Summary
The government of Prime Minister Abe is engaged in a most concerted attempt to rescue the Japanese economy from two decades of desuetude. Monetary easing, fiscal stimulus and structural reforms are the famous ‘three arrows’ of Abe’s revival plan. To date, only one, monetary easing has had any notable success. The Japanese economy slipped into recession last year and its recovery since has been unimpressive. What are the economic assumptions behind Mr. Abe’s program? What options does Prime Minister Abe have, aside from retirement, if his plan fails? Is Japan the future of all ageing industrial societies, or is Japan a singular and unfortunate case? Please join us for a fascinating voyage East and perhaps into the future.Latest Live Videos
Editors’ Picks
EUR/USD hovers around 1.0700 after German IFO data
EUR/USD stays in a consolidation phase at around 1.0700 in the European session on Wednesday. Upbeat IFO sentiment data from Germany helps the Euro hold its ground as market focus shifts to US Durable Goods Orders data.
USD/JPY refreshes 34-year high, attacks 155.00 as intervention risks loom
USD/JPY is renewing a multi-decade high, closing in on 155.00. Traders turn cautious on heightened risks of Japan's FX intervention. Broad US Dollar rebound aids the upside in the major. US Durable Goods data are next on tap.
Gold price trades with mild negative bias, manages to hold above $2,300 ahead of US data
Gold price (XAU/USD) edges lower during the early European session on Wednesday, albeit manages to hold its neck above the $2,300 mark and over a two-week low touched the previous day.
Worldcoin looks set for comeback despite Nvidia’s 22% crash Premium
Worldcoin price is in a better position than last week's and shows signs of a potential comeback. This development occurs amid the sharp decline in the valuation of the popular GPU manufacturer Nvidia.
Three fundamentals for the week: US GDP, BoJ and the Fed's favorite inflation gauge stand out Premium
While it is hard to predict when geopolitical news erupts, the level of tension is lower – allowing for key data to have its say. This week's US figures are set to shape the Federal Reserve's decision next week – and the Bank of Japan may struggle to halt the Yen's deterioration.