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  • Five reasons why tech stocks are in trouble

    November 27, 2018

    For months, technology stocks have been the holy grail for growth, with valuations reaching dizzying heights. So, considering that what goes up must come down, perhaps it’s not surprising that stocks started tumbling last week. Share prices for each of the five tech giants – Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Google (the so-called Faangs) – [...]

  • Is central bank independence even a thing?

    November 13, 2018

    Parents often find it tough to let go of the control they have on their children’s lives, no matter how old they are. While children usually tend to wriggle out of these constraints, the constant jostling between two often opposing opinions is a worldwide phenomenon. And such is the relationship between the government and the [...]

  • Federal Reserve will now publish semi-annual stability reports in bid to tackle risk

    November 10, 2018

    The Federal Reserve will now publish periodic reports on the US financial system's stability twice a year, starting on November 28.  The report will feature an overview of how the Federal Reserve's governors assess the financial sector's resilience and try to detail any risk as the country's economy continues to expand. “We learned from the financial [...]

  • Fed keeps US interest rates stable ahead of next month’s anticipated hike

    November 8, 2018

    US stocks ticked upwards as the Federal Reserve said it would keep its interest rate benchmark stable for at least another month. The S&P 500, which had been trading down 0.30 per cent ahead of the announcement, clawed back some of its losses, closing down 0.25 per cent to 2,807. The Fed said it would keep [...]

  • There’s nothing to fear from the latest easing back of Dodd-Frank’s reach

    October 17, 2018

    Shortly after his inauguration as President, Donald Trump pledged to do “a big number” on Dodd-Frank regulations, labelling the post-crisis measures “a disaster” and promising to “kill” parts of the legislation. While the rhetoric was typically Trumpian, the reality has proven to be somewhat more modest. Nonetheless, a change in the White House's direction of [...]

  • Prudential Finance removed from US ‘too big to fail’ list

    October 17, 2018

    US insurance giant Prudential Finance was removed from the list of organisations judged “too big to fail” today by US regulators. Prudential was the last of the insurance firms on the list of major financial institutions which was drawn up post-financial crisis. Read more: RIP Dodd Frank: Trump's adviser signals the end of the banking [...]

  • Talk of a US recession in 2020 is a little premature

    October 16, 2018

    Several analysts have come out of the woodwork in the past few weeks predicting not just a US growth slowdown, but the start of a recession in 2020. These calls were amplified after a week of stock market volatility. Bond vigilantes are pointing to rising real yields (that have been adjusted for inflation), while bear [...]

  • Global equity bloodbath plunges FTSE 100 to six-month low

    October 11, 2018

    A GLOBAL equity bloodbath plunged the FTSE 100 to its lowest level in six months  on a “gut-churning” day for investors. The sell-off began in the US on Wednesday before spreading to Europe, Asia, and trading floors across the world on Thursday. Global growth concerns, the prospect of higher US interest rates, as well as [...]

  • Fed hikes interest rates, signalling an end to ‘accommodative’ monetary policy

    September 26, 2018

      The US Federal Reserve raised interest rates again tonight, in an expected move which reaffirmed steady economic growth and rising employment. Policymakers have now lifted the benchmark to a range of two to 2.25 per cent, an increase of a quarter of a percentage point from its last rate hike in early August. In a [...]

  • Sterling and the euro gain against the dollar thanks to cooling US inflation

    September 13, 2018

    Sterling and the euro have risen against the dollar as they received an unexpected boost from US inflation. The “disappointing” inflation reading saw the dollar sink against the pound and euro, meaning sterling climbed to 1.31 against the dollar, its highest since late July, while the euro reached 1.17. Read more: Barclays: Trump impeachment wouldn't [...]

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