Economy

Wall Street treads water, ASX set to edge up; Gold at record

One wild card may pop up in the interim: The US government is heading toward a deadline that could result in its shutdown.

The United States has already has many such shutdowns, and they’ve made minimal waves in the past for the US stock market and for the economy. But another shutdown could delay the collection and release of economic data, such as on jobs and inflation. Without those reports, increasing uncertainty on Wall Street could make markets more twitchy.

This shutdown may also be different because the White House may push for large-scale firings of federal workers this time around.

“We believe that a shutdown will have only a small and transitory economic impact, but it may spur some financial market volatility,” according to Jennifer Timmerman, investment strategy analyst at Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

On Wall Street, Electronic Arts rallied 4.6 per cent after the video game maker confirmed rumours of a megabuyout. A group of investors will pay $US210 in cash for each share of EA. Based on the number of shares it had outstanding in July, the price tag would be around $US55 billion ($84 billion), and the companies are calling it history’s largest all-cash deal to take a business private.

CSX chugged 3.7 per cent higher after the railroad operator named Steve Angel as its chief executive. Angel was previously CEO of Linde and its predecessor Praxair, and he is replacing Joe Hinrichs, who also left CSX’s board.

Stocks in the marijuana-related business soared after President Donald Trump posted a video calling hemp-derived CBD a “game changer” in improving the quality of life for seniors. Tilray Brands jumped 46 per cent, and Canada’s Canopy Growth rose 17.3 per cent.

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In stock markets abroad, indexes mostly rose in Europe and Asia.

The FTSE 100 in London added 0.2 per cent as GSK climbed 2.2 per cent after the pharmaceutical giant said CEO Emma Walmsley will step down December 31 following more than eight years at the helm. Luke Miels, currently GSK’s chief commercial officer, will replace the 56-year-old Walmsley, who was the first woman to lead a major pharmaceutical company

The Hang Seng in Hong Kong jumped 1.9 per cent, and Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 fell 0.7 per cent for two of the world’s bigger moves.

Oil prices slumped roughly 4 per cent. Analysts said reports that oil-producing nations in the OPEC+ group might raise their production limits next month added to the notion that too much supply is washing around the world.

Gold topped $US3850 per ounce to continue its record-breaking run amid expectations for cuts to interest rates by the Fed and worries about potentially high inflation and the mountains of debt that governments worldwide are carrying.

In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury eased to 4.14 per cent from 4.20 per cent late Friday.

AP

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