CONTENT:
Central banks in the Czech Republic and Colombia are considering interest rate cuts as geopolitical tensions escalate and economic uncertainty grows. In the Czech Republic, policymakers may have room to make an interest-rate cut this year, but more evidence is needed that inflationary pressures are easing, according to a member of the central bank's board (Source 1). In Colombia, the finance ministry has stepped up dollar purchases in the spot market since Friday, after the peso hit its strongest level in almost five years, putting pressure on the Colombian currency (Source 7).
Meanwhile, the UK government is investing in the future workforce by offering free AI training to adults. The online lessons give advice on things such as how to prompt chatbots or complete admin tasks (Source 2).
In the United States, President Trump said the government will 'de-escalate' in Minnesota following the shooting of Alex Pretti over the weekend. Minnesota officials and locals renewed calls for Trump to end his immigration operation there (Source 5).
The political landscape is not the only area experiencing change. In the world of finance, bankers and lawyers are jostling for fees to help Scotland’s government launch its debut bond program (Source 9). In Kenya, the government has accumulated sufficient Chinese currency to service yuan-denominated debt after converting three dollar loans into renminbi (Source 10).
Thailand is tightening controls on large cash withdrawals after flagging two unusual transactions of more than $6 million apiece (Source 11). Motability Operations Group Plc is looking to sell debt publicly for the first time since scrutiny of its business model prompted government intervention (Source 12). Japan's 40-year government bond auction drew stronger demand than its 12-month average, easing immediate concerns about long-term debt (Source 13).
Standard Chartered's Global Head of G10 FX Research Steven Englander shares his analysis on how US policy uncertainty is adding a risk premium to holding the US dollar (Source 14). Bolivia's new government is canceling a planned zinc project awarded to a Chinese consortium and will demand that another Chinese firm fix shortcomings in a steel-making complex (Source 15). Japan's Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance Co. is looking for the right time to buy more Japan super-long bonds (Source 16).
Campaigners have raised concerns that benefits calculators can leave some people confused and in a dire financial state (Source 17). The government sets out proposals to address this issue as data finds vet prices rose at nearly twice the inflation rate (Source 19).
Bond traders are ramping up bets on a dovish policy shift at the Federal Reserve as BlackRock Inc.’s chief investment officer Rick Rieder is gaining momentum to succeed Jerome Powell (Source 20).
Sources:
Czech Policymaker Waits for Right Moment for One More Rate Cut
Government offers UK adults free AI training for work
Starmer speaks to Burnham after by-election row
Minnesota congresswoman Ilhan Omar attacked with 'unknown liquid' during town hall
Trump says government will 'de-escalate' in Minnesota following Pretti shooting
Workers Party of Britain pick by-election candidate
Colombia Government Adds to Dollar Holdings, Pressuring the Peso
CSG’s IPO Shows How Bankers Adapt to World Events Wrecking Deals
Bankers and Lawyers Jostle for Roles in Scotland’s Debut Bonds
Kenya Railway Loans Swap Fuels China’s Plan to Globalize Yuan
Thailand Tightens Scrutiny of Cash Transactions After Millions Withdrawn
Motability Sells Debt for the First Time Since Drawing Scrutiny
Japan 40-Year Bond Sale Sees Firmer Demand Than 12-Month Average
Standard Chartered's Englander on Dollar Slump
Bolivia Cancels Chinese Zinc Project, Demands Steel Plant Fixes
Meiji Yasuda Ready to Buy More Japan Super-Long Bonds by March
Vulnerable missing out on benefits due to online tool
Dollar Slumps Ahead of Fed as Stocks, Gold Rally: Markets Wrap
Vets may have to publish prices of common pet treatments
Bond Traders Target Dovish Fed Pick as Rieder’s Momentum Builds
CONTENT:
Central banks in the Czech Republic and Colombia are considering interest rate cuts as geopolitical tensions escalate and economic uncertainty grows. In the Czech Republic, policymakers may have room to make an interest-rate cut this year, but more evidence is needed that inflationary pressures are easing, according to a member of the central bank's board (Source 1). In Colombia, the finance ministry has stepped up dollar purchases in the spot market since Friday, after the peso hit its strongest level in almost five years, putting pressure on the Colombian currency (Source 7).
Meanwhile, the UK government is investing in the future workforce by offering free AI training to adults. The online lessons give advice on things such as how to prompt chatbots or complete admin tasks (Source 2).
In the United States, President Trump said the government will 'de-escalate' in Minnesota following the shooting of Alex Pretti over the weekend. Minnesota officials and locals renewed calls for Trump to end his immigration operation there (Source 5).
The political landscape is not the only area experiencing change. In the world of finance, bankers and lawyers are jostling for fees to help Scotland’s government launch its debut bond program (Source 9). In Kenya, the government has accumulated sufficient Chinese currency to service yuan-denominated debt after converting three dollar loans into renminbi (Source 10).
Thailand is tightening controls on large cash withdrawals after flagging two unusual transactions of more than $6 million apiece (Source 11). Motability Operations Group Plc is looking to sell debt publicly for the first time since scrutiny of its business model prompted government intervention (Source 12). Japan's 40-year government bond auction drew stronger demand than its 12-month average, easing immediate concerns about long-term debt (Source 13).
Standard Chartered's Global Head of G10 FX Research Steven Englander shares his analysis on how US policy uncertainty is adding a risk premium to holding the US dollar (Source 14). Bolivia's new government is canceling a planned zinc project awarded to a Chinese consortium and will demand that another Chinese firm fix shortcomings in a steel-making complex (Source 15). Japan's Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance Co. is looking for the right time to buy more Japan super-long bonds (Source 16).
Campaigners have raised concerns that benefits calculators can leave some people confused and in a dire financial state (Source 17). The government sets out proposals to address this issue as data finds vet prices rose at nearly twice the inflation rate (Source 19).
Bond traders are ramping up bets on a dovish policy shift at the Federal Reserve as BlackRock Inc.’s chief investment officer Rick Rieder is gaining momentum to succeed Jerome Powell (Source 20).
Sources:
Czech Policymaker Waits for Right Moment for One More Rate Cut
Government offers UK adults free AI training for work
Starmer speaks to Burnham after by-election row
Minnesota congresswoman Ilhan Omar attacked with 'unknown liquid' during town hall
Trump says government will 'de-escalate' in Minnesota following Pretti shooting
Workers Party of Britain pick by-election candidate
Colombia Government Adds to Dollar Holdings, Pressuring the Peso
CSG’s IPO Shows How Bankers Adapt to World Events Wrecking Deals
Bankers and Lawyers Jostle for Roles in Scotland’s Debut Bonds
Kenya Railway Loans Swap Fuels China’s Plan to Globalize Yuan
Thailand Tightens Scrutiny of Cash Transactions After Millions Withdrawn
Motability Sells Debt for the First Time Since Drawing Scrutiny
Japan 40-Year Bond Sale Sees Firmer Demand Than 12-Month Average
Standard Chartered's Englander on Dollar Slump
Bolivia Cancels Chinese Zinc Project, Demands Steel Plant Fixes
Meiji Yasuda Ready to Buy More Japan Super-Long Bonds by March
Vulnerable missing out on benefits due to online tool
Dollar Slumps Ahead of Fed as Stocks, Gold Rally: Markets Wrap
Vets may have to publish prices of common pet treatments
Bond Traders Target Dovish Fed Pick as Rieder’s Momentum Builds