The US dollar index continued to rise, and non-US currencies generally fell. The US dollar index continued to rise, rising by 0.4% to 106.6 in the day. Non-US currencies generally declined, and GBP/USD of the pound against the US dollar now fell by 0.19% to 1.2726; The euro fell 0.5% against the US dollar EUR/USD to 1.0500 in a day; The USD/JPY broke the 152 mark against the Japanese yen, rising by about 0.4% in the day.Bank for International Settlements: Swap spreads are reflecting investors' concerns about excessive bond supply. The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) pointed out that huge government loans are having an impact on the global interest rate market, saying that investors have demanded higher premiums for buying sovereign bonds. In its quarterly report released on Tuesday, the agency pointed out that the swap spreads of various currencies and maturities have narrowed rapidly in recent months, which are "signs of possible oversupply". As investors are worried about huge debt and deficit expansion, the yields of government bonds in the euro zone and Japan have recently exceeded comparable swap rates. This leads to the so-called swap spread becoming negative. Because national debt is usually regarded as a safer investment than interest rate swap, it is unusual for the swap spread to enter the negative range. According to the Bank for International Settlements, the negative swap spread seems to reflect the pressure faced by investors and intermediaries because they need to absorb more government bonds in the near future. In the United States, the swap spreads for some maturities have been negative for many years.Tesla (TSLA.O) rose more than 3%, and Morgan Stanley and Cantor Ftzgerald upgraded its rating.
Alaska Airlines rose 12.59%, American Airlines rose more than 3.8%, Boeing rose about 3.1%, United Airlines and Delta Air Lines rose at least 1.4%, and Southwest Airlines fell more than 0.8%. The airline association predicts that the overall profit and operating income of the industry will increase slightly in 2025. Bernstein, a brokerage firm, upgraded the AAL rating of American Airlines, saying that the company's share price could rise by about 40%.White House: Continue to pay close attention to the development of the situation in Syria.Us department of defense: Guam missile defense system successfully shot down air-to-air medium-range missiles in the test.
Citigroup's chief financial officer said that the spending of American consumers in its branded credit card business between Thanksgiving and Cyber Monday increased by a median digit year-on-year.Sichuan continued to promote the supply and demand docking of enterprises in the field of industrial informatization, with a cumulative signing amount of 38 billion yuan. The supply and demand docking activity of a new generation of information technology industry in Sichuan Province was held in Chengdu on the 10th. Zhai Gang, director of the Department of Economy and Information Technology of Sichuan Province, said at this event that since September this year, Sichuan has held nine consecutive supply-demand docking activities of "expanding the market and growing steadily" in Sichuan Province, which has promoted the establishment of long-term cooperative relations between the supply and demand sides of enterprises in Sichuan's industrial and information fields, and has contributed to a number of cooperation results and procurement transactions. At present, the accumulated contracted amount has reached 38 billion yuan. (Zhongxin. com)Top fund managers say that Trump's tariff plan is influenced or less than expected by the negotiation strategy. Some of the most influential and powerful fund managers in the world believe that the potential extensive tariffs of US President-elect Donald Trump are only negotiation strategies. This was the key message delivered by Jenny Johnson, CEO of Franklin Templeton, and Anne Walsh, Chief Investment Officer of Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, when they spoke at the event "Women, Money and Power" held by Bloomberg in London on Tuesday. "I think tariffs are still more of a negotiation strategy than the inevitable situation we will see," Walsh said. "I think it will be more targeted." Johnson expressed a similar view, adding that such measures are often "inflationary".