A growing disconnect between the market and economy
WALL Street is currently being supported by expectations that the US economy is strong and will gain even more strength once the Trump administration unveils its fiscal and spending programmes. So far, there has been no inkling of what these policies might be other than plenty of talk that the tax plan will be "phenomenal" and that lots of US jobs will be created.
Despite an absence of clarity on the fiscal front, the guardians of monetary policy in the US Federal Reserve, like the rest of the market, appear to have bought into the idea that massive tax cuts and spending in a robust economy with full employment will result in inflationary pressure. So it has been that over the past…
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Companies & Markets
Binance’s rivals muscle in on Bitcoin trading around the world
BOJ will hike rates if trend inflation accelerates, says Ueda
Malaysia to build region’s largest chip design park in bid for top startup-hub status
British retailer JD Sports to buy US rival Hibbett for US$1.08 billion
Japan’s 7-Eleven convenience chain targets aggressive global growth
Renault Q1 sales rise 1.8%, helped by financing business