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    Record Cyber Monday spending, Shein IPO filing reports – what’s moving markets

    1. Futures mostly mutedU.S. stock futures were mixed on Tuesday after equities in New York started off the new week in the red.By 04:58 ET (09:58 GMT), the Dow futures contract and S&P 500 futures were both mostly unchanged, while Nasdaq 100 futures had dipped by 24 points or 0.2%.The main indices on Wall Street dropped on Monday, marking a slight retreat as the end of what has been a mostly positive November for stocks approaches. The 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average and benchmark S&P 500 both declined by 0.2%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite moved down by 0.1%. However, all of them remain on track to finish higher for the month.Markets were paying close attention to Cyber Monday. Investors are on the lookout for any cues about the spending habits of U.S. consumers heading into the key holiday shopping season, which could help clarify the path ahead for Federal Reserve interest rate policy in the coming months.2. Cyber Monday spending expected to soar to record high – reportsSpending by American consumers is expected to have surged to an all-time high of over $12 billion on Cyber Monday, according to preliminary estimates from Adobe (NASDAQ:ADBE) Digital Insights cited by Reuters.Expenditures on Cyber Monday, when many retailers unveil online sales, was already anticipated to break records despite lingering concerns over the state of U.S. shoppers during a time of relatively steep inflation and elevated interest rates.In order to alleviate some of the pressure on price-squeezed customers, many retail firms are expected to have rolled out deep discounts and buy now, pay later services, Adobe told Reuters.The analytics firm now projects that between $12B to $12.4B was spent on items ranging from Barbie dolls to smart devices, Reuters reported. At the top end, it would be a 9.7% increase versus Cyber Monday last year.3. Shein confidentially files for IPO – reportsChinese fast-fashion retailer Shein has confidentially filed for an initial public offering in the U.S., according to media reports citing people familiar with the matter.Various reports said the value of Shein — the pandemic-era darling backed by large investors like venture capital group Sequoia China and the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala — stood at around $64B to $66B last year.Reports also suggested that a potentially massive listing of the company could help to reinvigorate the IPO market following two years of sluggish activity.Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley have all reportedly been selected as lead underwriters for the offering.Known for its extremely low prices, Shein has enjoyed a rapid rise from a local powerhouse in China to a global player. The surge in popularity has been particularly noticeable in the U.S., which has become Shein’s largest market.4. Binance founder ordered to temporarily stay in U.S.Changpeng Zhao, the founder of cryptocurrency exchange Binance who pleaded guilty last week to breaching American anti-money laundering laws, has been ordered by a federal judge to remain in the U.S. temporarily.Zhao must now stay in the country until a court in Seattle determines whether he should remain until his sentencing hearing in February or be allowed to return to the United Arab Emirates, where he has citizenship.Justice Department officials have said that because the government does not have a formal extradition treaty with the UAE, they may not be able to secure Zhao’s return to the United States. Zhao’s lawyers have asked that he be able to travel, arguing that he “voluntarily flew” to the U.S. to register his guilty plea.Zhao, who has also stepped down as Binance’s chief executive, was released on a $175 million bond last week. Binance, meanwhile, has agreed to pay over $4.3B in penalties and has pleaded guilty to violating anti-money laundering and sanctions laws.5. Oil rises amid hopes for OPEC+ output cutsOil prices edged higher Tuesday on hopes that OPEC+ will agree to extend or even deepen its ongoing production cuts at a meeting later this week.By 04:59 ET, the U.S. crude futures traded 1.3% higher at $75.85 a barrel, while the Brent contract climbed 1.2% to $80.84 per barrel.The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, also known as OPEC+, is set to hold an online ministerial meeting on Thursday.The gathering was delayed from Sunday after disagreements between members over production targets, but the group’s de facto leader Saudi Arabia has seemingly worked to find consensus on the need to expand output cuts.There has been a sharp fall in oil prices over the last month, as oversupply concerns grew following strong production data from non-OPEC countries such as the United States. More

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    Even Most Biden Voters Don’t See a Thriving Economy

    A majority of those who backed President Biden in 2020 say today’s economy is fair or poor, ordinarily a bad omen for incumbents seeking re-election.Presidents seeking a second term have often found the public’s perception of the economy a pivotal issue. It was a boon to Ronald Reagan; it helped usher Jimmy Carter and George H.W. Bush out of the White House.Now, as President Biden looks toward a re-election campaign, there are warning signals on that front: With overall consumer sentiment at a low ebb despite solid economic data, even Democrats who supported Mr. Biden in 2020 say they’re not impressed with the economy.In a recent New York Times/Siena College poll of voters in six battleground states, 62 percent of those voters think the economy is only “fair” or “poor” (compared with 97 percent for those who voted for Donald J. Trump).What the Economy Looks Like to Biden Voters in Swing StatesPercent of President Biden’s 2020 supporters who …

    Notes: Respondents of other races were omitted because of low sample sizes. The figures may not add up to 100 percent because of rounding.Source: New York Times/Siena College polls of 3,662 registered voters conducted Oct. 22 to Nov. 3 in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and WisconsinBy The New York TimesThe demographics of Mr. Biden’s 2020 supporters may explain part of his challenge now: They were on balance younger, had lower incomes and were more racially diverse than Mr. Trump’s. Those groups tend to be hit hardest by inflation, which has yet to return to 2020 levels, and high interest rates, which have frustrated first-time home buyers and drained the finances of those dependent on credit.But if the election were held today, and the options were Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump, it’s not clear whether voter perceptions of the economy would tip the balance.“The last midterm was an abortion election,” said Joshua Doss, an analyst at the public opinion research firm HIT Strategies, referring to the 2022 voting that followed the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the Roe v. Wade ruling. “Most of the time, elections are about ‘it’s the economy, stupid.’ Republicans lost that because of Roe. So we’re definitely in uncharted territory.”There are things working in Mr. Biden’s favor. First, Mr. Doss said, the economic programs enacted under the Biden administration remain broadly popular, providing a political foundation for Mr. Biden to build on. And second, social issues — which lifted the Democrats in the midterms — remain a prominent concern.Take Oscar Nuñez, 27, a server at a restaurant in Las Vegas. Foot traffic has been much slower than usual for this time of year, eating into his tips. He’d like to start his own business, but with the rising cost of living, he and his wife — who works at home answering questions from independent contractors for her employer — haven’t managed to save much money. It’s also a tough jump to make when the economy feels shaky.Mr. Nuñez expected better from Mr. Biden when he voted blue in 2020, he said, but he wasn’t sure what specifically the president should have done better. And he is pretty sure another Trump term would be a disaster.“I’d prefer another option, but it seems like it will once again be my only option again,” Mr. Nuñez said of Mr. Biden. For him, immigrants’ rights and foreign policy concerns are more important. “That’s why I was picking him over Trump in the first place — because this guy’s going to do something that’s real dangerous at some point.”Mr. Nuñez isn’t alone in feeling dissatisfied with the economy but still bound to Mr. Biden by other priorities. Of those surveyed in the six battleground states who plan to vote for Mr. Biden in 2024, 47 percent say social issues are more important to them, while 42 percent say the economy is more important — but that’s a closer split than in the 2022 midterms, in which social issues decisively outweighed economic concerns among Democratic voters in several swing states. (Among likely Trump voters, 71 percent say they are most focused on the economy, while 15 percent favor social issues.)Kendra McDowell thinks President Biden is doing the best he can given the continuing challenges of the wars in Ukraine and Gaza. “People are shopping — you know why? Because they’ve got jobs,” she said.Hannah Yoon for The New York TimesDour sentiment about the economy also isn’t limited to people who’ve been frustrated in their financial ambitions.Mackenzie Kiser, 20, and Lawson Millwood, 21, students at the University of North Georgia, managed to buy a house this year. Mr. Millwood’s income as an information-technology systems administrator at the university was enough to qualify, and they worried that affordability would only worsen if they waited because of rising interest rates and prices. Still, the experience left a bitter taste.“The housing market is absolutely insane,” said Ms. Kiser, who wasn’t old enough to vote in 2020 but leans progressive. “We paid the same for our one-story, one-bedroom cinder-block 1950s house as my mom paid for her three-story, four-bedroom house less than a decade ago.”Ms. Kiser doesn’t think Mr. Biden has done much to help the economy, and she worries he’s too old to be effective. But Mr. Trump isn’t more appealing on that front.“It’s not that I think that anybody of a different party could do better, but more that someone with their mental faculties who’s not retirement age could do a better job,” Ms. Kiser said. “Our choices are retirement age or retirement age, so it’s rock and a hard place right now.”Generally, voters don’t think Republicans are fixing the economy, either. In a poll conducted this month by the progressive-leaning Navigator Research, 70 percent of voters in battleground House districts, including a majority of Republicans, said they thought Republicans were more focused on issues other than the economy.The health of the economy is still a major variable leading up to the election. A downturn could fray what the president cites as a signal accomplishment of Bidenomics: low unemployment. A study of the 2016 election found that higher localized unemployment made Black voters, an overwhelmingly Democratic constituency, less likely to vote at all.“I think the likelihood that they would choose Trump is not the threat,” Mr. Doss said. “The threat is that they would choose the couch and stay home, and enough of them would stay home for an electoral college win for Trump.”But in the absence of a competitive Democratic primary, the campaigning — and television spots — have yet to commence in earnest. When they do, Mr. Doss has some ideas.So far, Mr. Biden’s messaging has focused on macroeconomic indicators like the unemployment rate and tackling inflation. “The truth is, that’s not the economy to most people,” Mr. Doss said. “The economy to most people is gas prices and food and whether or not they can afford to throw a birthday party for their kid.”Mr. Millwood supports a higher federal minimum wage, and is impatient with the bickering and finger pointing he hears about in Washington.Audra Melton for The New York TimesIt’s difficult for presidents to directly control inflation in the short term. But the White House has addressed a few specific costs that matter for families, by releasing oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to contain surging oil prices in late 2022, for example. The Inflation Reduction Act reduced prescription drug prices under Medicare and capped the cost of insulin for people with diabetes. The administration is also going after what it calls “junk fees,” which inflate the prices of things like concert tickets, airline tickets and even birthday parties.The more the administration talks about its concrete efforts to lower prices, the more Mr. Biden will benefit, Mr. Doss said. At the same time, Mr. Biden can lessen the blowback from persistent inflation by deflecting blame — an out-of-control pandemic was the original cause, he could plausibly argue, and most other wealthy countries are worse off.That’s how it seems to Kendra McDowell, 44, an accountant and single mother of four in Harrisburg, Pa. She feels the sting of inflation every time she goes to the grocery store — she spent $1,000 on groceries this past month and didn’t even fill her deep freezer — and in the health of her clients’ balance sheets. Despite her judgment that the economy is poor, however, she still has enough confidence to start a business in home-based care, a field in greater demand since Covid-19 ripped through nursing homes.“When I talk about the economy, it’s just inflation, and to me inflation is systemic and coming from the Trump administration,” Ms. McDowell said. If the pandemic had been contained quickly, she reasoned, supply chains and labor disruptions wouldn’t have sent prices soaring in the first place.Moreover, she sees the situation healing itself, and thinks Mr. Biden is doing the best he can given the challenges of the wars in Ukraine and now Gaza. “People are shopping — you know why? Because they’ve got jobs,” Ms. McDowell said. “God forbid, today or tomorrow, if I had to go find a job, it’s easier than it was before.”Ms. McDowell is what’s known in public opinion research as a high-information voter. Polls have shown that those less apt to stay up on the news tend to change their views when provided with more background on what the Biden administration has both accomplished and attempted.Ms. McDowell, a mother of four, said that she felt the sting of inflation every time she went to the grocery store, but that she didn’t blame Mr. Biden.Hannah Yoon for The New York TimesThe 15-month-old Inflation Reduction Act is still little known, for example. But this past March, the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication found that 68 percent of respondents supported it when filled in on its main components.A frequent theme of conversations with Democratic voters who see the economy as poor is that large corporations have too much power and that the middle class is being squeezed.Mr. Millwood, Ms. Kiser’s partner, said that he was concerned that society had grown more unequal in recent years, and that he didn’t see Mr. Biden doing much about it.“From what I see, it really doesn’t look like the working class is benefiting from many things recently,” said Mr. Millwood, who supports a higher federal minimum wage and is impatient with the bickering and finger pointing he hears about in Washington.After the phone conversation ended, Mr. Millwood texted to say that upon reflection, he would also like to see Mr. Biden push to lower taxes for low-income families and make it more difficult for the wealthiest to dodge them. After being sent news articles about Mr. Biden’s support for the extension of the now-expired Child Tax Credit and the appropriation of $80 billion for the Internal Revenue Service, in part to pursue tax evaders, he seemed surprised.“That is absolutely what I had in mind,” Mr. Millwood texted. “It’s been so noisy in the media lately I haven’t seen much that is covering things like that,” adding, “Biden doesn’t seem so bad after all haha.”Ruth Igielnik More

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    Dollar hangs at three-month low as traders eye PCE data

    TOKYO (Reuters) – The U.S. dollar ticked down to a three-month low against peer currencies on Tuesday after slipping overnight on weaker-than-expected new home sales data, while traders hunkered down on bets that the Federal Reserve could start cutting interest rates in the first half of next year. U.S. new home sales fell 5.6% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 679,000 units in October, data showed, below the 723,000 units expected by economists polled by Reuters and sending Treasury yields into a decline. The dollar index, a measure of the greenback against a basket of currencies, was last at 103.11, its lowest since Aug. 31. The dollar was track for a loss of more than 3% in November, its worst performance in a year. Market expectation that the Fed’s rate increase cycle has finally come to an end has also put downward pressure on the greenback. U.S. rate futures showed about a 25% chance that the Fed could begin cutting rates as early as March and increasing to nearly 45% by May, according to the CME FedWatch tool.”Slowing growth momentum, peak rates, rate cuts next year, and unwinding of long positioning: it’s the dynamic feeding a weaker U.S. dollar and driving the entire currency complex,” said Kyle Rodda, senior financial market analyst at Capital.com.”Anything that brings that trend into question will change the outlook; however, the bar for that to happen is high,” he added, saying the dollar likely has more room to fall. Traders are now eyeing U.S. core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index – the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation – this week for more confirmation that inflation in the world’s largest economy is slowing. PCE tops off a slew of other key economic events this week, including Chinese purchasing managers’ index (PMI) data and OPEC+ decision. After delaying its policy meeting to this Thursday, OPEC+ is looking at deepening oil production cuts, according to an OPEC+ source. The Australian dollar briefly touched a fresh three-and-a-half month high of $0.66155 before falling to $0.66105. Data out Tuesday morning showed that domestic retail sales in October declined from the previous month.The kiwi also momentarily hit its highest since Aug. 10 at $0.61055 before sliding back down to $0.61005. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has its monetary policy meeting on Wednesday, where it is expected to keep interest rates steady at 5.50% for the fourth straight time. Elsewhere, the yen held around 148.10 as the dollar’s recent weakening continued to offer the Japanese currency some breathing room. Although the Fed’s job may be finished, expectations are ramping up for the Bank of Japan to at last begin exiting from its ultra-loose monetary policy; more than half of the economists polled by Reuters expect the Japanese central bank to make its move at its April meeting.The dollar “still holds a significant yield advantage over the (yen),” Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG, wrote in a note. “We suspect an aggressive unwind is unlikely unless (dollar/yen) were to break trend channel support 146.50/30 area.”  More

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    Japan business lobby to discuss negative impact of weak yen -Yomiuri

    Keidanren, which is comprised of major companies including big automakers and electronics firms, traditionally favoured a weak yen and have called on the government to stave off sharp yen rises that make Japan’s exports less competitive overseas.Any discussion on the demerits of a weak yen by Keidanren would highlight a shift in how Japan’s business sector views the currency’s movement and its impact on the economy.The informal executive meeting, to be held on Dec. 4, reflects growing concern by some member companies over those demerits, and will likely affect the lobby’s policy proposals in the future, the Yomiuri said without citing sources.The shift in Keidanren’s stance could heighten calls by the business sector for the Bank of Japan to end ultra-low interest rates that have been blamed for accelerating the yen’s decline, the newspaper said.Keidanren was not immediately available to comment when contacted by Reuters. More

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    Bank of Korea to hold rates at 3.50% until at least mid-2024: Reuters poll

    BENGALURU (Reuters) – The Bank of Korea will hold its key policy rate at 3.50% when it meets on Thursday as inflation remains sticky, according to a Reuters poll which also forecast the first rate cut won’t be until the third quarter of 2024.Although the Bank of Korea (BOK) expected a brief rise in inflation in November the figure came in at nearly twice the central bank’s 2.0% target.Signs of a soft landing in Asia’s fourth-largest economy, coupled with a rebound in household debt in one of the most indebted countries in the world, indicate monetary conditions need to remain tight for longer. All 36 economists in the Nov. 21-27 Reuters poll predicted the BOK would leave the base rate at 3.50% on Thursday, its last meeting of the year.”We expect the Bank of Korea to keep its policy rate at 3.50% at its upcoming meeting. The board is also likely to retain a hawkish bias amid persistent concerns about the upside risks to inflation and household debt growth,” noted Krystal Tan, economist at ANZ. “That said, with policy rate settings already in restrictive territory, the bar for a rate hike is high, considering the risk of exacerbating financial stress.”Median forecasts showed rates staying at 3.50% until mid-2024 and the first 25 basis point rate cut in the third quarter of 2024, one quarter later than predicted in an October poll taken before the last meeting.Since a May poll, the prediction for the first rate cut has been pushed back from the end of 2023 to the second half of 2024.Among economists who had a long-term view 85%, or 22 of 26, predicted at least one 25 basis point rate cut by end-September while just 30% expected a cut before July.That puts the BOK roughly in line with its Southeast Asian peers which were also expected to cut rates by end-September. [ID/INT][PH/INT]Medians showed rates at 3.00% by the end of 2024.”We see a high chance that this meeting is their last time making a hawkish-hold decision before shifting to dovish-hold from next year. We see the BOK turning neutral in Q1 2024, dovish in Q2 2024, and cutting in Q3 2024,” noted Kathleen Oh, chief Korea economist at Morgan Stanley. More

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    UK shop price inflation at lowest since June 2022 -BRC

    The British Retail Consortium said annual shop price inflation dropped to 4.3% in the 12 months to November, its weakest since June 2022 and slower than October’s 5.2% rise.It was the sixth month in a row that the pace of price growth weakened.Food price inflation fell to 7.8% from 8.8% on the year but rose 0.3% in November from October.Non-food inflation eased to an annual 2.5% from 3.4%.BRC Chief Executive Helen Dickinson said there was a risk that the fall in inflation could stall or go into reverse because of rising business rates – a property-based tax – plus new regulations and a jump in the minimum wage.Britain’s broader official consumer price inflation peaked at 11.1% in October 2022 and was 4.6% in October this year.The Bank of England has paused its run of interest rate increases after 14 consecutive hikes. But Governor Andrew Bailey and other top officials say it is too early to think about cutting borrowing costs. More