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    Macron meets French party leaders to try to name a prime minister

    PARIS (Reuters) – France’s left-wing parties told Emmanuel Macron on Friday that they want to form the next government, as the French President kicked off consultations on who could be prime minister nearly seven weeks after inconclusive parliamentary elections.Macron, who did not speak publicly after his meeting with the left, has so far ignored their demands, pointing out that despite coming first in the early July ballot, the left’s New Popular Front alliance was far from an absolute majority.”We told him that it was up to the political force that came out first (in the election) – the New Popular Front – to form a government,” Lucie Castets, a little known 37-year-old senior civil servant chosen by the left as its candidate for prime minister, said after their meeting with Macron.After weeks of vocal tensions between rival political camps, the left’s leaders sounded slightly more upbeat, and said Macron recognised there was a need for change – though what that would entail still remains to be seen.With Macron set to meet centrists and conservatives later on Friday, and the far right on Monday, the left’s leaders said they hoped for a quick answer after that.Whoever Macron names will face a tough job, with parliamentary approval of the 2025 budget one of many challenges at a time when France is under pressure from the European Commission and bond markets to reduce its deficit.Who will become prime minister – and whether they can get a hung parliament to back any reforms – is still very much an open question, with no sign yet of any broader coalition that would have a stable majority.Macron’s gamble to call the snap parliamentary election backfired, with his centrist coalition losing dozens of seats in a ballot that delivered a hung parliament.He has called for leaders to strike deals beyond party lines to form a government that would have a solid majority – and a source close to Macron said earlier this month he felt the balance of power was more with the centre or centre-right.Macron has a history of coming up with unexpected prime ministers. The French Constitution says he is free to name who he wants – however they need to be able to survive no confidence votes from the opposition.Some possible candidates include a conservative regional president, Xavier Bertrand and former Socialist Prime Minister Bernard Cazeveuve, sources have said. French media recently mentioned Karim Bouamrane, the Socialist mayor of an impoverished Paris suburb, as another possible name. More

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    British household energy price cap to rise 10% from October

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    TSX futures rise, Fed Chair Powell’s speech anticipated

    September futures on the S&P/TSX index were up 0.6% at 6:26 a.m. ET (10:26 GMT).The energy sector is expected to be in focus as oil prices edged higher, though poised to register a weekly loss. [O/R]The materials sector is likely to be impacted as gold prices inched up, while copper prices also gained. [GOL/] [MET/L] Investors will follow Powell’s commentary at the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium at 10:00 a.m. ET for clues on the U.S. interest-rate easing cycle, especially after recent dovish comments from policymakers backing reduction in borrowing costs. After seeing the U.S. policy rates at 5.25% to 5.50% for over a year, market participants widely expect a 25-basis points reduction at the Fed’s meeting next month.In Canada, retail sales numbers expected at 8:30 a.m. ET could bolster the possibility of a third consecutive rate cut by the Bank of Canada, following this week’s data that showed annual inflation at a 40-month low.Meanwhile, major Canadian banks are set to report their quarterly numbers next week.The S&P/TSX composite index ended lower on Thursday, after posting a record closing high in the previous session.In corporate news, the Teamsters union said workers at Canadian National Railway (TSX:CNR) will return to work after the government moved to end the lockout that threatened the economy. However, work stoppage at Canadian Pacific (NYSE:CP) Kansas City is expected to continue.COMMODITIES Gold: $2,497.42; +0.57% [GOL/]US crude: $73.68; +0.92% [O/R]Brent crude: $77.83; +0.79% [O/R]FOR CANADIAN MARKETS NEWS, CLICK ON CODES:TSX market report (TO)Canadian dollar and bonds report [CAD/] [CA/]Reuters global stocks poll for CanadaCanadian markets directory($1 = 1.3583 Canadian dollars) More

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    US equity funds draw large inflows on rate cut bets, easing growth concerns

    According to LSEG data, investors racked up a net $5.97 billion worth of U.S. equity funds during the week, marking their largest weekly net purchase since July 17.A benign inflation report last week and the Fed meeting minutes on Wednesday, indicating a potential rate cut in September, boosted investor appetite for risk assets.Meanwhile, strong U.S. retail sales data and upbeat consumer sentiment numbers last week alleviated earlier fears of a sharp slowdown, and propped up stock markets.Investors scooped up a robust $5.19 billion worth of U.S. large-cap funds in their largest weekly net purchase since July 24. They also acquired $1.77 billion worth of small-cap funds, but sold mid-cap and multi-cap funds to the tune of $1.29 billion and $807 million, respectively.Among sectoral funds, consumer staples, financials, consumer discretionary, and tech attracted significant inflows, worth $768 million, $589 million, $309 million and $257 million respectively.Investors, meanwhile, withdrew about $620 million from utilities, snapping a five-week buying trend.Demand for U.S. bond funds continued for a 12th successive week as investors allocated about $4.43 billion to these funds on a net basis.U.S. government bond funds secured a hefty $2.26 billion, the fourth straight weekly inflow. High yield and general domestic taxable fixed income funds also observed a notable $1.83 billion and $865 million worth of net purchases, respectively.Meanwhile, money market funds remained popular for a third week as investors poured about $19.19 billion into these funds. More

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    With Fed rate cut set, Powell may focus on explaining US economic conditions at Jackson Hole

    JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming (Reuters) -U.S. economic data is giving the Federal Reserve the green light to cut interest rates, financial markets are aligned for the first move, and the central bank all but gave the game away on Wednesday when a readout of its July meeting showed a “vast majority” of policymakers agreed the policy easing likely would begin next month.With all that in place, Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s goal in his keynote speech on Friday to the Kansas City Fed’s annual Jackson Hole research conference may be less about further shaping expectations and more about assessing where the economy stands ahead of what he has called a “consequential” first step.”I don’t think he needs to do a lot beyond the press conference in July,” said Richard Clarida, a former Fed vice chair who is now global economic adviser for Pimco, referring to how Powell leaned strongly toward a rate cut at the Sept. 17-18 meeting in remarks to reporters after the July 30-31 meeting.”You will not get ‘mission accomplished,'” Clarida said, “but he might look back at the last two years, where we were and where we are, and acknowledge that they are close” to taming the worst outbreak of inflation in 40 years.Powell will take the podium at 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT) in a remote lodge in Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park to address a gathering that has become a global platform for central bank officials to shape views of monetary policy and the economy.With one exception, the six speeches Powell has delivered to the conference since becoming Fed chief in 2018 have been largely explanatory, designed less to influence short-term policy expectations than to lay out how officials were thinking about major structural issues or, since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, detailing the mechanics of inflation.The exception was in 2022 as the Fed fought to keep public expectations about high inflation in check: Powell delivered a terse, market-moving address meant to convey his seriousness about defending the central bank’s 2% inflation target. Some called it his “Volcker moment,” a reference to Paul Volcker, the Fed chief who triggered a recession in the early 1980s with punishing interest rates to break an inflationary cycle. REACTION FUNCTIONThat’s a consequence the Powell Fed has dodged – so far. Inflation crested at levels not seen since the Volcker era and two years later is roughly half a percentage point above target. The unemployment rate, at 4.3%, is well below its 5.7% long-run average. And financial markets seem in sync with where the Fed is heading.In light of that, former Fed staff, policymakers and outside analysts said Powell may well revert to his explanatory norm, perhaps sketching out in broad terms how the central bank will approach its coming easing cycle or delving into lessons learned over two years about inflation’s causes and cures.The conference theme – how monetary policy impacts the economy – would fit either.William English, a former head of the Fed’s monetary affairs division who is now a professor at the Yale School of Management, said he felt the moment called for a general outline about the approach to cutting rates.Because Fed policymakers at next month’s meeting will update their interest rate projections for this year and 2025, Powell won’t want to provide detailed forward guidance about what’s to come – a risk in itself for the possible market reaction it could trigger, or the possibility coming data could push in a different direction.Powell instead could provide some background for the public and markets to understand how the Fed will respond as the economy evolves, English said. “Let’s say the economy does not go as we expect. What would that mean for policy? … What is it going to take to move faster or slower?”THE OTHER MANDATEPowell and other Fed officials have become fans of describing different economic scenarios, a strategy that allows them to provide a baseline outlook, but also convey uncertainty around what might happen and how different outcomes might cause them to react.Some, for example, have begun to worry the economy is at a point where the unemployment rate could rise fast and far enough to derail the “soft-landing” from inflation that they thought was within reach.Yet it is unclear how the Fed, at this point, thinks about “maximum employment” – one of its two goals alongside stable inflation – and the degree to which officials are willing to tolerate rising joblessness to wring another one quarter or one half of a percentage point from inflation.Antulio Bomfim, a former special adviser to Powell and now the head of global macro for Northern Trust (NASDAQ:NTRS) Asset Management’s fixed-income team, agreed that the Fed chief will likely steer clear of short-term guidance in favor of a discussion about broader issues – perhaps trying to capture what the central bank has just lived through and how coming labor and inflation dynamics may differ from those before the pandemic.”We’re kind of at an inflection point for policy, potentially for the economy too … Inflection points are very difficult to navigate,” Bomfim said. Open questions linger about the economy that’s emerging, including whether inflation will prove a more persistent headache for central banks after years of running soft before the pandemic, and whether job market dynamics have shifted and may imply higher unemployment rates than the Fed thought it could achieve based on the economy’s pre-COVID-19 performance.With inflation being such a high priority “over the past couple of years, the Federal Reserve … was behaving like a single mandate central bank,” Bomfim said. “And now we are not just in the transition from hikes to cuts, but also transitioning back to what I would call a more normal state of affairs.” More

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    Global equity funds see sharp inflows on Fed rate cut hopes

    According to LSEG data, investors snapped up $15.73 billion worth of global equity funds during the week, marking their largest weekly net purchase since July 17. Expectations of Fed rate cuts soared as the latest meeting minutes revealed that a majority of policymakers support a September interest rate cut if the data aligns with expectations.Investors are now poised for Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s upcoming remarks on Friday at the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium, seeking confirmation that the Fed will proceed with the anticipated rate cut. Meanwhile, strong U.S. retail sales data, upbeat consumer sentiment numbers and a benign inflation reading last week signalled a robust economic footing, boosting investor appetite, despite earlier fears of a sharp slowdown sparked by a disappointing jobs report at the start of the month.Investors placed $5.97 billion into U.S. equity funds, the biggest amount in five weeks. European and Asian funds also gained $5.55 billion and $4.39 billion, respectively in inflows.The technology and consumer staples sectors booked net inflows of $931 million and $825 million, respectively, while utilities suffered a significant outflow of $612 million.Global investors bought bond funds for a 35th successive week on a net basis, allocating about $11.29 billion, the largest amount in three weeks.They funnelled a net $2.96 billion into corporate bond funds, the most in five weeks, and added about $2.71 billion worth of government bond funds, but discarded a net $336 million worth of loan participation funds.Gold and other precious metal funds saw the sharpest demand in about 2-1/2 years as they received $1.5 billion of inflows during the week. Investors also acquired a net $138 million of energy funds, broadly reversing a $193 million outflow during the prior week. Data covering 29,604 emerging market funds showed equity funds lost $679 million, as outflows continued for an 11th successive week. In contrast, bond funds remained popular for the ninth consecutive week, with about $531 million in net purchases. More

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    FirstFT: Kamala Harris lays out positions on China, Ukraine and Gaza

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    Has tipping culture gone too far?

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