1 00:00:02,400 --> 00:00:03,000 Speaker 1: Good morning. 2 00:00:03,120 --> 00:00:05,880 Speaker 2: I'm Brian Curtis and I'm Doug Krisner. Here are the 3 00:00:05,920 --> 00:00:07,360 Speaker 2: stories we're following today. 4 00:00:07,760 --> 00:00:10,039 Speaker 1: Let's take a closer look here at the FED. Doug, 5 00:00:10,240 --> 00:00:13,320 Speaker 1: it held at benchmark interest rate steady today, as mentioned, 6 00:00:13,560 --> 00:00:15,560 Speaker 1: in a range between five and a quarter and five 7 00:00:15,600 --> 00:00:18,400 Speaker 1: and a half percent. The FED central message was that 8 00:00:18,560 --> 00:00:21,560 Speaker 1: rates will be higher for longer. At the news conference, 9 00:00:21,640 --> 00:00:24,880 Speaker 1: Chair Powell addressed the issue of a soft landing, saying 10 00:00:24,960 --> 00:00:28,160 Speaker 1: it's a primary objective for the FED, although he wouldn't 11 00:00:28,240 --> 00:00:31,080 Speaker 1: call a soft landing a baseline expectation. 12 00:00:31,560 --> 00:00:35,720 Speaker 3: Ultimately, this may be decided by factors that are outside 13 00:00:35,720 --> 00:00:37,920 Speaker 3: our control at the end of the day. But I 14 00:00:37,960 --> 00:00:40,120 Speaker 3: do think it's I do think it's possible. A soft 15 00:00:40,200 --> 00:00:42,879 Speaker 3: landing is a primary objective, and I did not say otherwise. 16 00:00:43,440 --> 00:00:46,320 Speaker 3: I mean, that's what we've been trying to achieve for 17 00:00:46,360 --> 00:00:47,000 Speaker 3: all this time. 18 00:00:47,479 --> 00:00:50,680 Speaker 1: FED share J Powell. He described the current rate environment 19 00:00:50,880 --> 00:00:53,720 Speaker 1: as not yet sufficiently restrictive. 20 00:00:53,320 --> 00:00:56,600 Speaker 2: And that means one more rate hike is possible this year, 21 00:00:56,800 --> 00:01:00,120 Speaker 2: but former New York FED President to Bill Dudley is 22 00:01:00,160 --> 00:01:03,520 Speaker 2: saying he'd be surprised if another rate hike occurred in November, 23 00:01:03,760 --> 00:01:04,560 Speaker 2: so taking. 24 00:01:04,360 --> 00:01:06,040 Speaker 4: Quite a bit of signal of the fact that the 25 00:01:06,200 --> 00:01:09,480 Speaker 4: labor market seems to be ginning to better balance, even 26 00:01:09,520 --> 00:01:12,640 Speaker 4: without the unemployer rate rising very much. So they're more 27 00:01:13,200 --> 00:01:16,360 Speaker 4: confident that the labor market essentially normalized on its own, 28 00:01:16,959 --> 00:01:19,119 Speaker 4: that the FED doesn't have to generate as much slack 29 00:01:19,200 --> 00:01:21,319 Speaker 4: in the labor market to get inflation back down at 30 00:01:21,360 --> 00:01:21,880 Speaker 4: two percent. 31 00:01:22,080 --> 00:01:24,120 Speaker 2: He is Bill Dudley, the former head of the New 32 00:01:24,160 --> 00:01:25,440 Speaker 2: York Fed, Brian Well. 33 00:01:25,440 --> 00:01:29,520 Speaker 1: FedEx posted profit that topped analyst estimates, and then it 34 00:01:29,640 --> 00:01:33,440 Speaker 1: raised its earnings forecast to be a little bit higher. 35 00:01:33,800 --> 00:01:36,840 Speaker 1: The move is in part to cost cutting or the 36 00:01:37,680 --> 00:01:40,560 Speaker 1: move on profits, and partly due to cost cutting as 37 00:01:40,600 --> 00:01:43,560 Speaker 1: well as strong pricing customers who switched to the courier 38 00:01:43,600 --> 00:01:47,120 Speaker 1: from its main rival ups due to concerns over a 39 00:01:47,160 --> 00:01:51,000 Speaker 1: potential strike. We get more from Bloomberg Intelligence senior transportation 40 00:01:51,040 --> 00:01:52,160 Speaker 1: analyst Lee Clascal. 41 00:01:52,480 --> 00:01:54,560 Speaker 5: You know, the beat is what's telling us as that 42 00:01:54,680 --> 00:01:58,200 Speaker 5: management is beginning to execute on its strategy to cut 43 00:01:58,240 --> 00:02:03,120 Speaker 5: around six billion dollars and expenses. FedEx for a long 44 00:02:03,160 --> 00:02:05,840 Speaker 5: time has been a show me story, and they're actually 45 00:02:05,880 --> 00:02:08,480 Speaker 5: starting to, I guess, not show me, but show people 46 00:02:09,160 --> 00:02:11,440 Speaker 5: that they're able to execute on their plans. 47 00:02:11,600 --> 00:02:14,679 Speaker 1: FedEx Is Freight unit also picked up some volume from 48 00:02:14,720 --> 00:02:18,720 Speaker 1: trucking company Yellow, which had declared bankruptcy back in early August. 49 00:02:19,040 --> 00:02:22,000 Speaker 1: The company raised its guidance for annual adjusted earnings per 50 00:02:22,080 --> 00:02:25,600 Speaker 1: share to between seventeen and eighteen dollars and fifty cents 51 00:02:25,840 --> 00:02:29,120 Speaker 1: for fiscal twenty twenty four. Investor seemed to like the story. 52 00:02:29,120 --> 00:02:32,560 Speaker 1: FedEx shares about five percent ors So in late trading, let's. 53 00:02:32,320 --> 00:02:35,919 Speaker 2: Talk IPOs next, we had shares in Clavio climbing nine 54 00:02:35,960 --> 00:02:38,440 Speaker 2: percent on their trading debut. This is the marketing and 55 00:02:38,520 --> 00:02:42,320 Speaker 2: data automation provider. The company raised five hundred and seventy 56 00:02:42,360 --> 00:02:45,720 Speaker 2: six million through this offering. Now, the IPO is the 57 00:02:45,760 --> 00:02:48,000 Speaker 2: third major US listing in the past week, and you 58 00:02:48,000 --> 00:02:52,400 Speaker 2: would include on that list Arm Holdings and the grocery 59 00:02:52,480 --> 00:02:57,160 Speaker 2: delivery company Instacart. Well, speaking of Instacart, today, shares down 60 00:02:57,240 --> 00:03:01,360 Speaker 2: nearly eleven percent to close just ten cents above the 61 00:03:01,400 --> 00:03:05,560 Speaker 2: company's IPO price of thirty dollars. That's just one day 62 00:03:05,840 --> 00:03:06,840 Speaker 2: after going public. 63 00:03:06,880 --> 00:03:09,280 Speaker 1: Brian, Well, let's take a closer look here what we're 64 00:03:09,320 --> 00:03:12,520 Speaker 1: getting from the PBOC. So we had some comments from 65 00:03:12,560 --> 00:03:15,640 Speaker 1: a current leader at the PBOC and then also the 66 00:03:15,720 --> 00:03:18,600 Speaker 1: former head the People's Bank of China saying it has 67 00:03:18,639 --> 00:03:22,799 Speaker 1: sufficient policy space to support the economy's recovery. And get 68 00:03:22,800 --> 00:03:25,320 Speaker 1: the story from Bloomberg's Joan Wong in Hong. 69 00:03:25,200 --> 00:03:29,160 Speaker 6: Kong, Dolan, head of the PBOC Monetary Policy Department, said 70 00:03:29,200 --> 00:03:32,880 Speaker 6: the central Bank has ample policy room to react to challenges. 71 00:03:33,120 --> 00:03:35,640 Speaker 6: He also said the PBOC will step up its counter 72 00:03:35,760 --> 00:03:39,560 Speaker 6: cyclical adjustments. The comments add to expectations that there could 73 00:03:39,560 --> 00:03:43,280 Speaker 6: be more easy to come, including interest rate cuts. Separately, 74 00:03:43,360 --> 00:03:46,560 Speaker 6: former PBOC chief Yeegong said the central bank should ramp 75 00:03:46,640 --> 00:03:50,040 Speaker 6: up support for the economy in order to reach growth targets. 76 00:03:50,280 --> 00:03:53,360 Speaker 6: He made his remarks in an official paper affiliated with 77 00:03:53,440 --> 00:03:58,000 Speaker 6: the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. He also suggested giving 78 00:03:58,080 --> 00:04:01,520 Speaker 6: full play in monetary policy to support the housing sector 79 00:04:01,800 --> 00:04:04,400 Speaker 6: in Hong Kong. Join Long Bloomberg Radio. 80 00:04:04,680 --> 00:04:07,080 Speaker 1: So in one sense, Doug, it seems like Igong, the 81 00:04:07,120 --> 00:04:09,920 Speaker 1: former governor, is calling for the central bank to do more. 82 00:04:10,400 --> 00:04:12,800 Speaker 1: And then we had the comments there from the current 83 00:04:12,840 --> 00:04:16,359 Speaker 1: monetary policy chief at the PBOC saying, you know, we're 84 00:04:16,400 --> 00:04:19,600 Speaker 1: in a good place. We have the tools. So if 85 00:04:19,600 --> 00:04:21,800 Speaker 1: we look at what the currency did the currency weakened 86 00:04:21,800 --> 00:04:25,520 Speaker 1: a little, so it seems to imply that there are 87 00:04:25,640 --> 00:04:29,919 Speaker 1: more rooms for monetary easing. Thus the currency would slip 88 00:04:29,920 --> 00:04:31,679 Speaker 1: a little bit, So it'll be fun to watch it today. 89 00:04:31,760 --> 00:04:33,719 Speaker 2: Yeah, and a number of guests in our program have 90 00:04:33,800 --> 00:04:37,320 Speaker 2: been talking about their expectations for a cut in the 91 00:04:37,360 --> 00:04:40,080 Speaker 2: triple R in China. We'll have to see if that 92 00:04:40,160 --> 00:04:42,000 Speaker 2: comes to pass. But just to get back to the 93 00:04:42,040 --> 00:04:44,360 Speaker 2: FED in the notion of easing, one of the things 94 00:04:44,400 --> 00:04:46,479 Speaker 2: I was struck by Brian as a part of the 95 00:04:46,560 --> 00:04:50,359 Speaker 2: new dot plot the FED projecting just fifty basis points 96 00:04:50,360 --> 00:04:53,240 Speaker 2: and raid cuts in twenty twenty four. That's about fifty 97 00:04:53,279 --> 00:04:57,479 Speaker 2: basis points below what the FED was forecasting in June 98 00:04:57,520 --> 00:05:01,200 Speaker 2: when one hundred basis points in cuts was being discussed. 99 00:05:01,520 --> 00:05:04,640 Speaker 1: So if you put that together with the feds expectations 100 00:05:04,680 --> 00:05:07,279 Speaker 1: to raise one more time this year, and if you 101 00:05:07,320 --> 00:05:11,200 Speaker 1: put that together with the markets, the bond market in particular, 102 00:05:11,279 --> 00:05:14,800 Speaker 1: with the inversion of the yield curve, it seems like 103 00:05:14,920 --> 00:05:20,120 Speaker 1: you're getting a sort of bearish input into risk assets. 104 00:05:20,760 --> 00:05:23,560 Speaker 1: And it may not be the case depending upon your 105 00:05:23,600 --> 00:05:26,080 Speaker 1: time frame, but if you look at the performance today, 106 00:05:26,120 --> 00:05:27,200 Speaker 1: it was definitely. 107 00:05:26,880 --> 00:05:30,520 Speaker 2: Weaker definitely weaker in terms of equity market action. You're right, 108 00:05:30,600 --> 00:05:34,440 Speaker 2: and then moves up across the yield curve, particularly in 109 00:05:34,440 --> 00:05:36,920 Speaker 2: a two year right where you're up about seven basis 110 00:05:36,920 --> 00:05:39,320 Speaker 2: points to five seventeen. That's high yield. 111 00:05:39,560 --> 00:05:41,840 Speaker 1: So we'll be talking with our guests about this all 112 00:05:41,880 --> 00:05:44,520 Speaker 1: throughout the morning. Coming up. Danielle di Martino Booth, the 113 00:05:44,560 --> 00:05:49,560 Speaker 1: CEO and chief strategist for QI in Research. Used to 114 00:05:49,560 --> 00:05:52,200 Speaker 1: be Quill but now QI Research. That's coming up in 115 00:05:52,200 --> 00:05:55,800 Speaker 1: a few moments. Now it's time for Global News UK 116 00:05:55,880 --> 00:05:59,520 Speaker 1: Prime Minister Rishie Sunak diluting key parts of his Climate 117 00:05:59,600 --> 00:06:03,240 Speaker 1: Nets zero agenda at Bacheter covering that story and with 118 00:06:03,320 --> 00:06:04,840 Speaker 1: Global News in San Francisco. 119 00:06:05,040 --> 00:06:05,080 Speaker 5: Ed. 120 00:06:05,400 --> 00:06:08,000 Speaker 7: Yeah, all right, Brian, thank you. You're right. Sunakas pushing back 121 00:06:08,040 --> 00:06:10,360 Speaker 7: on a ban on the sale of new petrol and 122 00:06:10,400 --> 00:06:13,719 Speaker 7: diesel cars by five years. It's now will be twenty 123 00:06:13,800 --> 00:06:16,840 Speaker 7: thirty five. He says, most citizens will have electric cars 124 00:06:16,920 --> 00:06:18,720 Speaker 7: by that time. Anyway, we've had. 125 00:06:18,600 --> 00:06:21,240 Speaker 8: The fastest reduction in greenhouse gas missions in the G 126 00:06:21,360 --> 00:06:27,680 Speaker 8: seven down almost fifty percent since nineteen ninety, France twenty 127 00:06:27,720 --> 00:06:33,360 Speaker 8: two percent, the US, no change at all, China up 128 00:06:33,440 --> 00:06:36,000 Speaker 8: by three hundred percent, and when now our share of 129 00:06:36,040 --> 00:06:39,320 Speaker 8: global emissions is less than one percent, how can it 130 00:06:39,360 --> 00:06:42,320 Speaker 8: be right that British citizens are now being told to 131 00:06:42,400 --> 00:06:44,159 Speaker 8: sacrifice even more than others. 132 00:06:44,440 --> 00:06:47,360 Speaker 7: And he says the effort faces a major pushback if 133 00:06:47,360 --> 00:06:48,919 Speaker 7: it continues the way it is now. 134 00:06:49,200 --> 00:06:52,599 Speaker 8: If we continue down this path, we risk losing the 135 00:06:52,680 --> 00:06:56,760 Speaker 8: consent of the British people and the resulting backlash would 136 00:06:56,760 --> 00:07:01,080 Speaker 8: not just be against specific policies, but against the mission itself, 137 00:07:01,400 --> 00:07:03,640 Speaker 8: meaning we might never achieve our goal. 138 00:07:04,000 --> 00:07:06,400 Speaker 7: But climate control advocates are not happy at all. C 139 00:07:06,560 --> 00:07:09,000 Speaker 7: and then caught up with al Gore today, who says 140 00:07:09,040 --> 00:07:11,400 Speaker 7: he realizes he's not a British citizen, but. 141 00:07:11,840 --> 00:07:14,400 Speaker 9: I've heard from many of my friends in the UK, 142 00:07:14,600 --> 00:07:18,160 Speaker 9: including a lot of Conservative Party members by the way, 143 00:07:18,560 --> 00:07:22,800 Speaker 9: who have used the phrase utter disgust. And some of 144 00:07:22,840 --> 00:07:25,280 Speaker 9: the young people there feel as if their generation has 145 00:07:25,360 --> 00:07:26,360 Speaker 9: been stabbed in the back. 146 00:07:26,760 --> 00:07:29,160 Speaker 7: Sunak, by the way, says, still committed, dude, not zero 147 00:07:29,280 --> 00:07:32,600 Speaker 7: by twenty fifty, but in a more proportionate way. US 148 00:07:32,640 --> 00:07:35,720 Speaker 7: Secretary of State Anthony Blincoln took verbal aim at Russia 149 00:07:35,720 --> 00:07:38,040 Speaker 7: in front of the UN Security Council today. 150 00:07:38,600 --> 00:07:41,560 Speaker 10: For over a year and a half. Russia has shredded 151 00:07:41,680 --> 00:07:44,880 Speaker 10: the major tenants of the United Nations Charter, the Universal 152 00:07:44,960 --> 00:07:49,720 Speaker 10: Decoration of Human Rights, international humanitarian Law, and flouted one 153 00:07:49,800 --> 00:07:51,840 Speaker 10: Security Council resolution after another. 154 00:07:51,920 --> 00:07:54,960 Speaker 7: Now b Lincoln says Moscow is blocking Ukrainian food exports, 155 00:07:55,040 --> 00:07:59,080 Speaker 7: using illegal Iranian drones, and even arranging weapons deals with 156 00:07:59,160 --> 00:08:02,480 Speaker 7: North Korea. US President Joe Biden. Meanwhile, i'm the sidelines 157 00:08:02,520 --> 00:08:05,320 Speaker 7: of the UNA sat down with the Brazil's president Lulu 158 00:08:05,440 --> 00:08:09,040 Speaker 7: Lula to talk about workers' rights. The message to Lula, 159 00:08:09,240 --> 00:08:12,480 Speaker 7: but most importantly in an indirect way to the labor 160 00:08:12,520 --> 00:08:15,080 Speaker 7: situation in the United States for. 161 00:08:15,200 --> 00:08:20,880 Speaker 11: Working lockstep to tackle a climate crisis, including mobilizing hundreds 162 00:08:20,920 --> 00:08:25,040 Speaker 11: of millions of dollars to conserve the Amazon and the 163 00:08:25,120 --> 00:08:27,200 Speaker 11: critical ecosystems in Latin America. 164 00:08:27,360 --> 00:08:29,920 Speaker 7: And this comes with a UAW and strike as well 165 00:08:29,960 --> 00:08:33,439 Speaker 7: as the writers and Actors' unions. China says it's simplified. 166 00:08:33,480 --> 00:08:36,680 Speaker 7: It's a visa application process as it looks to attract 167 00:08:36,720 --> 00:08:41,160 Speaker 7: more visitors from overseas. Now applicants now need to list 168 00:08:41,280 --> 00:08:44,679 Speaker 7: where they have traveled in the past year rather than five. 169 00:08:45,120 --> 00:08:49,120 Speaker 7: It says it wants more streamlined process. Global News Fower 170 00:08:49,160 --> 00:08:51,400 Speaker 7: by more than twenty seven hundred journalists and analysts in 171 00:08:51,400 --> 00:08:54,280 Speaker 7: over one hundred and twenty countries. In San Francisco, I'm 172 00:08:54,280 --> 00:08:56,480 Speaker 7: at Baxter and this is Bloomberg. 173 00:08:56,679 --> 00:08:59,120 Speaker 1: This is Bloomberg Deabreak Asia. I'm Brian Curtis in Hong 174 00:08:59,200 --> 00:09:02,559 Speaker 1: Kong along with three Salama. Our guest is Danielle di Martino, 175 00:09:02,640 --> 00:09:07,400 Speaker 1: Booth CEO and chief strategist for QI Research. Danielle, thanks 176 00:09:07,480 --> 00:09:09,640 Speaker 1: very much for joining us. We've just been talking here 177 00:09:09,760 --> 00:09:13,040 Speaker 1: about the FED projections implying a hike at the end 178 00:09:13,040 --> 00:09:15,600 Speaker 1: of the year and two fewer cuts next year. I 179 00:09:15,600 --> 00:09:19,440 Speaker 1: suppose it sort of encourages us to think that maybe 180 00:09:19,440 --> 00:09:21,720 Speaker 1: this is a little bit more of a hawkish pause 181 00:09:22,400 --> 00:09:24,199 Speaker 1: than what the market was expecting. 182 00:09:24,600 --> 00:09:26,800 Speaker 12: What do you think, Well, I think that the market 183 00:09:26,880 --> 00:09:30,040 Speaker 12: was fully anticipating that the Fetter Reserve was going to 184 00:09:30,200 --> 00:09:35,800 Speaker 12: keep November or December a live meeting. But I don't think, 185 00:09:35,880 --> 00:09:39,040 Speaker 12: to your point, that they were anticipating that two rate 186 00:09:39,160 --> 00:09:42,920 Speaker 12: cuts would be coming off the table, which really hammers 187 00:09:42,960 --> 00:09:45,400 Speaker 12: home this idea of higher for longer. 188 00:09:45,679 --> 00:09:49,200 Speaker 13: Well, absolutely, you think when you look at that, how 189 00:09:49,520 --> 00:09:51,400 Speaker 13: do you think the market is interpreting this? 190 00:09:52,320 --> 00:09:58,840 Speaker 12: Well, I think that the market is rightly concerned that 191 00:09:59,200 --> 00:10:05,320 Speaker 12: there might be a larger element of dissent entering into 192 00:10:05,520 --> 00:10:09,800 Speaker 12: the debate among members of the Federal Open Market Committee. 193 00:10:10,120 --> 00:10:13,680 Speaker 12: When you look at the June dot plot, and I'm 194 00:10:13,679 --> 00:10:17,560 Speaker 12: not suggesting you just visualize the dots being a lot 195 00:10:17,640 --> 00:10:22,840 Speaker 12: closer together, more cohesiveness philosophically, And then you take a 196 00:10:22,840 --> 00:10:25,680 Speaker 12: look at September and you could drive a mack truck 197 00:10:25,840 --> 00:10:29,240 Speaker 12: through what the anticipations are for twenty twenty four. So 198 00:10:30,160 --> 00:10:33,840 Speaker 12: I think that there is a ton of anxiety right 199 00:10:33,880 --> 00:10:36,439 Speaker 12: now with what the Cutter reserve is going to look 200 00:10:36,480 --> 00:10:39,400 Speaker 12: like going forward, how they're going to deliberate going forward. 201 00:10:40,080 --> 00:10:42,360 Speaker 1: Well, the FED seems as mystified as the rest of 202 00:10:42,440 --> 00:10:45,200 Speaker 1: us on why the economy is resilient in the face 203 00:10:45,240 --> 00:10:48,280 Speaker 1: of all these FED rate hikes, And I think, from 204 00:10:48,320 --> 00:10:51,920 Speaker 1: an intellectual standpoint, can he really say that a soft 205 00:10:52,000 --> 00:10:57,080 Speaker 1: landing is the primary objective given the mandate? 206 00:10:57,520 --> 00:11:02,080 Speaker 12: Well, when I think that, when Powell was pointedly asked 207 00:11:02,120 --> 00:11:05,959 Speaker 12: by a Reuter's reporter, do you have soft landing as 208 00:11:06,000 --> 00:11:08,880 Speaker 12: your base case pre Powell, who is picarly a very 209 00:11:09,000 --> 00:11:14,559 Speaker 12: dignified and quiet spoken individual, interrupted the reporter to say no, no, 210 00:11:14,960 --> 00:11:17,920 Speaker 12: that that is not his base case. And then he 211 00:11:17,960 --> 00:11:21,320 Speaker 12: flipped pronouns and moved to the word I. So I 212 00:11:21,400 --> 00:11:25,160 Speaker 12: found that to be absolutely fascinating. And he is focused 213 00:11:25,200 --> 00:11:28,000 Speaker 12: on that two percent, and it is that two percent 214 00:11:28,360 --> 00:11:30,400 Speaker 12: that he is going to push towards. 215 00:11:30,760 --> 00:11:33,400 Speaker 1: Is that's the case. If two percent, if inflation is 216 00:11:33,400 --> 00:11:35,480 Speaker 1: the killer mandate, then how can you really say that 217 00:11:35,520 --> 00:11:39,360 Speaker 1: a soft landing is a primary objective. I don't think 218 00:11:39,360 --> 00:11:40,000 Speaker 1: you can. 219 00:11:40,480 --> 00:11:43,600 Speaker 12: I don't think you can. But that conflicts with members 220 00:11:43,640 --> 00:11:47,280 Speaker 12: of the Federal Open Market Committee raising their GDP forecast, 221 00:11:47,520 --> 00:11:51,840 Speaker 12: lowering their unemployment forecast, which which we saw today in 222 00:11:51,880 --> 00:11:55,040 Speaker 12: the Summary of Economic projections. So again a lot of 223 00:11:55,160 --> 00:11:56,839 Speaker 12: at least for me, I was I was only the 224 00:11:56,880 --> 00:11:59,679 Speaker 12: set for nine years, But there was a ton of 225 00:11:59,720 --> 00:12:03,360 Speaker 12: con usion that was entered. At least to me, there 226 00:12:03,440 --> 00:12:07,480 Speaker 12: was just a ton of confusion broadcast by j. Powell. 227 00:12:07,559 --> 00:12:10,360 Speaker 12: It seemed like there was going to be cohesion when 228 00:12:10,360 --> 00:12:12,360 Speaker 12: we saw the statement and when we saw the dot plot, 229 00:12:12,600 --> 00:12:14,760 Speaker 12: and then he kind of wandered off the reservation with 230 00:12:14,840 --> 00:12:19,040 Speaker 12: his own thoughts on monetary policy. And so you're seeing 231 00:12:19,800 --> 00:12:26,040 Speaker 12: reflected the increasingly progressive bent of the newest, newest confirmed 232 00:12:26,080 --> 00:12:30,480 Speaker 12: members of the Federal Reserve Board. It's really fascinating to dissect, 233 00:12:30,600 --> 00:12:33,840 Speaker 12: I think today what the politics right now of the 234 00:12:33,840 --> 00:12:37,520 Speaker 12: FED and how heated it appears the discussions have become. 235 00:12:37,400 --> 00:12:39,360 Speaker 13: Well, you know at the end of the day that 236 00:12:39,840 --> 00:12:43,440 Speaker 13: you're looking at the FED and internal divisions. It's not 237 00:12:43,600 --> 00:12:49,080 Speaker 13: surprising because you know, the data itself is really very 238 00:12:49,200 --> 00:12:51,920 Speaker 13: much of a potpouri. It's really how you want to 239 00:12:51,920 --> 00:12:54,360 Speaker 13: interpret it. There's so many different data points that it's 240 00:12:54,440 --> 00:12:55,559 Speaker 13: very confusing as well. 241 00:12:55,960 --> 00:12:59,840 Speaker 12: Well, it's it's the data is confusing. The data revision 242 00:13:00,200 --> 00:13:04,040 Speaker 12: are making me dizzy when when you get a retail 243 00:13:04,040 --> 00:13:07,360 Speaker 12: sales report out and they they revised July and then 244 00:13:07,559 --> 00:13:11,760 Speaker 12: June deeper, and economists are moving their GDT bogies around 245 00:13:11,800 --> 00:13:14,240 Speaker 12: like ping pong. And then you add on to that 246 00:13:14,320 --> 00:13:17,280 Speaker 12: the laundry list that he named at the podium, of 247 00:13:17,320 --> 00:13:19,320 Speaker 12: the oil shot, which he brought up, by the way, 248 00:13:19,360 --> 00:13:21,600 Speaker 12: not the Press Corps, but the oil shot, the student 249 00:13:21,720 --> 00:13:26,520 Speaker 12: loan repayments, the potential shutdown of the government, the United 250 00:13:26,520 --> 00:13:31,040 Speaker 12: Autoworkers Strike, so many different variables that are at play 251 00:13:31,120 --> 00:13:32,920 Speaker 12: right now, and it's to the data being all over 252 00:13:32,920 --> 00:13:33,439 Speaker 12: the map. 253 00:13:34,840 --> 00:13:37,320 Speaker 13: Is very important. To the point you raise about oil. Now, 254 00:13:37,480 --> 00:13:40,119 Speaker 13: this really has through an a spanner in all the works. 255 00:13:40,880 --> 00:13:44,079 Speaker 12: Look, this, this situation can really get out of hands. 256 00:13:44,440 --> 00:13:47,199 Speaker 12: There was not one time today at the podium that 257 00:13:47,200 --> 00:13:52,000 Speaker 12: that care Powell used the word supercore. He actually altered 258 00:13:52,000 --> 00:13:56,680 Speaker 12: the narrative without without actually saying so, because he mentioned oil, 259 00:13:56,720 --> 00:13:59,920 Speaker 12: but he did not mention his supercore, which excludes just about. 260 00:13:59,679 --> 00:14:04,800 Speaker 1: Every I think, you know, none of us would want 261 00:14:04,840 --> 00:14:07,559 Speaker 1: to be in his position up there taking questions like that. 262 00:14:07,880 --> 00:14:11,600 Speaker 1: And given you know, this incredibly complex mosaic that we 263 00:14:11,679 --> 00:14:15,080 Speaker 1: have a quick question on China, it seems like there's 264 00:14:15,120 --> 00:14:17,760 Speaker 1: a little bit of a of a you know, at 265 00:14:17,760 --> 00:14:20,360 Speaker 1: the PBOC, a little bit of confidence that they're doing 266 00:14:20,360 --> 00:14:22,600 Speaker 1: the right thing. But then the former chief said, you 267 00:14:22,640 --> 00:14:24,080 Speaker 1: need to do more. How do you see it? 268 00:14:24,600 --> 00:14:29,520 Speaker 12: Well, look, arguably we have seen a delay in the 269 00:14:29,560 --> 00:14:33,280 Speaker 12: reopening trade because we've seen so much, so much new 270 00:14:33,320 --> 00:14:37,640 Speaker 12: resilience in the domestic data coming out of China. But 271 00:14:37,760 --> 00:14:40,160 Speaker 12: you have to ask yourself what's coming behind that, and 272 00:14:40,200 --> 00:14:43,280 Speaker 12: the answer is not altogether that much. And so you know, 273 00:14:43,360 --> 00:14:46,880 Speaker 12: compared to two fifteen, twenty sixteen, the industrial recession and 274 00:14:46,920 --> 00:14:49,560 Speaker 12: the great natural part of China's not applying near is 275 00:14:49,600 --> 00:14:50,359 Speaker 12: much stimulus. 276 00:14:50,640 --> 00:14:53,640 Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah, absolutely, Danielle, Thanks very much for joining us. 277 00:14:53,680 --> 00:14:57,640 Speaker 1: Danielle di Martino, Booth CEO and chief strategist at QI Research. 278 00:14:59,200 --> 00:15:02,040 Speaker 1: This is Bomberg Daybreak Asia, your morning brief on the 279 00:15:02,120 --> 00:15:05,760 Speaker 1: story's making news from Hong Kong to Singapore and Wall Street. 280 00:15:05,760 --> 00:15:09,760 Speaker 2: Look for us on your podcast feed every day, on Apple, Spotify, 281 00:15:10,040 --> 00:15:12,040 Speaker 2: and anywhere else you get your podcasts. 282 00:15:12,040 --> 00:15:14,600 Speaker 1: You can also listen live each day on Bloomberg eleven 283 00:15:14,680 --> 00:15:17,040 Speaker 1: three to zero in New York, Bloomberg ninety nine to 284 00:15:17,040 --> 00:15:20,280 Speaker 1: one in Washington, Bloomberg one oh sixty one in Boston, 285 00:15:20,560 --> 00:15:23,040 Speaker 1: and Bloomberg nine sixty in San Francisco. 286 00:15:23,120 --> 00:15:25,960 Speaker 2: Our flagship New York station is also available on your 287 00:15:26,000 --> 00:15:31,080 Speaker 2: Amazon Alexa devices. Just say Alexa play Bloomberg eleven thirty. 288 00:15:30,920 --> 00:15:34,080 Speaker 1: Plus listen coast to coast on the Bloomberg Business app, 289 00:15:34,360 --> 00:15:38,600 Speaker 1: Sirius XM Channel one nineteen, the iHeartRadio app, and on 290 00:15:38,640 --> 00:15:40,000 Speaker 1: Bloomberg dot Com. 291 00:15:40,200 --> 00:15:43,160 Speaker 2: I'm Brian Curtis and I'm Doug Krisner. Join us again 292 00:15:43,200 --> 00:15:45,200 Speaker 2: tomorrow for all the news you need to start your 293 00:15:45,280 --> 00:15:50,720 Speaker 2: day right here on Bloomberg day Break Asia.