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Stocks wavered and were mostly flat at the close. Bond yields were back up, with the 2-year reaching its highest 3 p.m. ...
10/18/2023

Stocks wavered and were mostly flat at the close. Bond yields were back up, with the 2-year reaching its highest 3 p.m. level since 2006.

Earlier, retail sales came in hotter than expected. And Nvidia stock fell after the U.S. said it would further restrict chip exports to China.

Three banks posted earnings results, with Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, and Bank of New York Mellon all topping Wall Street expectations. Pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson's first earnings since spinning out Kenvue also beat forecasts.

United Airlines said fourth-quarter earnings would be hurt by the Israel-Hamas War and fuel costs.

Stocks fell Wednesday as investors kept an eye on the federal debt ceiling debate in Washington in the final trading day...
06/01/2023

Stocks fell Wednesday as investors kept an eye on the federal debt ceiling debate in Washington in the final trading day of May.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average
traded 134.51 points lower, or 0.41%, to end at 32,908.27. The S&P 500
dipped 0.61% to close at 4,179.83. The Nasdaq Composite
slipped 0.63%, finishing at 12,935.29.

The deal, which was reached over the weekend by President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, cleared a major test Tuesday night after advancing to the House floor following a 7-6 vote in the House Rules Committee. The floor vote is expected to take place Wednesday evening. “I think we have the votes to pass this today,” said Rep. Patrick McHenry, a GOP negotiator on the debt deal, on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” Wednesday morning.

Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research, said a debt ceiling deal will likely pass before the U.S. would default, but investors are wondering if more changes and time are needed before an official agreement can be reached. Once a bill is approved, he said market participants will shift focus to the June Federal Reserve policy meeting.

“Some investors are worried that the high-decibel, dissenting fringes might end up causing this vote to fail and require some adjustments before it ends up passing,” Stovall said. “People are taking whatever profits they can ahead of the vote tonight.”

May 28 (Reuters) - Global investors are gaming out how a tentative deal to raise the United States debt ceiling could ri...
05/29/2023

May 28 (Reuters) - Global investors are gaming out how a tentative deal to raise the United States debt ceiling could ripple through markets, as lawmakers strive to pass the agreement through Congress before a June 5 deadline.

A deal to lift the $31.4 trillion debt limit announced by the White House and House Republicans late Saturday would avert a catastrophic U.S. default and boost overall appetite for risk while also buoying some of the sectors that have been left behind in this year’s tech-led rally, such as cyclical stocks and small caps, investors said.

May 12 (Reuters) - Global equity funds witnessed a fourth successive weekly outflow in the week ended May 10, hit by dea...
05/14/2023

May 12 (Reuters) - Global equity funds witnessed a fourth successive weekly outflow in the week ended May 10, hit by deadlock over the U.S. debt ceiling and lingering worries over an economic slowdown.

According to Refinitiv Lipper, global equity funds saw $4.9 billion worth of outflows, which was the fourth consecutive outflow. U.S. equity funds had outflows worth $5.7 billion, and Asia and European funds had modest inflows of $1.1 billion and $0.59 billion, respectively.

A Trader reacts as a screen displays the Fed rate announcement on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New...
05/06/2023

A Trader reacts as a screen displays the Fed rate announcement on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., May 3, 2023. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
NEW YORK, May 4 (Reuters) - The end of a market-punishing rate hiking cycle may be in sight, but uncertainty over stock valuations and the economic outlook is keeping investors on alert for more turbulence ahead.

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday signaled it may pause interest rate increases after raising rates by 500 basis points over the last 14 months to fight inflation in its most aggressive monetary policy tightening since the 1980s.

More than a month after Silicon Valley Bank collapsed, the Federal Reserve is considering expanding oversight to prevent...
04/26/2023

More than a month after Silicon Valley Bank collapsed, the Federal Reserve is considering expanding oversight to prevent some mid-sized banks from covering up losses on their securities holdings.

The sudden collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank last month sent shockwaves through the global financial industry before regulators began considering changes. If passed, it would reverse the Fed's decision to loosen regulatory rules in 2019 and apply restrictions currently applied only to the largest and most complex financial institutions to manage mid-sized banks.

In total, regulators are considering extending the tougher restrictions to about 30 banks with assets between $100 billion and $700 billion. Specific proposals could be announced as early as this summer, with changes to be phased in over the next few years.

Regional banks such as U.S. Bancorp and PNC Financial Services Group could be affected and forced to raise capital. They may respond to regulatory changes by cutting back on buybacks, retaining more earnings or raising capital from investors.

The aforementioned Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Barr once hinted after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank that a series of stricter regulatory rules will be introduced, which will enhance the resilience of the financial system. He has said, for example, that SVB's capital levels don't necessarily reflect unrealized losses on certain securities.

Under regulations introduced after the 2008 financial crisis, banks with more than $250 billion in assets must factor unrealized gains and losses on "available-for-sale" securities into their capital ratios. But smaller regional banks would not have to, arguing that such a move would introduce excessive volatility to their capital metrics. Larger regional banks were also exempted in 2019.

Changes being considered by the Fed could reverse that, meaning that unrealized losses would also reduce banks' capital levels.

"Available-for-sale" securities played a major role in the collapse of Silicon Valley banks. On March 9, Silicon Valley Bank announced that it had sold a large number of securities, resulting in a loss of nearly $2 billion, and said it would sell shares to raise funds. That has sparked shareholder concerns about dilution and possible unrealized losses in the bank's books.

Silicon Valley Bank shares plummeted, depositors withdrew $42 billion in deposits the next day, and regulators had to take control of the bank. The bank has larger unrealized losses in another class of securities that the bank has said it will hold to maturity. These losses were neither reflected in the bank's financial statements nor recognized by regulatory capital.

Proponents of changing the capital rules on unrealized losses on banks’ “available-for-sale” securities say it would force Silicon Valley Bank to address the problem earlier when interest rates start to rise and the value of the securities it holds falls.

But banks say the change could lead to higher government borrowing costs and mortgage rates. The rule would require banks to hold more capital, which, combined with possible restrictions on the securities they plan to hold to maturity, could instead prompt banks to stop buying long-term Treasury and mortgage-backed securities, they said.

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