Category Archives: Business

Home prices cooled at the fastest rate in index history

A ‘for sale’ sign is displayed outside a single family home on September 22, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.

Allison Dinner | Getty Images

U.S. home prices cooled in July at the fastest rate in the history of the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Index, according to a report released Tuesday.

Home prices in July were still higher than they were a year ago, but cooled significantly from June gains. Prices nationally rose 15.8% over July 2021, well below the 18.1% increase in the previous month, according to the report.

The 10-City composite, which tracks prices in major metropolitan areas such as New York and Boston, climbed 14.9% year over year, down from 17.4% in June. The 20-City composite, which adds regions such as the Seattle metro area and greater Detroit, gained 16.1%, down from 18.7% in the previous month. July’s year-over-year gains were lower compared with June in each of the cities covered by the index.

“July’s report reflects a forceful deceleration,” wrote Craig J. Lazzara, managing director at S&P DJI in a release, noting the difference in the annual gains in June and July. The 2.3 percentage point “difference between those two monthly rates of gain is the largest deceleration in the history of the index.”

Tampa, Florida, Miami and Dallas saw the highest annual gains among the 20 cities in July, with increases of 31.8%, 31.7% and 24.7%, respectively. Washington, D.C., Minneapolis and San Francisco saw the smallest gains, but were still well above year-ago levels.

Another recent report from the National Association of Realtors showed home prices softening dramatically from June to July. Prices usually fall during that time, due to the strong seasonality of the housing market, but the decline was three times the average decline historically.

The share of homes with price cuts reached about 20% in August, the same as in 2017, according to Realtor.com.

“For homeowners planning to list, today’s market is significantly different than the one from even 3 weeks ago,” said George Ratiu, senior economist and manager of economic research at Realtor.com.

Home prices are dropping because affordability has weakened dramatically due to fast-rising mortgage rates. The average rate on the popular 30-year fixed mortgage started this year around 3%, but by June had briefly surpassed 6%. It remained in the high 5% range throughout July and is now edging toward 7%, making the average monthly payment about 70% higher than it was a year ago.

“As the Federal Reserve continues to move interest rates upward, mortgage financing has become more expensive, a process that continues to this day. Given the prospects for a more challenging macroeconomic environment, home prices may well continue to decelerate,” Lazzara said.

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Best Buy, Home Depot Lock Up Goods to Fight Theft

Shoppers are finding more empty space on store shelves, but not because the retailer is out of stock. In many cases, the items are locked away to prevent theft.

At a

Best Buy Co.

BBY -5.03%

store in the suburbs of Houston, hundreds of items including Bose speakers and Fitbit activity trackers have been replaced by small blue signs that read, “This product kept in secured location,” and ask shoppers to find store workers for help.

“There used to be a lot more on the floor itself than locked up in cages,” said

Gary Pearce,

a 47-year-old manager at a disaster restoration company who shops in the store weekly.

The store is a sign of an endemic challenge for retailers: how to stop theft without shrinking profits or inconveniencing shoppers. Retailers have long dealt with theft, and frequency is down from a peak last winter for some, said retail executives. But theft attempt levels are higher than they were before the pandemic.

Many large retailers, including

Home Depot Inc.,

HD -1.61%

have been locking up more items while testing other solutions. They track high-risk goods and lock up items in regions or stores being hit hardest, retail executives say.

Best Buy

BBY -5.03%

says it isn’t locking up more items overall than in the past, but continues to do so where needed.

It is a tactic that risks annoying customers and investors. In July a Best Buy analyst recommended selling the company’s stock after he observed conditions in dozens of stores and found items locked up or missing from shelves.

At Best Buy stores, less than 5% of its products are locked up or in backrooms for theft-protection reasons, about the same percentage as previous years. A Best Buy store in Lone Tree, Colo.



Photo:

David Zalubowski/Associated Press

“Putting products in cages certainly deters theft, but it probably hinders sales,” said R5 Capital CEO

Scott Mushkin

in the report titled “Heartbreaking.” Some stores, like one in Danbury, Conn., were in good shape, said the report, while others were messy or didn’t have enough items easily available for shoppers to buy.

Best Buy declined to comment on the research.

Around $69.9 billion worth of products were stolen from retailers in 2019, according to the most recent data from the Retail Industry Leaders Association, which surveyed members.

Theft surged after stores reopened early in the pandemic, retail industry executives say. In part, the rush to buy more online during that period led to more demand online for stolen goods, they say. In some cases stores have been understaffed due to the tight labor market or staffing choices, which means fewer watchful eyes, say some executives. In addition, well-organized theft groups working regionally have become prevalent, making the problem harder to solve than run-of-the-mill shoplifting.

Many retailers use a risk algorithm to determine which items to lock up and in what locations. A high-value item that is frequently stolen is a good candidate, say executives. Retailers often try other deterrents first, like moving a product closer to staffed registers, attaching an alarm that is removed at checkout or using more visible security staff.

Less-expensive items can get similar treatment. “For a store to be locking things up like toothpaste, Spam or honey, they would have had to have been repeatedly targeted over a period of time,” said

Ben Dugan,

director of organized retail crime at

CVS Health Corp.

and president of the Coalition of Law Enforcement and Retail, a group that facilitates planning between retailers and law enforcement.

Home Depot

has been locking up more products during the past 12 months as a stopgap while testing more customer-friendly, higher-tech solutions, according to the company.

“It’s a triage-type scenario. It’s stop the bleeding and give yourself some time,” said

Scott Glenn,

vice president of asset protection at Home Depot.

Overall theft attempts at Home Depot continue to rise compared with before the pandemic, Mr. Glenn said. Shoppers don’t like when items are locked and Home Depot tries to avoid it, he said. But after a high-theft item is locked up, sales gradually go up because the store stays more consistently in-stock, Mr. Glenn said. In stores where Home Depot has aggressive theft deterrents, it has reduced loss to theft, he said.

Best Buy has long locked up some products as a large retailer of high-value electronics, say executives. Across all U.S. stores, less than 5% of its products are locked up or in backrooms for theft-protection reasons, about the same percentage as previous years, said

Damien Harmon,

executive vice president of omnichannel for the company.

Included in the 5% figures is a tactic Best Buy started using last winter as retail theft jumped, he said. The company replaced some products on shelves with QR codes so shoppers could scan, then head to registers to pay and pick up the product.

In some locations including the Houston Best Buy—which sits in an area where many local stores face elevated levels of crime, according to data from the local police department—the share of locked items can be higher. Shopper Mr. Pearce said he understood the extreme measures given the threat of theft.

Best Buy’s store inventory is being held differently than it has in the past, with less on floors due to more buying online, said Mr. Harmon. Products are brought to shoppers directly, which has the added benefit of also reducing theft, said Mr. Harmon.

After an item is locked, Best Buy watches sales trends and doesn’t get many comments about products being locked up, said Mr. Harmon. The company is also experimenting with training store staff to stand near high-theft items, he said. Its internal customer experience scores for stores are at a 15-year high, said a spokeswoman.

InVue, a Charlotte, N.C., company that sells retailers locked glass cabinets, tracking sensors and software, late last year started getting requests from retailers asking for more customer-friendly options, said

Chris Gibson,

InVue’s chief product and marketing officer.

InVue is pitching more automated solutions that are more aesthetically pleasing or make it easier for store workers or shoppers to unlock a product quickly. Locking down products “became this draconian thing” during the pandemic, said Mr. Gibson. “A lot of our partners are saying, maybe that was a bridge too far.”

Browsing videogames at the local Best Buy used to be fun, said

Zion Grassl,

a 30-year-old video producer for a videogame website. Over the summer his local Best Buy in Eugene, Ore., removed the physical videogames from store shelves, he said, swapped with photocopy images of the front of the box that provide less information about the game.

Mr. Grassl said he understands the need to protect products from theft, but the change ruins the experience of browsing for something you didn’t know you needed.

“You still have this physical representation to look at, but it’s almost like they don’t want you to come in anymore,” he said.

Best Buy declined to comment on Mr. Grassl’s views.

Write to Sarah Nassauer at Sarah.Nassauer@wsj.com and Benoît Morenne at benoit.morenne@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Keurig Dr Pepper, CSX, Li Auto and more

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Keurig Dr Pepper — The consumer stock fell 1.5% premarket after Goldman Sachs downgraded the stock to neutral from a buy rating. The Wall Street firm said it sees increased risk to Keurig’s margins as commodity inflation, especially related to coffee, remains elevated.

related investing news

Here are Tuesday’s biggest analyst calls: FedEx, McDonald’s, Lucid and more

Lucid Group — Shares of the electric vehicle player jumped 2.7% in premarket trading after Cantor Fitzgerald initiated coverage with an overweight rating. The firm said Lucid’s luxury and premium vehicles provide greater efficiency, longer range, faster charging and more space relative to its peers.

Norfolk Southern, CSX — Shares of the railroad companies declined more than 1% each after UBS downgraded the duo, citing a deteriorating macro backdrop. The Wall Street firm said it will be hard for Norfolk and CSX to achieve the consensus 25% volume growth going forward.

Li Auto — Shares of the Chinese EV maker edged up 0.5% premarket, even after the company cut its third-quarter delivery guidance by 2,500 vehicles or 9%. The company said the downward revision was due to supply chain constraints.

Amazon, Apple, Microsoft — Big Tech names Amazon, Apple, Alphabet and Microsoft all traded at least 1% higher premarket, a possible rebound from Monday’s sell-off. Treasury yields retreated Tuesday morning after the multi-year highs hit in the previous session put pressure on tech names.

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Cryptoverse: Bitcoin miners get stuck in a bear pit

A bitcoin representation is seen in an illustration picture taken at La Maison du Bitcoin in Paris, France, June 23, 2017. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

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Sept 27 (Reuters) – Spare a thought for the beleaguered bitcoin miner.

In late 2021, miners were the toast of the town with a surefire path to profit: hook powerful computers up to cheap power, crack fiendishly complex maths puzzles and then sell newly minted coins on the booming market.

A year’s a long time in crypto.

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Global revenue from bitcoin mining has dropped to $17.2 million a day amid a crypto winter and global energy crisis, down about 72% from last November when miners were racking up $62 million a day, according to data from Blockchain.com.

“Bitcoin miners have continued to watch margins compress – the price of bitcoin has fallen, mining difficulty has risen and energy prices have soared,” said Joe Burnett, head analyst at Blockware Solutions.

That’s put serious pressure on some players who bought expensive mining machines, or rigs, banking on rising bitcoin prices to recoup their investment.

Bitcoin is trading at around $19,000 and has failed to break above $25,000 since August, let alone regain November’s all-time high of $69,000.

At the same time, the process of solving puzzles to mine tokens has become more difficult as more miners have come online. This means they must devour more computing power, further upping operating costs, especially for those without long-term power pricing agreements.

Bitcoin miners’ profit for one terahash per second of computing power has fluctuated between $0.119 and $0.070 a day since July, down from $0.45 in November last year and around its lowest levels for two years.

The grim state of affairs could be here to stay, too: Luxor’s Hashrate Index, which measures mining revenue potential, has fallen almost 70% so far this year.

Reuters Graphics

2140: THE LAST BITCOIN

It’s been painful for miners.

Shares of Marathon Digital (MARA.O), Riot Blockchain (RIOT.O) and Valkyrie Bitcoin Miners ETF (WGMI.O) have sunk more than 60% this year, for example, while crypto-mining data center operator Compute North filed for bankruptcy last week.

Yet mining is ultimately a long-term proposition – the last bitcoin is expected be mined in 2140, more than a century away – and some spy opportunity in the gloom.

“The best time to get in is when market’s low, the same mining rigs that went for $10,000 earlier this year you can get that for 50% to 75% off right now,” said William Szamosszegi, CEO of Sazmining Inc which is planning to open a renewable-energy powered bitcoin mining operation.

Indeed, many miners are cutting back on buying rigs, forcing makers to cut prices.

For instance, the popular S19J Pro rig sold for $10,100 in January on average, but now sells for $3,200, analysts at Luxor said, also noting prices for bulk orders of some mining machines had fallen by 10% in just the past week.

Chris Kline, co-founder of crypto investment platform Bitcoin IRA, said miners would have to be “hyper-focused” on energy efficiency, both to bring costs down and to avoid any repercussions from climate change-related regulations.

“From managing their balance sheet, processing units and energy costs, miners will look to stay afloat regardless of current market conditions,” he added.

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Reporting by Lisa Pauline Mattackal and Medha Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Tom Wilson and Pravin Char

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Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.

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World stocks edge above Nov 2020 lows, sterling recovers some ground

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  • Dollar eases from 20-year highs reached Monday
  • German 10-year bond yields hit near 11-year highs
  • Oil rallies from Monday’s nine-month lows

LONDON/HONG KONG, Sept 27 (Reuters) – World stocks picked up from 21-month lows on Tuesday and sterling rallied after hitting record lows versus the dollar a day earlier on UK plans for tax cuts, as market slides ran out of steam.

U.S. S&P futures bounced 0.94% after Wall Street fell deeper into a bear market on Monday, benchmark 10-year Treasury yields dipped from the previous session’s 12-year high and the dollar eased from 20-year highs on a basket of currencies.

Markets remain nervous, however, after U.S. Federal Reserve officials on Monday said their priority remained controlling domestic inflation. read more

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“U.S. rate expectations have increased fairly significantly,” said Andrew Hardy, investment manager at Momentum Global Investment Management, though he added that “there’s a huge amount of bearishness already priced into markets”.

Markets are pricing in a 76% probability of a further 75 basis point move at the next Federal Reserve meeting in November.

Central bank speakers on Tuesday include Fed chair Jerome Powell and ECB president Christine Lagarde.

The MSCI world equity index (.MIWD00000PUS) rose 0.29% after hitting its lowest since Nov 2020 on Monday. European stocks gained more than 1% and Britain’s FTSE (.FTSE) rose 0.6%.

Sterling collapsed to a record low $1.0327 on Monday as the government tax cut plans announced on Friday came on top of huge energy subsidies.

The British currency recovered 4.6% from that low to $1.0801 on Tuesday.

After the pound’s plunge, the Bank of England said it would not hesitate to change interest rates and was monitoring markets “very closely”. read more

Bank of England Chief Economist Huw Pill will speak on a panel at 1100 GMT.

A lack of confidence in the government’s strategy and its funding also hammered gilts on Friday and again on Monday.

The yield on five-year gilts rose as much as 100 basis points in two trading days, though it slipped off the highs on Tuesday.

“(It) is definitely something that’s unfolding…probably we’re only at a certain initial stage of seeing how the market digests that kind of information,” said Yuting Shao, macro strategist at State Street Global Markets.

“Of course the tax cut plan itself was really aimed to stimulate growth, reduce household burdens, but it does raise the question of what the implications are in terms of the monetary policies.”

Spillover from Britain kept other assets on edge.

Bond selling in Japan pushed yields up to the Bank of Japan’s ceiling and prompted more unscheduled buying from the central bank in response.

The German 10-year bond yield briefly hit a new nearly 11-year high of 2.142%.

Ten-year U.S. bond yields dropped 3.2 bps after reaching a high on Monday of 3.933%.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) hit a fresh two-year low before bouncing 0.5%. Japan’s Nikkei (.N225) was up 0.5%.

The dollar index eased 0.13% to 113.72, after touching 114.58 on Monday, its strongest since May 2002.

The European single currency was up 0.24% on the day at $0.9629 after hitting a 20-year low a day ago.

Oil rose more than 1% after plunging to nine-month lows a day earlier, amid indications that producer alliance OPEC+ may enact output cuts to avoid a further collapse in prices.

U.S. crude gained 1.4% to $77.70 a barrel. Brent crude rose 1.27% to $85.20 per barrel.

Gold , which hit a 2-1/2 year low on Monday, rose 0.8% to $1,634 an ounce.

Bitcoin broke above $20,000 for the first time in about a week, as cryptocurrencies bounced, along with other risk-sensitive assets. read more

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Reporting by Xie Yu; Editing by Edmund Klamann, Muralikumar Anantharaman and Raissa Kasolowsky

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Stock futures rise more than 1% after S&P 500, Dow close at lowest levels since 2020

Stock futures were higher on Tuesday morning after the market started the week by continuing its dramatic September decline.

S&P 500 futures gained 1.42% and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 1.6%. Those tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 379 points, or 1.27%.

The move in futures comes after five straight days of losses for stocks, with the S&P 500 Monday closing at its lowest level of 2022. The Dow dropped more than 300 points on Monday, putting it in a bear market after falling more than 20% below its record high.

Technical indicators show that the selling has been historic. According to Bespoke Investment Group, the 10-day advance decline line for the S&P 500 has hit a record low, meaning market breadth is at its worst level in at least 32 years.

The latest round of selling appears to have several catalysts, including an aggressive Federal Reserve and surging interest rates, which in turn have roiled currency markets. On Monday, the British pound slid to a record low against the dollar, unnerving investors on both sides of the Atlantic.

“Typically, US investors wouldn’t care too much about something like this, and especially more recently. And so this to me says that now there is this fear that is gripping investors a lot more than it did before. That in turn will lead to a capitulation moment where we really are at a bottom,” said Max Gokhman, CIO at AlphaTrAI.

On Tuesday, investors will get several new pieces of economic data, including September consumer confidence, August durable goods orders and July home prices. Wall Street has grown increasingly concerned that the Fed’s six-month-long inflation fight will push the economy into a recession.

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Why is the British pound tanking as the US dollar soars? | Business and Economy

As the British pound plummets in value, the US dollar is flying high.

Against a tumultuous backdrop that includes the Ukraine war, soaring prices and China’s COVID lockdowns, sharp fluctuations of some of the world’s major currencies are injecting new uncertainty into the global economic outlook.

Why is the British pound in freefall?

On Monday, the pound sank to a record low against the United States dollar as investors rushed to sell the currency and government bonds in a major vote of no confidence in new Prime Minister Liz Truss’s economic plans, which include large tax cuts funded by steep increases in government borrowing.

The pound at one point in Asian trading sank as low as $1.0327, surpassing the previous record low reached in 1985, before making back some of its value.

The price of 5-year UK bonds — through which investors loan money to the government — recorded the sharpest fall since at least 1991.

Under Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng’s “mini budget” announced on Friday, the UK is proposing the biggest tax cuts in 50 years, including abolishing the 45 percent tax rate on incomes over 150,000 pounds ($162,000).

The tax cuts, along with a plan to support household’s rising energy bills, will require the government to borrow an extra 72 billion pounds ($77.7bn) in the next six months alone.

UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng has proposed the biggest tax cuts in 50 years [File: Maja Smiejkowska/Reuters]

As with other goods and services, the value of most of the world’s major currencies operates on the principle of supply and demand.

When demand for a particular currency is high, the price goes up and vice versa.

The pound’s plummeting value indicates that investors are concerned about the UK’s ability to manage so much extra debt, especially as rising interest rates make borrowing much more costly.

On Monday, Raphael Bostic, a top official at the US Fed, warned that the tax overhaul had “really increased uncertainty” and raised the risk of a global recession.

“Confidence in the UK economy is low right now,” Pao-Lin Tien, an assistant professor of economics at George Washington University, told Al Jazeera.

“The new prime minister’s economic policy of lowering taxes on the wealthy is not too popular, and the consensus is that it will not work in stimulating the economy.”

While the UK’s tax plans were the initial trigger of the pound’s freefall, economists say that investors’ confidence in the British economy has been waning for some time due to developments such as Brexit.

“The British pound has long been suffering for political decisions in the UK,” Alexander Tziamalis, a senior economics lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University, told Al Jazeera.

“It has been hit by Brexit and is also facing the prospect of a second Scottish independence referendum and a potential trade war with the EU over the Northern Ireland protocol.”

What can the UK do to stop the pound’s decline?

The main tool available to prop up the pound, or any other falling currency, is to raise interest rates in order to attract foreign investors with better yields.

On Monday, Andrew Bailey, the governor of the Bank of England, said the central bank would not hesitate to lift rates as necessary.

But despite calls from some economists for emergency action, the UK’s central bank opted against an unscheduled rate hike, sending the pound down to $1.06 after it made some earlier gains.

“Both the Bank of England and Bank of Japan can decide to raise rates to match the rising US interest rates,” said Tien, the professor at George Washington University.

“This will help, but if investors don’t see aggressive enough actions from BoE or BoJ — so not just an increase in rates, but a larger than expected increase in rates — it won’t help much with the currency values. The issue with aggressively large interest rate hikes is that it’s likely to push the economy into a recession, which no one wants to see.”

Governments can also intervene by buying up their own currency to prop up its value, although this is frowned on by many economies and risks invoking trade penalties.

“The pound and yen are officially floating exchange rates, governments should not and do not often intervene in the forex market,” Tien said.

Why is the US dollar so strong?

The strength of the US dollar, which has been on an upward trajectory since mid-2021 and last month hit a 20-year high against six major currencies, has two main drivers.

The first is confidence in the US economy relative to its peers.

Much in the same way a weakening currency reflects declining investor confidence in a country’s economy, a strengthening currency points to a vote of confidence in an economy’s fundamentals.

While the US economy is battling high inflation and flagging growth, the dollar has long been seen by investors as a reliable bet.

“The US dollar has always been seen as a safe haven for investors because the US is such a strong and large economy, so if there is global uncertainty, it’s always a safe bet to hold US dollars because it retains value well,” Tien said.

“So with the war in Ukraine, economic and political problems in Europe, high inflation, etc, it is not surprising investors are turning to the US dollar.”

Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at financial consultancy Bannockburn Global Forex, said that the US seemed like a safe bet to investors in light of global events even if it recorded negative growth during the last two quarters.

“The US biggest rivals have shot themselves in the foot. Here I am thinking of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and China’s zero-Covid policy that has disrupted growth,” Chandler told Al Jazeera.

“The US allies are also having serious struggles. Japan is the only G10 country not to raise interest rates.  China actually cut rates recently.  Europe is on the verge of a recession and the UK’s new government has stirred crisis talk with its fiscal stimulus adding to its current account deficit.”

The second driver of the dollar’s rise is interest rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve, which has been raising the cost of borrowing in an effort to tame soaring inflation.

With depositors at US banks benefitting from interest rates, investors have been further encouraged to swap other currencies for dollars, pushing up the price of the greenback.

“Of course, central banks in other jurisdictions such as the UK have also been raising interest rates, and the eurozone is planning to do likewise. But they are not acting as aggressively as the US,” said Tziamalis, the economics lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University.

“Meanwhile Japan is not tightening at all, so the net result is still greater overseas demand for greenbacks.”

Who are the winners and losers?

For US consumers, a stronger dollar means cheaper imported goods in the shops and more affordable holidays abroad.

For everyone else, the picture is less rosy.

Not only does a stronger dollar mean pricier American imports and travel in the US, it is likely to exacerbate inflation generally in other countries.

Oil and other commodities such as metals and timber are usually traded in dollars, raising their cost in local currency. Higher energy prices will in turn push up the cost of other goods and services.

“The only exception is the US, where a stronger dollar makes it cheaper to import consumer products and therefore could help to tame inflation,” Tziamalis said.

The strength of the dollar also makes it more difficult for many developing countries to repay their debts, which are often held in US currency.

“As a result, many countries will struggle to find an ever-increasing amount of local currency to service their debts,” Tziamalis said.

“These countries will either have to tax their economies more, issue inflationary local money or simply borrow more. The results could be deep recession, hyper-inflation, a sovereign debt crisis or all three together, depending on the path chosen.”

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Stocks trade higher after negative start to the week

Visitors stands in front of an electronic ticker at the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE), operated by Japan Exchange Group Inc. (JPX), in Tokyo, Japan, on Monday, Nov. 30, 2020.

Toru Hanai | Bloomberg via Getty Images

Shares in the Asia-Pacific were mixed on Tuesday after sharp falls on Monday.

The Nikkei 225 in Japan rose 0.61%, and the Topix index gained 0.7%. In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 added 0.25%. The Shanghai Composite in mainland China rose 0.26% and the Shenzhen Component was 0.314% higher.

South Korea’s Kospi struggled for direction and last lost 0.62%, while the Kosdaq shed 0.74%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index lost 1.06%, with the Hang Seng Tech index down 1.7%.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.29%. China’s industrial profits for January to August fell 2.1% from the same period a year ago, official data showed.

Overnight in the U.S., major stock indexes dropped. The S&P 500 slipped 1.03% to 3,655.04, a new closing low for 2022. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell into a bear market after it lost 329.60 points, or 1.11%, to 29,260.81. The Nasdaq Composite shed 0.6% to 10,802.92.

“The sell-off in bonds and equities continued as sterling’s weakness highlighted the fragility of markets to policy uncertainty,” ANZ Research analysts wrote in a Tuesday note, a day after the pound hit a record low.

— CNBC’s Sarah Min and Tanaya Macheel contributed to this report.

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Live news updates: Asian markets mostly down as investors cautious after US sell-off

Wall Street equities closed at the lowest level since December 2020, while US Treasury yields lurched higher after intense volatility in Britain’s gilt market and a lacklustre sale of new Treasuries shook investor sentiment.

The blue-chip S&P 500 share index ended the day down 1 per cent after having lost 4.7 per cent over the course of the previous week. The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 0.6 per cent on Monday.

Monday’s wobble in equities came as the yield on the 10-year US Treasury note, a benchmark for global borrowing costs, added 0.22 percentage points to 3.92 per cent — the highest level since 2010. Bond yields rise when prices fall.

The selling in the US followed a brutal session in London, in which gilt yields surged for the second trading day in a row after the UK government’s plans for big tax cuts spooked investors. Britain’s 10-year gilt yield rose on Monday by its most in 40 years, according to Refinitiv data.

A sale of US two-year Treasuries on Monday also highlighted how fund managers are demanding the government pay higher borrowing costs on expectations the Federal Reserve will continue pushing interest rates sharply higher. 

Last week, the Fed led the charge on a series of interest rate rises by other global peers, implementing a third consecutive increase of 0.75 percentage points to a target range of 3 to 3.25 per cent.

The dollar, which tends to strengthen in times of economic and market stress, added 0.8 per cent against a basket of six peers, hitting a fresh 20-year high.

Read more on markets here.

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‘Out of control’: what the papers said about government handling of UK’s sterling crisis | Newspapers

Turmoil in financial markets which saw the pound fall to a record low against the dollar dominates today’s front pages.

The currency tumbled as investors lost confidence in the UK’s public finances after last Friday’s mini-budget.

The Guardian leads with “Sterling crisis deepens as Truss’s strategy unravels,” reporting that the government was struggling to prevent a full-scale loss of financial market confidence in its economic strategy.

Guardian front page, Tuesday 27 September 2022: Sterling crisis deepens as Truss’s strategy unravels pic.twitter.com/GhKPgon1w9

— The Guardian (@guardian) September 26, 2022

n”,”url”:”https://twitter.com/guardian/status/1574505211070144534″,”id”:”1574505211070144534″,”hasMedia”:false,”role”:”inline”,”isThirdPartyTracking”:false,”source”:”Twitter”,”elementId”:”5baa9846-ae4f-464c-b8f4-6b8840ee3ff1″}}”/>

The Financial Times has “Bank of England and Treasury fail to calm market nerves over UK finances”. The paper says a statement from the Bank “dashed market hopes of an emergency interest rate rise to prop up the pound”.

Just published: front page of the Financial Times, UK edition, Tuesday 27 September https://t.co/fEOHVUzmlq pic.twitter.com/04u6OHaPee

— Financial Times (@FinancialTimes) September 26, 2022

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The Times leads on the central bank’s pledge to act after the fall of the pound with its headline “Bank vows to step in after day of turmoil”.

Tuesday's Times: Bank vows to step in after day of turmoil #TomorrowsPapersToday #TheTimes #Times pic.twitter.com/IbfayQDud3

— Tomorrows Papers Today (@TmorrowsPapers) September 26, 2022

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The Telegraph has “Spooked lenders ditch new mortgages in pound chaos,” noting Halifax, Virgin Money and Skipton were among the lenders pulling mortgage deals ahead of an anticipated rate rise.

The front page of tomorrow's Daily Telegraph:

'Spooked lenders ditch new mortgages in pound chaos'#TomorrowsPapersToday

Sign up for the Front Page newsletterhttps://t.co/x8AV4Oomry pic.twitter.com/17V6AUps0l

— The Telegraph (@Telegraph) September 26, 2022

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The i newspaper has a similar take with its lead story: “New mortgages blocked amid UK market turmoil” above a picture of PM Liz Truss and a smiling chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng.

Tuesday's front page: New mortgages blocked amid UK market turmoil#TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/zuC1YKrtz9

— i newspaper (@theipaper) September 26, 2022

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The Express says “Don’t panic! We have got a plan to cut debt”. It says the chancellor “shrugged off yesterday’s financial market jitters” with a vow to set out his strategy to bring down debt.

Tuesday's Express front page – Don't panic! We have got a plan to cut debt#TomorrowsPapersToday https://t.co/9ZAwTOycB0 pic.twitter.com/IC74P0wtso

— Daily Express (@Daily_Express) September 26, 2022

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The Metro has “The pound Kwartanks” alongside a picture of Kwarteng.

Tomorrow's Paper Today 📰

THE POUND KWARTANKS

🔴 Sterling crashes to an all-time low against the dollar
🔴 Fears interest rates are set to rocket up to 7%
🔴 No confidence in new PM letters 'are already submitted'#TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/DHOVBATGuV

— Metro (@MetroUK) September 26, 2022

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The Mirror runs the subheading “Tories economic disaster” above its headline “Out of control”. The paper says millions of households face further financial misery as “Kwarteng’s tax cuts plunge markets into chaos”.

Tuesday's front page: Tories' Economic disaster.#TomorrowsPapersTodayhttps://t.co/RYGCG9eFk3 pic.twitter.com/ARR5QTotLU

— The Mirror (@DailyMirror) September 26, 2022

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The Mail’s take is “Fury at the city slickers betting against UK Plc.” It cites senior Tories as saying short sellers were “trying to make money out of bad news.”

Tuesday’s @DailyMailUK #MailFrontPages pic.twitter.com/sm2pUuDC9B

— Daily Mail U.K. (@DailyMailUK) September 26, 2022

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