Articles

  • 3 weeks ago | spokesman.com | Ruth Carson |Aline Oyamada |Anya Andrianova

    Wall Street banks are reinforcing their calls that the dollar will weaken further, hit by interest-rate cuts, slowing economic growth and President Donald Trump’s trade and tax policies. Morgan Stanley said the greenback will tumble to levels last seen during the Covid-19 pandemic by the middle of next year, while JPMorgan Chase & Co. remains bearish on the US currency. Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

  • 3 weeks ago | bloomberg.com | Ruth Carson |Aline Oyamada |Anya Andrianova

    Los bancos de Wall Street refuerzan sus pronósticos de que el dólar se debilitará aún más, afectado por recortes de las tasas de interés, la desaceleración del crecimiento económico y las políticas comerciales y fiscales del presidente Donald Trump. Morgan Stanley dijo que el dólar caerá a niveles no vistos desde la pandemia de covid-19 a mediados del próximo año, mientras que JPMorgan Chase & Co. sigue siendo pesimista sobre la moneda estadounidense. Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

  • 3 weeks ago | bloomberg.com | Ruth Carson |Aline Oyamada |Anya Andrianova

    (Bloomberg) -- Wall Street banks are reinforcing their calls that the dollar will weaken further, hit by interest-rate cuts, slowing economic growth and President Donald Trump’s trade and tax policies. Morgan Stanley said the greenback will tumble to levels last seen during the Covid-19 pandemic by the middle of next year, while JPMorgan Chase & Co. remains bearish on the US currency. Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

  • 1 month ago | news.bloomberglaw.com | Aline Oyamada |Alice Gledhill

    Bond investors are demanding more and more compensation to hold long-dated US debt as global markets grow anxious about the widening fiscal deficit in the world’s biggest economy. The US 10-year term premium — or the extra return investors demand to own longer-term debt instead of a series of shorter ones — has climbed to near 1%, a level last seen in 2014. It’s a measure of how jittery investors are about plans to raise the scale of future borrowing.

  • 1 month ago | detroitnews.com | Aline Oyamada |Alice Gledhill

    Bond investors are demanding more and more compensation to hold long-dated US debt as global markets grow anxious about the widening fiscal deficit in the world’s biggest economy. The US 10-year term premium - or the extra return investors demand to own longer-term debt instead of a series of shorter ones - has climbed to near 1%, a level last seen in 2014. It’s a measure of how jittery investors are about plans to raise the scale of future borrowing.

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