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    As Fed cuts loom, health of US economy could determine markets’ path

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – How stocks, bonds and the dollar perform after the Federal Reserve kicks off its rate-cutting cycle could depend on one factor more than most: the health of the U.S. economy. The Fed is expected to kick off a series of rate cuts on Wednesday, after raising borrowing costs to their highest level in nearly two decades. Markets are pricing in roughly 250 basis points of easing by the end of 2025, LSEG data showed.For investors, a key question may be whether the Fed will cut rates in time to avert a potential economic slowdown.The S&P 500 has slumped an average of 4% in the six months following the first reduction of a rate-cutting cycle, if the economy was in a recession, data from Evercore ISI going back to 1970 showed. That compares to a 14% gain for the S&P 500 when the Fed cut in a non-recessionary period. The index is up 18% in 2024.“If the economy is falling into recession, the rate cuts aren’t enough of a support to offset the move down in corporate profits and the high degree of uncertainty and lack of confidence,” said Keith Lerner, co-chief investment officer at Truist Advisory Services.Treasuries have performed better during recessions, as investors seek the safety of U.S. government bonds. The dollar, meanwhile, tends to rise less during a downturn, though its performance could depend on how the U.S. economy fares in comparison with others.STOCKSRecessions are typically called in hindsight by the National Bureau of Economic Research and for now, economists see little evidence that the U.S. is currently experiencing one.Those conditions bode well for the rally in U.S. stocks, should they persist. “Based on previous easing cycles, our expectation for aggressive rate cuts and no recession would be consistent with strong returns from U.S. equities,” said James Reilly, senior market analyst at Capital Economics, in a report.Still, worries over the economy have jolted asset prices in recent weeks. Weakness in the U.S. labor market has helped fuel sharp swings in the S&P 500, while global growth concerns are reflected in slumping commodity prices, with Brent crude oil trading near its lowest level since late 2021.Uncertainty over whether growth is merely falling back to its long-term trend or showing signs of a more serious slowdown are reflected in futures markets, which in recent days have swung between pricing in a 25- or 50-basis-point cut on Wednesday.The state of the economy is important for investors looking to gauge stock performance over the longer term, as well. The S&P 500 was down an average of nearly 12% one year after an initial cut that took place during a recession, according to a study by Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group.That compares to an average gain of 13% following cuts that came in a non-recessionary period, when the reductions were to “normalize” policy, according to the data, which studies the last 10 easing cycles.“The linchpin to the whole thing is that the economy avoids recession,” said Michael Arone, chief investment strategist for State Street (NYSE:STT) Global Advisors.Overall, the S&P 500 has been 6.6% higher a year after the first rate cut of a cycle — about a percentage point less than its annual average since 1970, Evercore’s data found.Among S&P 500 sectors, consumer staples and consumer discretionary had the best average performance, both rising around 14% a year after the cut, while healthcare rose roughly 12% and technology gained nearly 8%, according to Evercore.Small caps, seen as highly sensitive to signs of an economic turnaround, also outperformed, with the Russell 2000 rising 7.4% over the next year. TREASURIESBonds have been a rewarding bet for investors at the start of rate-cutting cycles. This time around, however, Treasuries have already seen a huge rally, and some investors believe they are unlikely to run much further unless the economy experiences a recession.Treasury yields, which move inversely to bond prices, tend to fall alongside rates when the Fed eases monetary policy. The safe-haven reputation of U.S. government bonds also makes them a popular destination during economic uncertainty. The Bloomberg U.S. Treasury Index returned 6.9% on a median basis 12 months after the first cut, Citi strategists found, but 2.3% in “soft-landing” economic scenarios.The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury has fallen about 20 basis points this year and stands near its lowest level since mid-2023. Further gains in Treasuries may be less certain without a so-called economic hard landing that forces the Fed to cut rates further than anticipated, said Dirk Willer, Citi’s global head of macro and asset allocation strategy.“If you get a hard landing, yes, there’s a lot of money on the table,” Willer said. “If it’s a soft landing, it’s really a bit unclear.”That said, getting in early might be key. The 10-year Treasury yield has fallen a median nine basis points in the month following the first cut in the last 10 rate-cutting cycles and climbed a median 59 basis points a year after the initial cut as investors begin to price an economic recovery, data from CreditSights showed.DOLLARThe U.S. economy and the actions of other central banks have been important elements in determining how the dollar will react to a Fed easing cycle.Recessions often require deeper cuts from the Fed, with falling rates eroding the dollar’s attractiveness to yield-seeking investors.The greenback strengthened a median 7.7% against a trade-weighted basket of currencies a year after the first rate cut when the economy was not in a recession, an analysis by Goldman Sachs of the prior 10 cutting cycles showed. That compares to a 1.8% gain in the same time period when the U.S. was in a downturn.At the same time, the dollar tends to outperform other currencies when the U.S. cuts alongside a number of central banks, according to a separate Goldman Sachs analysis. Rate-cut cycles that see the Fed moving alongside relatively few major banks, on the other hand, often result in weaker dollar performance. The scenario of cutting alongside a number of other central banks appears to be in play now, with the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank all cutting rates.The U.S. dollar index, which measures the greenback’s strength against a basket of currencies, has weakened since late June but is still up about 9% over the past three years.“U.S. growth still stands out a little bit better than most countries,” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment officer at BMO Wealth Management. “Even though the dollar strengthened so much, we wouldn’t expect a meaningful degree of dollar weakness.”That could change if U.S. growth sputters, analysts at BNP Paribas (OTC:BNPQY) wrote.“We think the Fed would be likely to cut by more than other central banks in a potential recession scenario this time around, further eroding the (dollar’s) yield advantage and leaving the currency vulnerable,” they said. (This story has been refiled to correct the graphic link) More

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    Goldman Sachs reiterates bullish view on gold prices amid Fed rate-cut hopes

    Gold prices rose to an all-time high at $2,589.6 an ounce on Monday, supported by a weaker dollar and the prospect of a big rate reduction by the Fed.Markets are currently pricing in a 33% chance of a 25-basis-point U.S. rate cut at the Fed’s Sept. 17-18 meeting, and a 67% chance of a 50-bps cut, the CME FedWatch tool showed.”While we see some tactical downside to gold prices under our economists’ base case of a 25bp Fed cut on Wednesday, we reiterate our long gold trading recommendation and our price target of $2,700/toz by early 2025,” the investment bank said in a note. Goldman Sachs noted that while a structurally higher demand from central banks has reset the relationship at the price level, changes in interest rates continue to drive fluctuations in gold prices.It also indicated that exchange-traded funds backed by physical gold are consistently rising as the Federal Reserve’s policy rate diminishes. More

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    Time to retire the emerging markets brand

    Save over 65%$99 for your first yearFT newspaper delivered Monday-Saturday, plus FT Digital Edition delivered to your device Monday-Saturday.What’s included Weekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysis More

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    Microsoft approves new $60 billion share buyback program

    The tech giant declared a quarterly dividend of $0.83 per share, reflecting an 8 cent, or 10%, increase over the previous quarter.Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) said it will hold its annual shareholders meeting on Dec. 10. In July, the company said it will spend more this fiscal year on AI infrastructure. It reported a 77.6% rise in capital spending in the quarter ended June 30, largely due to AI-related expenses. The company reported a slowdown in growth at its Azure cloud business in the reported quarter but said growth would accelerate in the second half of fiscal 2025.Big tech companies, including Microsoft and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL)’s Google, are facing investor pressure to show a pay off for the billions of dollars they have been investing in AI infrastructure.Microsoft is one of the few big companies that break out AI contributions in their quarterly earnings, as most firms are yet to see a big boost from AI investments.Last month, it had restructured how it reports results for its business units, moving some search and news advertising revenue under the Azure cloud-computing unit.Among other big technology companies, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) unveiled a record $110 billion share buyback program in May after it reported upbeat quarterly results. Shares of Microsoft rose marginally in aftermarket trade. Stock has risen about 15% so far this year. More

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    Morning Bid: Dovish Fed eyed, China’s deflationary forces intensify

    (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets.If deepening gloom around China and a surging Japanese yen are the local market drivers in Asia, the Fed’s upcoming interest rate decision hangs heavily over world markets as growing hopes for a 50 basis point cut push the dollar to new lows for the year.Wall Street lost ground on Monday even as bond yields edged lower, with jitters beginning to bubble up as Wednesday’s Fed decision draws closer.Rates traders are now putting a 60% probability on a half percentage point cut and expect 120 bps of easing over the three remaining policy meetings this year. That effectively implies two of them will deliver 50 bps cuts.This front-loaded dovishness is weighing heavily on the dollar, especially against the yen. The Japanese currency on Monday hit its strongest level since July last year, with the dollar falling below 140.00 yen before regaining that threshold.Indeed the MSCI index for emerging market currencies, which dates back to 2009, hit a lifetime high on Monday.The decline in U.S. implied rates and yields is putting Hong Kong interbank rates under downward pressure too. The overnight Hong Kong interbank offered rate or ‘Hibor’ on Monday hit a one-year low around 2.44%, and one-year Hibor touched its lowest in two years near 4.07%. Amidst all this, China’s outlook continues to darken.A “downward spiral”, reckons SocGen. “From bad to worse” and “a vicious cycle,” says Barclays. “Things could get worse before they get better,” warns Morgan Stanley.These are some of the reactions from analysts at global brokerages to the latest wave of weak economic data that shows not only is the world’s second largest economy in deep trouble, but the global spillover cannot be ignored either.Economists at Goldman Sachs and Citi lowered their 2024 GDP growth forecasts for China to 4.7%, a level notably below Beijing’s target of around 5%. Others may well follow suit, and for most of those that don’t, the risk to their outlook is firmly to the downside.Uniformly weak industrial, consumer and house price data on Saturday followed soft bank lending figures on Friday, bolstering the case for aggressive stimulus to shore up demand and growth. The trouble is few analysts expect Beijing to deliver the scale of fiscal and monetary support required. Some analysts point to the U.S. and European housing crashes in the Global Financial Crisis and say it could be a decade before China fully emerges from its property sector implosion.The Chinese 10-year bond yield fell below 2.05% on Monday for the first time ever, nearing a much more symbolically significant break below 2.00%. The two-year yield around 1.35% is near the lows plumbed at the height of the pandemic. Here are key developments that could provide more direction to Asian markets on Tuesday:- India wholesale price inflation (August)- Indonesia trade (August)- Japan tertiary index (July) More

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    Canada’s Trudeau faces crucial election test as questions over leadership loom

    OTTAWA (Reuters) – Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s ruling Liberals, trailing badly in the polls, face a struggle on Monday to retain a once-safe seat in a special election where failure to win could boost calls for a new party leader.The election in the Montreal parliamentary constituency of LaSalle—Emard—Verdun was called to replace a Liberal legislator who quit. Normally Trudeau’s party could count on an easy win there but surveys suggest the race is tight. If the Liberals lose, the focus will fall squarely on Trudeau, who has become increasingly unpopular after almost nine years in office.Unusually, some Liberal legislators are breaking ranks to call for change at the top. Alexandra Mendes, a Liberal lawmaker who represents a Quebec constituency, said many of her constituents wanted Trudeau to go.”I didn’t hear it from two, three people – I heard it from dozens and dozens of people,” she told public broadcaster Radio-Canada last week. “He’s no longer the right leader.”Trudeau, who insists he will lead the party into an election that must be held by the end of October 2025, suggested voters on Monday would be drawn to vote by anger over elevated prices and a housing crisis.”Canadians right now are facing difficulties with the high cost of living. They are very frustrated,” he said last Wednesday when questioned about the vote and his future.Questions about Trudeau’s future intensified in June after the party lost a safe seat in Toronto in a special election.Polls suggest that the Liberals will lose badly to the right-of-center Conservatives of Pierre Poilievre in the next federal election. A Leger poll last week put the Conservatives on 45% public support, a level of broad support rarely seen in Canada, with the Liberals in second place on 25%.In the 2021 general election, the Liberals won LaSalle—Emard—Verdun with 43% of the vote, far ahead of the separatist Bloc Quebecois on 22% and the New Democratic Party on 19%. Polls now show the three parties are neck and neck in the constituency.Voting ends at 9 p.m. (0100 GMT). Early results would normally be ready within 90 minutes, but around 80 activists, angry that Trudeau broke a 2015 promise to change Canada’s voting system, are also on the ballot. That means counting votes will likely take several hours longer than usual.Trudeau’s popularity has sagged as voters struggle with a surge in the cost of living and a housing crisis that has been fueled in part by a spike in arrivals of temporary residents like foreign students and workers.Poilievre is promising to axe a federal carbon tax he says is making life unaffordable and last week vowed to cap immigration limits until more homes could be built.Liberals concede the polls look grim but say they will redouble efforts to portray Poilievre as a supporter of the Make America Great Again movement of former U.S. President Donald Trump as an election approaches.Poilievre, an acerbic career politician who often insults his opponents, also says he would defund CBC, Canada’s public broadcaster. In April he was ejected from the House of Commons after he called Trudeau “a wacko.” More