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S&P 500 Earnings Dashboard 24Q4 | March. 14, 2025 Click here to view the full report. Please note: if you use our earnings data, please source "LSEG I/B/E/S".   S&P 500 Aggregate ... Find Out More
Weekly Aggregates Report | March. 14, 2025 To download the full Weekly Aggregates report click here. Please note: if you use our earnings data, please source "LSEG I/B/E/S". The Weekly ... Find Out More
This Week in Earnings 24Q4 | March. 14, 2025 To download the full This Week in Earnings report click here. Please note: if you use our earnings data, please source "LSEG ... Find Out More
Consumer Confidence Continues Unsteady Start to 2025 as Expectations Index Falls Sharply WASHINGTON, DC - The LSEG/Ipsos Primary Consumer Sentiment Index for March 2025 is at 54.0. Fielded from February 21 – March 7, 2025*, the Index ... Find Out More
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Breakingviews: Snap Poll In Japan Would Be Mixed For Investors

A snap election in Japan would have mixed implications for investors. A renewed mandate for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe would provide political certainty. But that will probably come with an accompanying tax hike that dents economic growth and, in turn, be offset by yet more market-friendly monetary policy. Abe could soon call an October election, Reuters says, citing government sources. That makes sense: his popularity crashed earlier this year but has rebounded amid heightened tensions over North Korea. The shambolic opposition polls far below Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party. It is also too early for one potential rival, Tokyo Governor Yuriko
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Breakingviews
Sep 20, 2017
posted by Breakingviews

The Market Sentimentalist: European Elections (Part 2) – Britain’s Re-referendum

PM May surprised most people last week by announcing that the UK is to hold a snap election on June 8th. Outlining her motivation for calling an early election, something she had previously ruled out, PM May said “[T]he country is coming together but Westminster is not” Her concern is that such large and all-too-visible parliamentary divisions over Brexit hinders her government’s ability to get the best deal out of Brussels [1]. This all sounds very laudable – PM May putting the UK’s economic and financial interests before her personal political ambitions [2]. However, the move is not entirely selfless, it is
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Macro Insight
Apr 28, 2017
posted by Amareos
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