(Bloomberg) --
Powell says the Fed is āin a good place,ā U.S.-China trade deal planĀ hits yet another snag, and Jho Low strikes a $1 billion 1MDB dealĀ with the U.S. Here are some of the things people in markets are talking about today.
Third Cut
āWe believe monetary policy is in a good place.ā That's whatĀ Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell told a news conference after officials reduced interest ratesĀ by a quarter-percentage point for the third time this year, signalling a pause in further cuts unless the economic outlook changes materially. The Federal Open Market Committee altered language in itsĀ statementĀ following the two-day meeting, dropping its pledge to āact as appropriate to sustain the expansion,ā while adding a promise to monitor data. TheyĀ cited the implications of global developments in deciding to lower the target range for the central bank's benchmark rate to 1.5% to 1.75%.Ā Here areĀ six strategists explaining why stocks didn't lose it over Powell's tougher stance.Ā
Markets
Stocks in Asia looked set to gain after U.S. equities rose to a fresh record high following the Federal Reserve's decision to cut interest rates and indicate it is unlikely to move in either direction any time soon. Treasuries gained and the S&P 500 turned higher when Powell said rate hikes won't occur as long as inflation remains persistently cool. The offshore yuan climbed. After the close of trading,Ā AppleĀ andĀ FacebookĀ advanced after posting results. The yen was steady ahead of the Bank of Japan's policy decision.
Billion-DollarĀ Pact
The U.S. Justice Department has struck a deal with fugitive financier Jho Low to recoup almost a billion dollars looted from Malaysian investment fund 1MDB, in what would be the biggest recovery from a decade-old anti-corruption crackdown. The 1MDB global corruption scandal has toppled a government, ensnared Goldman Sachs and set off investigations across the globe. The proposed settlement was filed Wednesday in a California court.Ā The deal, if approved by a federal judge, would help resolve forfeiture cases tied to Low, who prosecutors say orchestrated the theft of more than $4 billion from 1MDB that ended up paying for a private jet, a superyacht, mansions, diamonds and even Hollywood movie productions. The agreement doesn't include an admission of guilt or wrongdoing. It's unclear whether it affects the criminal charges against Low in the U.S.
āPhase Oneā Snags
There seemĀ to be hurdles left, right and center when it comes to āphase oneā of a U.S.-China trade accord. The first installment of the agreement is now beingĀ thrown into questionĀ after Chile canceled an upcoming summit where Donald Trump andĀ Xi JinpingĀ planned to meet. The cancellation āĀ Ā announcedĀ as social unrest continued to rock Santiago āĀ appeared to catch the White House off guard. Still, the administration insisted that it would continue to press on inĀ finalizingĀ the agreement in coming weeks, but it wasn't clear whether U.S. officials would be able to find an alternate venue for a meeting with Xi.Ā
How Long, Hong Kong?
The Hong Kong government will release data Thursday expected to showĀ that the economy has slipped into a recession, after nearly five months of increasingly violent protests in the city.Ā Third-quarter GDP figures are expected to show a further 0.6% retreat after a 0.4% contraction in the second quarter from the previous three months,Ā the first technical recession since the global financial crisis a decade ago.Ā This week Financial Secretary Paul Chan said that a full-year contraction is āvery likely.ā The city's economy has shown the faintest of positive glimmers since the initial shock of the protests' impact this summer, when tourists began staying away. One of the biggest questions in determining if and whenĀ Hong Kong willĀ recoverĀ is whether mainland Chinese tourists will return, givenĀ the anti-China tone of the demonstrations.
What We've Been Reading
This is what's caught our eye over the past 24 hours.
- SoftBank's Son speaksĀ to an almost empty room in Saudi Arabia.
- The CEO of the world's biggest sovereign wealth fund is resigning.
- China is about toĀ introduceĀ 5GĀ mobile phone services.
- Japanese companies are paying more dividends than ever.Ā
- Twitter will ban political advertising, says the CEO.Ā
- Vietnam is a trade war winner. Now it has to work out how to stay ahead.
- The drone wars are already here, and they're escalating.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Alyssa McDonald at amcdonald61@bloomberg.net, Alex Millson
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