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The Economist (July 11)

2025/ 07/ 12 by jd in Global News

“Growth is abysmal; wages are low. But seen from the outside, Britain is a great place to contract services and buy bargain-basement bonds.”

 

The Guardian (July 9)

2025/ 07/ 11 by jd in Global News

“As the climate crisis throws its destructive effects ever more fully in our faces, cities during heatwaves are their own type of ground zero.” We need to “create more green spaces and more tolerable streets” Make no mistake, “extreme heat is our future” so “European cities must adapt.” It is true that “greenery, shade and swimming spots won’t solve the climate crisis, but they’re becoming ever more critical.”

 

New York Times (July 8)

2025/ 07/ 10 by jd in Global News

“China has overtaken Detroit as the center of the global auto industry. America can embark on an all-out push to rebuild world-class manufacturing and supply chains, or our carmakers can hide behind tariffs, continue making gas-powered trucks and S.U.V.s and fade into irrelevance.”

 

Bloomberg (July 7)

2025/ 07/ 09 by jd in Global News

Wall Street currency traders are increasingly “flying blind” as once reliable models misfire and new forces, “like the broad shift of money out of the US and foreign investors buying dollar hedges,” drive markets. Since Trump’s second term began, currency experts “have been blindsided by the dollar’s selloff and are now questioning whether the past few months will go down as a chaotic but short-lived adjustment or the start of a harder-to-navigate era.”

 

Barron’s (July 7)

2025/ 07/ 08 by jd in Global News

“Trade tensions are likely to recapture markets’ attention this week and through the summer months as President Donald Trump looks to ride his recent wins on taxes and immigration into tariff negotiations.” Since “reshaping the international trade system is a vastly complex enterprise,” the ensuing “uncertainty tied to trade talks… likely will be a feature for markets into the back half of the year and possibly beyond.”

 

Washington Post (July 6)

2025/ 07/ 07 by jd in Global News

“As China rises, the Trump administration should be strengthening, not fraying, ties with Japan.” Instead, it “is preparing to slap this vital ally with a ‘reciprocal tariff’ of 24 percent” on top of other levies. “The United States needs allies — to protect itself and, yes, to trade with — and alliances cannot remain stable for long when they are clouded by mistrust and fear…. Trump should not squander” chances to “deepen ties” with allies and create “a stable alternative to China’s network of global influence.” Instead, we are witnessing “a case study in how not to cultivate an ally.”

 

Economic Times (July 4)

2025/ 07/ 06 by jd in Global News

“The Chinese government is signalling enough is enough when it comes to the fierce competition in the country’s electric car market.” The nation’s “industrial policy has engineered a remarkable transformation to electric vehicles in… the world’s largest auto market,” but it has also “spawned far more makers than can possibly survive.” The government is moving to address “long-simmering concerns about oversupply and debilitating price wars.” The government is now “cracking down… targeting unsustainable price wars led by market giant BYD.” Marking a first step “toward stabilising the market,” the government has introduced “a new pledge to pay suppliers within 60 days.”

 

Reuters (July 3)

2025/ 07/ 05 by jd in Global News

“Big investors are mobilising to trade through weeks packed with wild-card events that may shatter the calm in stock markets and drive big swings for assets they see as exposed to both positive or negative surprises, from gold to corporate credit.”

 

Barron’s (July 3)

2025/ 07/ 04 by jd in Global News

“It’s a muddled picture, one that suggests that demographics and policies have slowed U.S. labor supply while uncertainty over future tariffs may have curbed labor demand. Clues for how this stasis plays out should emerge in the earnings reporting season set to kick off later this month.”

 

Fortune (July 1)

2025/ 07/ 03 by jd in Global News

“Consumer spending is weakening. The job market is getting worse for workers. And U.S. stock investors are loving it. The S&P 500 rose 0.52% yesterday, hitting an all-time high for the second day in a row.” The surging market suggests “investors don’t anticipate anything dramatic like a mass selloff.” Their optimism seems to be pinned on hopes that “the deteriorating macro picture” will convince the Federal Reserve to “cut interest rates sooner rather than later. And cheap money is usually good for stocks.”

 

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