Second, but he was in a thing called the civil war. You can understand that. Andrew jackson was really, really treated badly. In fact, his wife died during the process. A lot of people said she died because of the way they were treated. I mean, she was heartbroken and broken in so many other ways. I heard that for years. And i look now, even last night i was saying it. I said, Andrew Jackson or anybody else, when you think of the fake things, nobody has been treated like trump in terms of badly. No, thats true. Thats true. Thats definitely true. There is some truth to that, willie geist. Its hard for me not to also look at the person asking the questions. I mean, are you kidding me . These networks floating trumps lies. Im not going to make fun of it or anything, but it is creating a whole level of lies that people are swallowing whole because they think thats news. They think those are facts. Thats the part thats sad. I mean, its pathetic that donald trump parallels himself to Abraham
(Bloomberg) Currency traders are betting that the yen will tumble beyond the closely-watched 152 per dollar level, and are ramping up wagers on a slide toward 155.Most Read from BloombergTrumpism Is Emptying ChurchesIran’s Better, Stealthier Drones Are Remaking Global WarfareWhy India’s South Rejects Modi — And Why It MattersBlackstone Nears Buyout of Skin-Care Company L’OccitaneGermany to Order Ships, Armored Vehicles Worth Up to €7 BillionOptions looking for a 2% fall in the yen to around t
The dollar was steady on Monday after data last week showing U.S. inflation remained sticky cast doubts on when the Federal Reserve would start its easing cycle, while the yen remained rooted near the psychologically key 150 per dollar level. Investor focus this week will be on the minutes of the Fed meeting from last month, scheduled for release on Wednesday.
Asian stocks rose on Thursday, with the Nikkei breaching a new 34-year peak, while the dollar took a breather near a three-month high as markets assess when the Federal Reserve is likely to start its easing cycle after a run of strong economic data. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.7%, with the IT index surging more than 2%. Japan's Nikkei remains on the charge and rose in early trading to 38,127, its highest since January 1990 and was inching closer to surpass its record high.
The blistering start to 2024 for the Nikkei shows no signs of stopping, with the Japanese benchmark scaling yet another 34-year peak on Tuesday as the yen teeters towards the closely watched 150 per dollar level. The Nikkei has been breaching multi-decade peaks almost every other day this year, slowly making its way to the record high of 38,957 touched on the final trading day of 1989. The investment thesis remains the same: low valuations and corporate governance changes, making the market attractive for foreign investors even after they poured 6.3 trillion yen ($42.1 billion) into Japanese equities last year.