By Mike Dolan
LONDON (Reuters) – What matters in U.S. and global markets today
By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Finance and Markets
Wednesday’s market drama on reports of an imminent ouster of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has calmed quickly, with President Donald Trump saying it was “highly unlikely” he would fire the central bank boss even as speculation continue to brew.
I’ll dig into all of today’s market news below, and then I’ll discuss how U.S. markets may soon shift focus from tariffs to the more pressing economic threat of labor shortages driven by aggressive immigration crackdowns and deportations.
Today’s Market Minute
* U.S. President Donald Trump said Wednesday he is not planning to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, but he kept the door open to the possibility and renewed his criticism of the central bank chief for not lowering interest rates.
* Canada’s Alimentation Couche-Tard on Thursday pulled its $46 billion bid to buy Seven & i Holdings, saying the retailer refused to engage constructively on the deal, which would have been Japan’s largest ever foreign buyout.
* The deadly Air India crash last month has renewed a decades-old debate in the aviation industry over installing video cameras monitoring airline pilot actions to complement the cockpit voice and flight data recorders already used by accident investigators.
* While almost no one thinks Donald Trump’s verbal attacks on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell are a positive development, writes ROI columnist Jamie McGeever, they have electrified the debate about whether the U.S. president is right that interest rates are too high.
* The idea of simplifying the federal tax code used to enjoy widespread bipartisan political support. Times have changed in this regard, and not for the better. That’s bad news, says Income Securities Advisor publisher Marty Fridson, and not just because of the headaches it causes taxpayers each April.
Markets calm down after Powell poser
The Fed episode overshadowed otherwise decent set of U.S. economic updates – showing relatively subdued producer prices and above-forecast industry output last month and offsetting anxiety about some tariff-related price rises in Tuesday’s consumer inflation report.
The Powell story also obscured another decent set of bank earnings, with individual stock reactions for Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America underwhelming – much like the prior day’s results. Johnson & Johnson did surge 6%, however, after halving its expectations for costs related to new tariffs and raising full-year profit projections.
By Mike Dolan
LONDON (Reuters) – What matters in U.S. and global markets today
By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Finance and Markets
Wednesday’s market drama on reports of an imminent ouster of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has calmed quickly, with President Donald Trump saying it was “highly unlikely” he would fire the central bank boss even as speculation continue to brew.
I’ll dig into all of today’s market news below, and then I’ll discuss how U.S. markets may soon shift focus from tariffs to the more pressing economic threat of labor shortages driven by aggressive immigration crackdowns and deportations.
Today’s Market Minute
* U.S. President Donald Trump said Wednesday he is not planning to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, but he kept the door open to the possibility and renewed his criticism of the central bank chief for not lowering interest rates.
* Canada’s Alimentation Couche-Tard on Thursday pulled its $46 billion bid to buy Seven & i Holdings, saying the retailer refused to engage constructively on the deal, which would have been Japan’s largest ever foreign buyout.
* The deadly Air India crash last month has renewed a decades-old debate in the aviation industry over installing video cameras monitoring airline pilot actions to complement the cockpit voice and flight data recorders already used by accident investigators.
* While almost no one thinks Donald Trump’s verbal attacks on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell are a positive development, writes ROI columnist Jamie McGeever, they have electrified the debate about whether the U.S. president is right that interest rates are too high.
* The idea of simplifying the federal tax code used to enjoy widespread bipartisan political support. Times have changed in this regard, and not for the better. That’s bad news, says Income Securities Advisor publisher Marty Fridson, and not just because of the headaches it causes taxpayers each April.
Markets calm down after Powell poser
The Fed episode overshadowed otherwise decent set of U.S. economic updates – showing relatively subdued producer prices and above-forecast industry output last month and offsetting anxiety about some tariff-related price rises in Tuesday’s consumer inflation report.
The Powell story also obscured another decent set of bank earnings, with individual stock reactions for Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America underwhelming – much like the prior day’s results. Johnson & Johnson did surge 6%, however, after halving its expectations for costs related to new tariffs and raising full-year profit projections.
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