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It has been a heavy news-flow week of economic data for both activity and employment, and neither disappointed.
China is tightening up on financing restrictions to Local Government Financing Vehicles (LGFVs) to reduce risks from hidden debt.
A Global Public Investor Survey was conducted and published last week by the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum.
Investors are becoming increasingly aware of inflation, with prices rising. But the US Federal Reserve has been saying this inflation is transitory.
Q2 was a pleasing one for investors. The global stock market rose 7.4% in the 3 months to the end of June with multiple sectors delivering positive gains.
Although bonds have been gaining again, bond yields have now fallen back to their lower end. But what have been the major factors driving the markets?
The US administration reached an infrastructure deal valued at $1.2trn over 8 years, which includes transportation, internet & environmental remediation.
A rapidly recovering economy and increasing house prices are the main reasons behind several banks bringing forward their interest rate hiking timetables.
US inflation figures released this week, with the headline rate running at 5% year-on-year. despite the US economy still not being back to full potential.
The G7 Finance Ministers reach deal to make multinational companies pay more tax, with a global minimum rate of 15% corporation tax agreed.
The US Federal Reserve is exploring the potential development of a regulated, monitored & eco-friendly digital version of the US Dollar for all Americans.
It has been a torrid week in the world of Cryptocurrencies. Over the past seven days, we have seen prices fall dramatically. So, what was the catalyst?
While we await a Financial Services deal between the EU & UK, it’s clear the EU wants to reduce UK dependancy with NYC winning the shake-up war.
The release of the US payroll numbers heavily disappointed, with just 266,000 new jobs created. The market expecting was closer to one million new jobs.
Despite everything default rates are around 3.5%, whilst Global debt has soared with Central Banks buying it back for Quantitative Easing & market support.
Providing a boost to the Canadian Dollar, the Central Bank of Canada announced it is scaling back on its pandemic relief given the progress of the economy.
This week saw releases around GDP growth, retail sales & inflation, which are all rising. Biden's $1.9trn stimulus package is having an immediate effect.
The Biden administration is to raise the US corporate tax rate to 28% and has also proposed to set a global minimum corporation tax rate of 21%.
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