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A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Intel (INTC) dropped a whopping 10% after the firm said it expects to lose money in the current quarter, surprising investors with a bleak outlook for both the PC market and its key data center division. "We stumbled... we lost share, we lost momentum," said Chief
Executive "We expect some of the largest inventory corrections literally that we've ever seen in the industry," he told Reuters later. While the chip world and Intel (INTC) may have peculiar post-pandemic issues, the question of mounting inventories was one worrying feature of Thursday's otherwise surprisingly upbeat U.S. GDP report for the final quarter of last year. While annualised Q4 economic growth came in at a brisk 2.9%, the Commerce Department showed half of that came from a sharp rise in inventory held by businesses, some of which is likely unwanted and which may now be run down while production is scaled back. That may cast a pall on the new year outlook, but it should also encourage hopes of discounting and disinflation, with Friday's release of the Federal Reserve's favoured inflation measure - the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index - now a key focus ahead of next week's Fed policy meeting. Annual 'core' PCE inflation is expected to have slowed to 4.4% last month, the lowest in more than a year, from 4.7% in November. With the Fed decision now firmly in view and widely expected to conclude another downsizing of its interest rate hikes to just 25 basis points, persistent tightness in the U.S. labour market is one area that will keep the central bank on alert. A separate report from the Labor Department showed initial
claims for state unemployment benefits fell last week to the
lowest level since The flipside to such low prevailing jobless readings is a wave of company announcements on planned staff cuts - something that was initially concentrated in the digital and tech universe, but is now broadening out to other sectors. Toymaker Hasbro said on Thursday it would cut about 15% of its global workforce this year, eliminating about 1,000 full-time positions globally and joining a growing list of firms shedding jobs, including big industrial names this week such as Dow and 3M. Hasbro (HAS) stock fell 5% in afterhours trade. American Express and Colgate-Palmolive are among the companies reporting on Friday. After 1%-plus gains for the major Overseas, While the data keeps the Bank of Japan under pressure to
phase out its ongoing monetary stimulus and cap on government
borrowing rates, Prime Minister British finance minister Shares in Seven listed companies of the Adani conglomerate -
controlled by one of the world's richest men, U.S. bonds of Adani firms also fell after Hindenburg
Research flagged concerns in a (By
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