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    Mexico’s ruling bloc confirmed supermajority in house, just short in Senate

    MEXICO CITY (Reuters) -Mexico’s electoral authority on Friday confirmed that ruling party Morena and its allies will hold a two-thirds supermajority in the lower house but fall just short of a supermajority in the Senate when the new legislative term begins in September.Electoral authority INE ruled that Morena and its allies secured 364 lower house seats, comfortably exceeding the two-thirds majority of 334 votes needed to amend the constitution without consensus with the opposition.In the Senate, the ruling party will control 83 of the 128 seats, just shy of the two-thirds majority of 85 seats.”The decision of INE’s general council respects the will of the people,” Morena party leader Mario Delgado said on X, pledging to continue the so-called Fourth Transformation political project launched under the current president.The formal ratification of the June 2 election results comes after opposition parties complained that the ruling coalition should have fewer seats.Those objections were based on an interpretation of the electoral system prioritizing representation by party rather than coalition.”The INE neither gives nor takes away congressional or senatorial seats,” INE’s presiding counselor Guadalupe Taddei said during the marathon seven-hour debate. “Only the citizens can do this with their vote.”Taddei added that the body’s actions reflect “our commitment to democracy and the popular will expressed at the ballot box.”The Morena party intends to approve the first part of a series of constitutional changes proposed by outgoing President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador for the period starting Sept. 1.These include a controversial reform of the judiciary that would allow judges and magistrates to be elected by popular vote, a move that has rattled markets. Other amendments aim to abolish autonomous bodies and reform the electoral referee so that its counselors are elected by popular vote and plurinominal deputies are eliminated.These changes are expected before Oct. 1, when Claudia Sheinbaum assumes her role as the first female president in Mexico’s history. More

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    Eli Lilly Alzheimer’s drug to be blocked for use by NHS, The Telegraph reports

    The drug donanemab would be rejected by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), which decides what drugs are available on the NHS, the newspaper reported citing insiders.NHS and NICE declined to comment, while Eli Lilly (NYSE:LLY) did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. NICE is also unlikely to go back on its decision to reject a previous Alzheimer’s drug, lecanemab, the report said. Earlier this week, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) stated that lecanemab’s high cost and intensive monitoring requirements for side effects make it poor value for taxpayers.Lecanemab is the first treatment for Alzheimer’s licensed for use in the country that shows some evidence of slowing the progression of the disease.Donanemab is reported to be even more effective at slowing down the progression of Alzheimer’s disease and was hailed as the “best ever” treatment for the disease by scientists, the Telegraph reported.The MHRA may not approve donanemab due to concerns regarding risk of side-effects, according to the report. Both the drugs have been approved for use in the United States.A decision on donanemab has been delayed, with the regulatory agency initially planning to make a call in July, the same time it was approved for use in the U.S., the report said. More

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    US new home sales rise to highest level in more than a year

    New home sales jumped 10.6% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 739,000 units last month, the highest level since May 2023, the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau said on Friday. It was also the sharpest increase in sales since August 2022.The sales pace for June was revised higher to 668,000 units from a previously reported 617,000 units.Economists polled by Reuters had forecast new home sales, which account for more than 10% of U.S. home sales, to edge up to a rate of 625,000 units.New home sales are counted at the signing of a contract. They, however, can be volatile on a month-to-month basis. Sales increased 5.6% on a year-on-year basis in July.The average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was 6.46% this week, the lowest since May 2023, and more than half a percentage point lower than the same time last year, data from mortgage finance agency Freddie Mac showed. It has eased from a six-month high of 7.22% in early May amid signals from the Federal Reserve that it will deliver a long-awaited interest rate cut in September. That could help to stimulate sales in the future.Other housing data has been mixed. U.S. existing home sales rose more than expected in July, reversing a four-month decline. However, single-family housing starts dropped to a 16-month low in July, likely weighed down by Hurricane Beryl while permits for future construction also edged down. More

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    IMF sees scope for Bank of Japan to keep raising rates

    JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming (Reuters) – The Bank of Japan can raise interest rates gradually as heightening inflation expectations leave further scope to normalise its ultra-loose monetary policy, the International Monetary Fund said on Friday.The speed of further rate increases will be “very data-dependent,” as the BOJ will look at the pace at which inflation, wage growth and inflation expectations heighten in normalising policy, said IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas.Gourinchas said Japan’s inflation is higher than 2% and inflation expectations have started to move towards, or “maybe even a little bit above” the BOJ’s 2% target.As a result, the BOJ is normalising the extremely loose monetary policy it has had for decades, which is “certainly something that we think is a good development for Japan,” he told Reuters in an interview on the sidelines of the annual economic symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.”Certainly in our assessment, there is scope for further normalisation of monetary policy going forward, and policy rates to increase gradually for some time,” he said.The BOJ ended negative interest rates in March and raised its short-term policy rate to 0.25% in July in landmark steps away from a decade-long radical stimulus program.BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda has signaled the bank’s readiness to keep raising interest rates if inflation makes progress toward durably meeting its 2% target, as it projects.While Japan’s economic growth will slow in 2024 from the fiscal stimulus-driven expansion last year, what is important for the BOJ is not just economic activity but inflation, Gourinchas said.Unlike other central banks that focused on taming inflation expectations, the BOJ had to pull them up from multiple decades of too-low levels, he said.”What the BOJ is trying to engineer is a realignment of inflation expectations,” Gourinchas said.”We’re expecting that as inflation expectations remain stable at their new level close to 2%, the BOJ will start normalising policy rates,” he said.The BOJ’s surprise July rate increase and Ueda’s hawkish signal jolted financial markets in August, forcing his deputy to offer dovish reassurances that no hikes would come until markets stabilise.Speaking in parliament on Friday, Governor Ueda reaffirmed the BOJ’s readiness to keep raising rates but with a close eye on the economic fallout from still-unstable markets.Gourinchas said the recent market turbulence was due to a mix of factors including prospects of higher Japanese interest rates, and weak U.S. jobs data that fueled expectations of faster-than-expected rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.Thin market trading during the August holiday season, coupled with a massive unwinding of the yen carry trade, also heightened market volatility, he said.”I think the market overreacted,” he said. “I think a lot of this has been resolved, but we could see other episodes of market volatility as markets are … in a little bit of an uncharted territory” with many central banks starting to ease policy, while the BOJ begins to raise rates, he said. More

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    IMF’s Gourinchas says right for US to cut rates though inflation risk not gone

    JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming (Reuters) – The imminent rate cuts planned by the U.S. Federal Reserve are “in line” with International Monetary Fund advice that has put a premium on ensuring inflation was controlled but now sees risks shifting toward the labor market, IMF economic counsellor Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said on Friday.”What was telegraphed by (Fed chair Jerome) Powell today is very much in line with what we’ve advocated,” Gourinchas said on the sidelines of a Kansas City Fed economic conference. “Inflation has been improving and labor markets have shown signs of cooling … If labor markets are not contributing to inflation pressures anymore … then you might ease a little bit on cooling aggregate demand and bring (the policy rate of interest) back closer to neutral.”The Fed has maintained its benchmark interest rate in the 5.25% to 5.5% range for more than a year, a level policymakers feel is curbing economic activity.In keynote remarks to the conference on Friday, Powell said bluntly that with inflation just a half-point above the Fed’s 2% target and the unemployment rate rising, “the time has come for policy to adjust,” remarks that cemented expectations for an initial rate cut at the Fed’s Sept. 17-18 meeting. Depending on the outcome of an upcoming August jobs report, some economists anticipate the initial cut may even be a larger than usual half-point reduction.The U.S. should not be “complacent” that inflation has disappeared, Gourinchas said, noting that service-sector prices are still rising and that the Fed will have to calibrate the pace and extent of rate cuts with incoming economic data.”There is still some upside risk to inflation,” he said. Yet it was also clear the U.S. job market was cooling, Gourinchas said, though from a position of strength and ongoing economic growth. “I don’t think we are in a situation where recession is imminent” in the U.S., Gourinchas said, while the odds of a soft landing “have increased and that remains our baseline.” More

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    Take Five: Nvidia, let’s see what you’ve got

    Gold’s relentless climb to record highs and a dollar under pressure as U.S. rate cut speculation builds are also in investors’ sights. Here’s your guide to the week ahead in financial markets from Rae Wee in Singapore, Sruthi Shankar in Bangalore, Ira Iosebashvili in New York, Yoruk Bahceli in Amsterdam, and Pratima Desai in London. 1/ NVIDIA, YOU’RE UPInvestor enthusiasm for artificial intelligence could be tested when chipmaker Nvidia reports earnings on Aug. 28. Nvidia’s chips are seen as the gold standard in the AI-space and its shares are up around 150% this year, helping to power the S&P 500 to record highs.But the stock’s stunning, multi-year run and the AI-mania have also drawn comparisons to the dot-com craze that imploded more than two decades ago. Investors’ reaction to disappointing results from megacap names such as Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) last month suggests markets may not be in a forgiving mood, especially when valuations for many companies in the sector are stretched. Data highlights meanwhile include Friday’s U.S. Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, a key inflation gauge tracked by the Federal Reserve.2/ WHEN SEPTEMBER COMES August euro zone inflation numbers on Friday will be key to European Central Bank policymakers deciding whether or not to cut rates in September.The data, preceded by national releases starting on Thursday, follows a small but unexpected rise in July, highlighting a bumpy last mile in curbing inflation. Headline inflation may ease as oil prices have fallen, but focus will remain on the core figure and the dominant services sector, where price growth remains stickier.Any upside surprises may warrant caution, as traders have ramped up ECB rate cut bets in recent weeks. Focus has turned to growth risks, but euro zone business activity showed surprising strength in August. Traders fully price in another 25 basis point rate cut on Sept. 12, and see a high chance of two more moves after that by year-end.3/ HIGH STAKES The stakes are high for the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), which has insisted that interest rates need to stay restrictive for an “extended period” since underlying inflation remains too high for comfort.Wednesday’s July inflation numbers could show headline inflation diving back into the RBA’s 2-3% target band for the first time in three years.And any signs that inflation pressures are abating could pile pressure on the central bank. It has become an outlier globally with a reluctance to lower rates while many peers look to kick off, or have already begun, easing cycles.Investors are also hoping that Wednesday’s data could provide some relief to consumer sentiment, which has taken a hit from the weight of steep borrowing costs.Elsewhere, Tokyo’s August inflation report on Friday potentially offers further clues on Japan’s rate outlook.4/ EURO BULLS The euro is at its highest this year against the dollar, benefiting from recent ructions in global markets. Diverging U.S. and euro area rate expectations are behind its gains. Traders price around 100 bps of Fed rate cuts by year-end, up sharply from before the latest U.S. payrolls data, while only fully pricing two more 25 bps ECB cuts. The question is whether the euro, also at its highest on a trade-weighted basis on record, can sustain its momentum. Germany’s business activity contracted by more than expected in August, a negative sign for Europe’s economic engine, while euro zone wage growth slowed last quarter, supporting the case for an ECB September cut.Euro bulls are a shy bunch, price action in recent years suggests. They may need more convincing of the euro’s rebound before coming out in force. 5/ ALL THAT GLITTERS Gold has hit consecutive records since 2022, and has surged over 20% so far this year. Now $3,000 an ounce beckons. The stars have aligned for the precious metal used primarily to preserve wealth during periods of heightened security risks and political and economic turmoil. Russia’s war on Ukraine triggered gold’s rally in February 2022. Soaring commodity prices in the aftermath fueled inflation, which erodes the value of monetary assets. Middle East tensions and uncertainty from the fast-approaching U.S. Presidential election have spurred further gains.Reinforcing the buy bullion trade is the prospect of U.S. interest rate cuts, pressuring the U.S. currency and boosting gold’s appeal. It has a negative relationship with the dollar.But gold bulls should bear in mind the old adage that “nothing goes up in a straight line” because markets typically “buy the rumour, sell the fact”. More

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    S&P downgrades Kenya on weaker fiscal and debt trajectory

    President William Ruto discarded the government’s finance bill for the year, which contained tax hikes worth 346 billion shillings ($2.69 billion), following the protests that resulted in more than 50 people being killed.    “The downgrade reflects our view that Kenya’s medium-term fiscal and debt outlook will deteriorate following the government’s decision to rescind all tax measures proposed under the 2024/2025 Finance Bill,” S&P said in a statement.    The government has since revised its budget for the 2024/25 financial year (July-June) to cut some spending and has increased the local borrowing target to cover the wider fiscal deficit.The abandoned tax increases were part of an International Monetary Fund-supported programme.     The IMF board is expected to convene next month to approve a $600 million disbursement under Kenya’s $3.6 billion lending programme, which expires next year. “Although immediate external liquidity pressures have receded slightly, Kenya’s structurally large external imbalances remain a key vulnerability,” S&P added. Despite the downgrade, the agency maintained Kenya’s outlook as stable as it expects strong economic growth and continued access to concessional external financing to offset challenges from high interest costs, slow fiscal consolidation, and structural imbalances.     Moody’s (NYSE:MCO) downgraded Kenya’s credit rating further into junk status in July, while Fitch downgraded Kenya’s sovereign rating to “B-” from “B” earlier this month, sending its dollar bonds lower. More

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    Powell says ‘time has come’ for US rate cuts

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