Singapore and New York ranked the most expensive cities to live in: EIU
Singapore and New York were named as the most expensive cities to live in this year, according to Economic Information Unit (EIU).
The average price of goods in 172 major cities globally has risen 8.1% in local currency terms this year, the EIU survey showed, citing a survey conducted by the organization between Aug. 16th and Sept. sixteen.
The reading indicates a significant increase from the 3.5% price rise seen in the same survey the organization conducted last year.
Charmaine Jacob
India is poised to become the third largest economy by 2030
India is expected to overtake Japan and Germany to become the third largest economy in the world. Standard & Poor’s Worldwide Morgan Stanley predicted in a report.
The S&P forecast is based on the expectation that India’s average annual nominal GDP growth will be 6.3% through 2030. Similarly, Morgan Stanley estimates that India’s GDP is likely to double from current levels by 2031.
Wednesday, India recorded a year-on-year GDP growth of 6.3% in the July-September quarter, partially beating Reuters pollsters’ estimates of 6.2%.
– Lee Ying Chan
CNBC Pro: Citi names 6 global stocks for “defensive growth and value” acquisitions
Citi says investors need not completely abandon growth by focusing on a defensive portfolio of stocks ahead of a possible recession.
The investment bank has identified six global stocks that collectively offer “low risk, quality and growth”.
CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.
– Ganesh Rao
Inflation in South Korea in November came in below expectations
South Korea Annual November inflation It came in at 5%, lower than the 5.1% estimate in a Reuters poll.
The latest reading marks a slight decline from 5.7% in October and far from an unprecedented peak of 6.3% in July.
– Jihe Lee
CNBC Pro: BlackRock unit says it’s time for a new portfolio playbook, reveals how to set
BlackRock’s ETF division says the investment environment has changed drastically, which has “profound implications” for portfolios looking to the future.
In its 2023 Investor’s Guide, Blackrock’s iShares, one of the world’s largest providers of exchange-traded funds, said the shift brings with it “profound implications for portfolio building.”
CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.
– Wizen tan
“No one wants to be too optimistic” ahead of the release of new employment data on Friday, the analyst says
Edward Moya, chief market analyst at Oanda, said stocks weren’t able to continue Wednesday’s rally because investors were waiting for the upcoming key jobs report on Friday.
He said that investors were intentionally holding back ahead of the morning’s non-farm payroll data. Investors will also be watching data on hourly wages and the unemployment rate.
Moya said: “US stocks were not able to hold on to previous gains as Wall Street digested a batch of economic data that showed that inflation is declining and the labor market is slowing.” “It was a nice rally but no one wants to be aggressively bullish with the NFP approaching.”
Investors will be looking for the right data and the middle ground, said Megan Hornemann, chief investment officer at Verdence Capital Advisors. This means that it is weak enough to show that raising interest rates has the intended effect of an economic contraction, while strong enough to indicate that a recession could be avoided.
“A large number will scare markets more than the Fed won’t be able to slow the pace of rate hikes,” Megan Hornemann, chief investment officer at Verdence Capital Advisors, said in Friday’s jobs data.
“With a number like that, I think maybe the markets could go higher like that,” she added. “But if you get a really soft number, it will scare off investors after that strong rally we had in November.”
– Alex Haring
Indexes come out of the winning month
Thursday was the first day of the new trading month as the market came out winning in November.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 And the daw Both posted gains for the second month in a row, rising by 5.38% and 5.67%, respectively. This monthly streak was the first for each since August 2021.
The NASDAQ Composite It rose 4.37%, its second consecutive positive month. It was the first time the tech-heavy index had started a streak since it saw three straight months of gains that ended in December 2021.
– Alex Haring
The headline inflation indicator rose less-than-expected in October
The Bureau of Economic Analysts reported that the core personal consumption expenditures index, a key measure of inflation, rose 0.2% in October. This is less than the Dow’s expected increase of 0.3%.
After this report, Treasury yields fell amid optimism that inflation will ease.
– Fred Imbert
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