Kevin Hassett evidently has not received the memo that economics is ‘the dismal science.’ The ebullient chairman of the president’s Council of Economic Advisers is relishing the intellectual feast of applying to policymaking the predictive tools of a science that was blindsided by the Great Recession. Economists, like other scientists, learn things even when — actually, especially when — they ...
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China’s real estate cooling measures, latest headache for R&F Properties
Poor Guangzhou R&F Properties Co. China’s third-most-indebted developer, already burdened by its acquisition of Dalian Wanda Group Co.’s hotel portfolio, has once again had to push back its A-share listing, just as more evidence emerges the government’s real-estate-cooling measures are starting to bite. R&F said on Sunday its planned float of shares in China, mooted as far back as May ...
Read More »Abe’s win might not make everyone rich
High stock prices. It’s a chief reason voters gave for coming out again in favor of Shinzo Abe, who cinched another term as Japan’s prime minister on Sunday. Watching Japan’s stock market tick up to its highest level in two decades is a bit like watching the ‘likes’ accumulate from your so-called friends on a popular Facebook post. Affirmation tends ...
Read More »Facebook must be ready for next election
By nearly any measure, Facebook Inc. is an extraordinary success. Its market capitalization exceeds $500 billion. Its user base outnumbers all but one continent. Mark Zuckerberg, its chief executive officer, is one of the world’s wealthiest people. No one should begrudge Facebook (or Zuckerberg) this success. Yet as it begins to play a more central role in American media and ...
Read More »Delhi is choking on bad policy, not firecrackers
For most Indians, the festival of Diwali is well worth the wait. Houses are brightly lit, boxes of sweets are exchanged—and accounts for the year are closed. The Hindu festival of lights also heralds the beginning of winter, the few months when the baked northern plains of the subcontinent become marginally more liveable. Except in India’s giant capital. Here in ...
Read More »Trump is about to own the next credit cycle
President Donald Trump is about to select a new Federal Reserve chair. Whether it’s Jerome Powell, Kevin Warsh, or even current head Janet Yellen, the choice will mark a shift in Trump’s tenure leading the world’s biggest economy. That’s because the president, who railed against Yellen during his 2016 campaign, will now be assuming ownership of this credit cycle and ...
Read More »Brexit talks flounder and somebody needs to care
Since talks on the UK’s exit from the European Union kicked off in June, there have been five negotiating rounds backed by speeches, press conferences and shuttle diplomacy. And yet the UK and Europe are no closer to agreeing about what their future relationship should be, or even settling the divorce bill. Now the question is whether there will be ...
Read More »Euro drops with Spain on edge; bonds and oil climb
Bloomberg The euro weakened as investors watched and waited for the next big development in Spain, where Catalan separatists are planning their response after Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy moved to stamp his authority on the region. Candidates for the Fed chief and the odds of US tax reform remain in focus as the dollar rose a second day. The common ...
Read More »NCB, Mobily hit Saudi, Emaar weighs on Dubai
Reuters National Commercial Bank and telecom stocks dragged down Saudi Arabia’s main index while Emaar Properties weighed on Dubai’s stock market for the second day in a row. The Saudi index fell 1.3 percent to 6,886 points on the back of the banking and insurance sectors, as NCB reported an 8.4 percent rise in third-quarter net profit, or around 5 ...
Read More »Draghi seen going for ECB bond buying limit in QE’s last hurrah
Bloomberg The European Central Bank (ECB) will halve monthly bond purchases to €30 billion ($35 billion) next year, stretching out the programme’s remaining capacity as it waits for inflation to pick up, a Bloomberg survey of economists shows. Policy makers will keep buying for about nine months to take the programme to just over €2.5 trillion, respondents said before the ...
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