Fiscal deficit

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French markets in disarray following Lecornu resignation
Youtube· 2025-10-07 07:55
The CNBC app, global market news in one place. Customizable sections and personalized alerts, stocks tracking, interactive charts and market insights, all in your hands. Stay connected, stay informed.Download the CNBC app today. Welcome to Sportbox Europe. I'm Karen show with Juliana Tatal and Steve Cedric.These are your headlines. French President Emanuel Macarron tasks outgoing Prime Minister Sebastian Lorno with finding a way forward after his shock resignation as yields spike in equity slump. >> Gold no ...
Why Milei’s Economic Shock Therapy Is Dividing Argentina
Bloomberg Television· 2025-09-20 14:00
Westin: This is a story about short-term pain for long-term gain. Argentine President Javier Milei's strong medicine for his economy seems to be working despite the costs, but recent elections raised doubts about whether the public is willing to stay on a difficult course. - Over the weekend, President Javier Mieli was defeated in a key provincial election.- [Singing in Spanish] Westin: Milei's party lost big in the Buenos Aires provincial election, and markets reacted immediately. The peso weakened against ...
Trump pressure on Fed may steepen US yield curve, fund managers say
Yahoo Finance· 2025-09-16 19:21
Core Viewpoint - The Treasury yield curve is expected to steepen as investors seek higher compensation for perceived fiscal and political risks, influenced by the Trump administration's pressure on the U.S. Federal Reserve [1][2]. Group 1: Investor Sentiment and Market Dynamics - President Trump's ongoing criticism of the Federal Reserve and attempts to alter its voting board are undermining investor confidence in the Fed's authority [2]. - Yield curves steepen when long-term rates increase more rapidly than short-term rates, indicating concerns about inflation resurgence and larger U.S. deficits [3]. - A notable trading strategy this year involves buying shorter-term bonds while selling 30-year bonds, particularly in the 5-year/30-year yield curve [3]. Group 2: Yield Expectations and Economic Indicators - The two-year yield fell to 3.51% after reaching 3.578%, while the 10-year yield was at 4.03%, influenced by softer labor data that increased expectations for policy easing [5]. - If labor market softness continues, front-end yields are expected to decline towards the high-2% range, with long-end yields remaining in the 3%-4% range [6]. Group 3: Inflation and Fiscal Concerns - Investors are reportedly not receiving adequate compensation for inflation and fiscal risks, with the long end of the Treasury curve being particularly sensitive to these concerns [7]. - There is a trend of investors moving away from sovereign debt towards stocks and other assets, although back-end yields are anticipated to decrease in the near term due to Treasury buybacks and Fed communications [8].
X @The Economist
The Economist· 2025-07-20 06:00
Economic Performance - Inflation is down [1] - The fiscal deficit is down [1] - Exports are up [1] Potential Concerns - The rosy economic picture may not be the whole story [1]
泰国月度经济监测,2025年4月
Shi Jie Yin Hang· 2025-05-01 23:10
Investment Rating - The report does not explicitly provide an investment rating for the industry Core Insights - Thailand's economic activity is showing mixed signals, with stable private consumption and strong exports countered by a sharp decline in private investment due to rising uncertainty [1][2] - Goods exports have shown robust growth, particularly to the US and China, with a year-on-year increase of 13.9 percent in February, marking the highest growth in four months [4][12] - The tourism sector is experiencing a decline in arrivals, particularly from China, which fell by 40 percent year-on-year, reaching only 35 percent of pre-pandemic levels [3] Summary by Sections Economic Activity - Private consumption expanded modestly, supported by fiscal stimulus, but high household debt and tighter credit standards are constraining spending [2] - The private investment index contracted sharply, reflecting declines in consumer confidence and ongoing weakness in manufacturing output [2] Exports - Goods exports maintained double-digit growth, driven by strong shipments to the US and China, partly due to frontloading amid global trade uncertainties [4][12] - Exports to Japan and ASEAN have started to contract, indicating potential challenges in these markets [12] Tourism - Tourist arrivals in February declined by 6.9 percent year-on-year, with arrivals from major sources surpassing pre-pandemic levels except for China [3] - The recent earthquake may further dampen tourist confidence and arrivals in the coming months [3] Inflation and Monetary Policy - Inflation has declined for three consecutive months, with headline inflation at 0.8 percent in March, below the Bank of Thailand's target range [14] - The Bank of Thailand has lowered the policy rate to 2.0 percent to alleviate household debt pressures amid tightening credit standards [14] Fiscal Position - The central government's fiscal deficit widened to 6.7 percent of GDP in the first five months of FY 2025, driven by increased spending [15] - Fiscal revenue reached its highest level since 2020, but spending growth outpaced revenue gains [15] Financial Markets - The Thai baht depreciated by 1.5 percent in early April, influenced by global market risk-off sentiment despite a strong current account surplus [16][24] - The current account surplus rose to USD 5.5 billion, the highest since the pandemic, driven by a stronger goods trade balance [24][25]
JPMorgan's James Dimon warns US faces ‘considerable turbulence' amid trade war threats
New York Post· 2025-04-11 11:43
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has warned President Trump that the US economy is facing “considerable turbulence” from his threats to start a global trade war.“The economy is facing considerable turbulence (including geopolitics), with the potential positives of tax reform and deregulation and the potential negatives of tariffs and ‘trade wars’, ongoing sticky inflation, high fiscal deficits and still rather high asset prices and volatility,” Dimon said. “As always, we hope for the best but prepare the firm ...