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WSJ Dollar Index Falls
The dollar weakened, snapping a three-day winning streak, after jobless claims data reinforced hopes of a Fed rate cut this year.The Wall Street Journal - World -
U.S. Dollar Showing Signs of Fatigue
The U.S. dollar is showing signs of fatigue amid weaker U.S. economic activity, buoyant risk appetite, and China and Japan’s FX policies inhibiting local currency weakness, HSBC said.The Wall Street Journal - World -
Dollar Expected to Weaken as QT Paths Diverge
Quantitative tightening was expected to end relatively soon in the U.S. and Canada, continue at its current pace in the U.K. and Australia and accelerate in the euro area, Bank of America economists said.The Wall Street Journal - World -
Dangers of dollar nationalism hang over the world economy
Even more serious than Fed rate rises would be a politically driven devaluation of the US currencyFinancial Times - Business -
Reservations at top New York City restaurants are selling for hundreds of dollars
Reservations at some of New York City's hottest restaurants are selling for hundreds of dollars through bidding apps.NBC News - Top stories - New York -
Manchester City spent big on Josko Gvardiol. He’s been worth every penny
Some players need a season to acclimatise to Pep Guardiola’s style and the Premier League’s intensity. Not Gvardiol . By Ben McAleer for WhoScored. Football fans and pundits often use transfer fees as a stick with which to beat players. The higher ...The Guardian - World -
Apple spent $645 billion on buybacks in a decade. These companies were even more effective.
An analysis of the S&P 500 shows that large reductions in share counts over the long term are correlated with good performance for stocks.MarketWatch - Business - Apple -
More hospitals and surgery centers are demanding patients pay in advance, distressing patients who must come up with thousands of dollars while struggling with serious conditions.
More hospitals and surgery centers are demanding patients pay in advance, distressing patients who must come up with thousands of dollars while struggling with serious conditions.The Wall Street Journal - World