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Monday, October 18, 2021

Tuesday's News Links

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] U.S. Stocks Rise on Earnings; Dollar Declines: Markets Wrap

[Reuters] Gold jumps 1% propelled by a weaker dollar

[Reuters] Oil prices rise on China energy demand concerns

[Reuters] Chinese property bonds firm after Kaisa and Sunac make coupon payments

[Reuters] Gold edges higher as dollar, Treasury yields weaken

[Reuters] U.S. housing starts, permits tumble in September

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] World Faces Fiscal Problems Much Worse Than Those From Covid, OECD Warns

[AP] Energy crunch hits global recovery as winter approaches

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Bond Investors Face Year of Peril With Few Places to Hide

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] China’s Property Sector Contracts For First Time Since Pandemic

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Unit Has Yuan Payment Due; China Dollar Bonds: Evergrande Update

[Reuters] Analysis: China's self-inflicted slowdown tests Beijing's reform resolve

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Xi Dials Back China’s Economic Overhaul as Masses Feel Pain

[SCMP] China GDP: slowdown in third quarter growth ramps up fears of more economic trouble ahead

[CNBC] Russia chooses not to raise natural gas supplies to Europe despite Putin’s pledge to help

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] China’s Curbs on Fertilizer Exports to Worsen Global Price Shock

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Lira Rout Upends One of the Best Bond Trades in Emerging Markets

[Reuters] China, Russia navy ships jointly sail through Japan strait

[Reuters] N.Korea fires ballistic missile as military activity surges

[Bloomberg] ‘People Are Hoarding’: Food Shortages Are The Next Supply-Chain Crunch

[Bloomberg] China’s Xi Vows Tighter Oversight of Tech Firms, Digital Economy

[Bloomberg] China’s Orbiting Missile Exploits Weakness in U.S. Defenses

[NYT] As Evergrande Teeters, Chinese Media Walks a Fine Line

[WSJ] Procter & Gamble to Raise Prices on More Staples

[FT] Almost 900,000 accounts traded GameStop at peak of meme stock craze

[FT] Chinese developer Sinic defaults as Evergrande deadline looms

[FT] China’s magnesium shortage threatens global car industry