(Bloomberg) -- Welcome to Friday, Asia. Here’s the latest news and analysis from Bloomberg Economics to help take you through to the weekend.
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- Bloomberg Economics’ GDP tracker suggests global growth picked up further in July. Most economies appear to have banked the easy gains from the relaxation of containment measures, says Dan Hanson
- China’s retail investors are embracing the euphoria of the biggest bull run since 2015. It’s a dangerous strategy both for already overextended households as well as lenders
- Japan’s pandemic-hit economy shrank last quarter by the most in records going back to 1955, official data is set to show, with a resurgence of the virus threatening to slow a fragile recovery
- Flare-ups from Australia to Japan show the world hasn’t learned an early lesson from the coronavirus crisis: to stop the spread, those with mild or symptom-free coronavirus infections must be forced to isolate, both from their communities and family
- New Zealand’s push toward negative rates is flattening the yield curve of its rapidly expanding NZ$79 billion sovereign bond market
- India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman can expect another payout from the central bank in coming weeks, but it’s unlikely to plug a huge government revenue hole created by the pandemic
- Europe’s east can find some consolation despite the unprecedented economic damage wrought by Covid-19
- The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits fell below 1 million for the first time since the pandemic began in March
- Europe’s initial reaction to the U.S.’s latest tariff move in the Airbus dispute is disappointment and relief it wasn’t much worse
- U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government faces a dilemma, and how it responds could set the tone of the economy for years
- The Fed is conducting experiments with a hypothetical digital dollar for research purposes, though it hasn’t yet committed to issuance that would require a formal policy process involving the government and other stakeholders, Governor Lael Brainard said Thursday
- On the northeastern fringe of Chongqing, the rising district of Yuelai is designed as a “sponge city.” China’s cities flood partly because most of the water-retaining land that used to absorb rainfall has been paved over, forcing rain to flow directly into poorly built or outdated sewage and drainage systems
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