Thursday, 4 December 2025

The BoE Warns, Again!!! Why Now? Stocks More Disconnect.

Baltic Dry Index. 2845 +245     Brent Crude 63.02

Spot Gold  4213            US 2 Year Yield 3.49 -0.02  

US Federal Debt. 38.364 trillion

US GDP 31.617 trillion.

“I did not attend his funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it.

 Mark Twain

In the global stock casinos, more disconnect and denial from a real global economy showing sign of turning from relative boom to bust.

Never mind the facts, buy more! The more I see in the stock casinos the more I think Warren Buffett is right to be selling out of stocks.

Besides, the Bank of England is clearly spooked about something bad about to happen. But what and how soon?

Asia markets mostly rise after Wall Street gains on rate-cut hopes fueled by weak jobs data

Published Wed, Dec 3 2025 6:59 PM EST

Asia-Pacific markets mostly rose Thursday, after Wall Street gained on hopes the Federal Reserve could cut interest rates next week following weaker-than-expected jobs data.

Payroll processor ADP reported that private companies cut 32,000 workers in November, compared with 47,000 additions in October, and well below the 40,000 increase expected by economists polled by Dow Jones.

Markets are pricing in an 89% chance of a cut when the Federal Reserve meets on Dec. 9-10, significantly higher than rate-cut bets just a couple of weeks ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool.

In Asia, Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 index added 1.77%, and the Topix index advanced 1.81%.

Industrials and tech stocks led gains on the Nikkei index. Shares of Japan’s Fanuc skyrocketed more than 12%. The industrial robot maker announced a partnership with Nvidia on Tuesday, which sent shares up 6.51% that day.

Shares of tech-focused investment giant SoftBank rallied for a second straight day. The stock jumped more than 8%.

Japanese chip equipment maker Lasertec rallied for a third consecutive session, rising 6.5%. Renesas Electronics jumped more than 9% after California-based semiconductor company SiTime Corp was reportedly in talks to acquire the Japanese chipmaker’s timing unit. A deal could value the timing business at up to $2 billion, including debt, Bloomberg said, citing people familiar with the matter.

South Korea’s Kospi index fell 0.64%, while the small-cap Kosdaq declined 0.12%.

Australia’s ASX/S&P 200 rose 0.19%.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index added 0.19%, and the CSI 300 added 0.28%.

India’s Nifty 50 advanced 0.27%, while the BSE Sensex index climbed 0.22%. The Indian rupee opened at a record low of 90.4 against the greenback, marking the third straight day of reaching an all-time low.

Shares of IndiGo, the country’s biggest airline, fell as much as 3% after it cancelled multiple flights since Monday. IndiGo attributed the disruptions in the past two days to unforeseen issues such as adverse weather conditions and increased congestion, as well as the implementation of updated rostering rules, Reuters reported.

Flight disruptions reportedly continued for a fourth day, as a spokesperson for the airport in Bengaluru said 73 IndiGo flights had been cancelled Thursday.

Overnight, the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 408.44 points, or 0.86%, to finish at 47,882.90. The S&P 500 traded up 0.30% to end the day at 6,849.72, while the Nasdaq Composite added 0.17% to settle at 23,454.09.

Stocks with exposure to the artificial intelligence trade were the biggest drag on U.S. key benchmarks Wednesday stateside, after The Information reported Microsoft was cutting software sales quotas tied to artificial intelligence. 

Other major tech names, including Nvidia and Broadcom, pulled the broad-based S&P 500 lower.

Microsoft refuted the claims in the report, which led the stock to recover slightly in after-hours trading.

Asia-Pacific markets: AI, tech, Nikkei 225, Hang Seng Index, CSI 300

US Companies Keep Shedding Jobs

December 3, 2025 at 11:26 PM GMT

US companies fired employees or otherwise reduced payrolls last month by the most since early 2023, further accelerating a trend of job losses that’s plagued the Trump administration for much of its second term. Unemployment currently sits at 4.4%.

Private-sector payrolls decreased in November by 32,000, according to ADP Research data released Wednesday. Payrolls have now fallen four times in the last six months. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 10,000 gain.

“Hiring has been choppy of late as employers weather cautious consumers and an uncertain macroeconomic environment,” said Nela Richardson, chief economist at ADP and a contributor to Bloomberg Television. “And while November’s slowdown was broad-based, it was led by a pullback among small businesses.”

Companies with fewer than 50 employees shed 120,000 jobs, the largest one-month decline since May 2020. Those with 50 or more employees increased headcount. Until recently, many economists have said the labor market is in a state of low hiring and low firing. But a number of large companies, including Apple and Verizon, recently undertook mass terminations or announced plans to do so, which risks driving unemployment even higher. David E. Rovella

US Companies Keep Firing Their Workers: Evening Briefing Americas - Bloomberg

FTSE 100 Live: HSBC names new chair; Bloomsbury and Google tie-up

Wednesday 03 December 2025 6:45 am  |  Updated: Wednesday 03 December 2025 7:36 am

Good morning and welcome back to the City AM liveblog.

Are we on the verge of another financial crisis?

It’s quite the eerie question but it was one of many posed to the Governor of the Bank of England Andrew Bailey following the latest financial stability report on Tuesday.

The head of the central Bank was asked whether changes to banks capital requirements was “sowing the seeds” of another 2008-esque crash.

Bailey robustly denied this, in fact calling it the “sensible” thing to do.

But one consistent area the Bank has drawn 2008 comparisons with is the ever-ballooning AI bubble.

In the Financial Policy Committee’s (FPC) latest report, it said “risks to financial stability have increased during 2025”.

“Equity valuations in the US are close to the most stretched they have been since the dot-com bubble, and in the UK since the global financial crisis,” the committee added.

“This heightens the risk of a sharp correction.”

Fears of an AI bubble have ramped up over the last 12 months but the UK market has managed to avoid being swept up too dramatically due to the FTSE 100’s weighting towards ‘traditional’ stocks such as healthcare, banking and oil.

Still, the FPC report indicates the UK was likely to get caught in “spillover” due its standing as an “open economy with a large financial centre.”

“The UK is exposed to global shocks that could transmit through multiple, interconnect channels,” it added.

More

(1) FTSE 100 Live: HSBC names new chair; Bloomsbury and Google tie-upFacebookXLinkedInWhatsAppEmailFacebookXLinkedInWhatsAppEmailFacebookXInstagramLinkedIn

In related news.

Bank of England sounds alarm on leveraged hedge fund bond bets

Wednesday 03 December 2025 6:32 am

The Bank of England has sounded the alarm on international hedge funds snapping up record levels of UK government debt, warning that their highly leveraged bets leave Britain increasingly exposed to a bond market meltdown.

In its biannual Financial Stability Report, the central bank said the large share of UK government debt held by risk-seeking asset management firms means the economy is more vulnerable to a sudden sell-off of British bonds – known as gilts.

The UK government has become more reliant on a small number of little-known hedge funds to buy up its debt, after a shake-up in capital market regulation allowed pension funds and insurance firms to diversify away from the longer term bonds the government relies on selling.

Pension funds and insurers had tended to keep their bond holdings until they matured, and given their risk-averse mandates were not as likely to rack up debt to help fund investing elsewhere. But hedge funds, which largely operate on much shorter time frames, have increasingly taken out enormous bets on small price fluctuations in the UK bond market, which they then borrow against and reinvest to boost returns.

Bank of England officials warned the amount of debt taken out against gilts has reached its highest level since the central bank started monitoring the trend in 2017. Hedge funds used their gilt portfolios to borrow some £100bn of extra cash in November, a pattern of behaviour the Bank said “increase[s] the risk of sharp moves” in the UK government bond market.

Bank of England explores limiting hedge fund leverage

The leverage has left regulators concerned about the strength of the bond market’s foundations during a downturn in financial conditions, as the mostly foreign hedge funds would be forced to extricate themselves from the risky trades to pay off debts, compounding a rout. Any sharp sell-off would immediately send government borrowing costs skyward, posing an acute threat to the public finances and a major systemic risk to the financial system.

“Forced or widespread deleveraging would have the result of amplifying initial moves and potentially triggering a feedback loop of further forced selling,” the Bank of England’s Financial Regulation Committee wrote, “especially if funding conditions tightened to the extent that refinancing became unavailable or prohibitively expensive.”

Andrew Bailey, the Bank of England governor who chairs the regulation committee, said officials were exploring plans to limit the size of hedge fund bets on gilts in a bid to avoid the worst of any market fallout.

Elsewhere in Bank’s report, officials highlighted the rapid escalation of debt issuance for artificial intelligence infrastructure, the “materially stretched” tech valuations and “opaque” shadow banking sector as all raising the likelihood of a market meltdown in 2026.

“Risks to financial stability have increased during 2025,” the Bank’s Financial Policy Committee wrote. “Global risks remain elevated and material uncertainty in the global macroeconomic outlook persists.”

Investor speculation over the transformative potential of AI has driven shares in tech firms to historically high valuations through 2025, and meant capital in global stock markets is increasingly concentrated in a few large stocks.

More, much more.

Bank of England sounds alarm on leveraged hedge fund bond bets

Exclusive: Goldman Sachs, Oaktree and Carlyle to take part in private credit stress test

Wednesday 03 December 2025 1:39 pm

Goldman Sachs, Oaktree and Carlyle will take part in the Bank of England’s inaugural stress test of the burgeoning private credit sector this week, City AM can reveal.

Britain’s central bank is poised to carry out its first ever “system-wide exploratory scenario exercise” of so-called shadow banks in the coming weeks, in a bid to to probe how the increasingly pivotal corner of UK finance would fare during a downturn in market conditions.

The UK’s largest UK-founded non-bank, ICG, is also understood to be taking part. Sources familiar with the exercise’s planning confirmed that the four companies – which are among the biggest names in the private credit industry – will take part in the test, during which officials will seek to understand “the actions [they take] in response to a shock”.

Banking behemoth Goldman Sachs, which as well as boasting its own private credit division also issues traditional loans to specialist non-banking funds, will be submitted to tests both on the response of its private debt practice and the underwriting of its loans to the industry.

Oaktree, the Los Angeles-based private markets giant established by investment luminary Howard Marks, Carlyle and ICG will also submit to interrogation from the Bank over the systemic risk their loans pose to the UK economy.

Private credit comes under regulators’ gaze

Watchdogs across the world have become increasingly worried about the opaque role that private markets play in the global financial system, after a string of high-profile corporate collapses with ties to private lending.

The International Monetary Fund devoted a chapter of its 2024 financial stability report to the systemic threat posed by the private credit industry, which now boasts an estimated $2 trillion under management. Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey has also compared some of the riskier lending issued by industry players to the sub-prime mortgage crash that foreshadowed the 2008 financial crisis, saying “alarm bells” were ringing.

The recent failures of car part maker First Brands, and subprime auto lenders Primalend and Tricolor, were held up as evidence of lax underwriting at private credit funds which could trigger a future financial crisis. The industry has vigorously denied those charges, claiming its long-term, closed-end nature makes it less vulnerable to contagion than traditional banking.

As well as Oaktree, ICG and Goldman, earlier reports have revealed industry heavyweights Blackstone, Apollo and KKR will also participate in the test. A source familiar with the inaugural test said the Bank of England was planning to unveil a full list of names taking part and reveal additional detail on how it will work on Thursday.

The exercise is similar to the regulator’s biannual probe of the traditional lending sector, the results of which it published this week alongside confirmation it would lower capital requirements on licensed banks in a bid to boost lending. Private markets are not as heavily regulated as banks, meaning the industry juggernauts that are confirmed to be taking part have signed up voluntarily.

Oaktree, ICG, Carlyle and Goldman Sachs declined to comment.

Goldman Sachs, Oaktree and ICG join private credit stress test

In other news.

Toyota warns of ‘challenging road ahead’ after profit falls £100m

Wednesday 03 December 2025 10:43 am

The UK manufacturing arm of Toyota has warned “the road ahead may be challenging” after its profit slumped by more than £100m during its latest financial year.

The division of the Japanese giant said the “uncertainties of the automotive industry and infrastructure to support vehicle type” were the main factors behind its pessimism.

However, Toyota added the future is “also filled with opportunity” as its UK operation “remains committed to meeting consumer expectations”.

The business also said it is “an exciting time to be part of the automotive industry”.

Fewer Toyotas rolling off production line

The warning was included in new accounts filed with Companies House for Toyota Motor Manufacturing (UK), the division which makes the Corolla hybrid at Burnaston in the East Midlands and engines in Deeside, North Wales.

In the year to 31 March, 2025, Toyota made 90,000 Corollas and 243,184 engines, down from 132,591 and 258,768 respectively from the prior 12 months.

As a result, the division’s turnover fell from €3.11bn (£2.7bn) to €2.25bn while its pre-tax profit slumped from €167.4m to €40.4m.

In the accounts, Toyota said both its sales and production volumes fell because of “a stabilisation of output in line with European market demand”.

It said its prior financial year included “elevated volumes” which were driven by “recovery efforts following global parts shortages”.

Toyota added that despite the reductions, it still delivered an operating profit in line with the directors’ expectations.

That operating profit totalled €70.7m for the year, down from €200m.

In terms of the future, Toyota’s Burnaston site is preparing to start production on the GR Corolla in November 2026.

A year ago, it was announced the factory would be the first outside of Japan to manufacture the model.

More

Toyota warns of 'challenging road ahead' after profit falls £100m

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

Given our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians, inflation now needs an entire section of its own.

Bank of Japan faces a policy dilemma as government bond yields keep hitting new highs

Published Wed, Dec 3 2025 11:01 PM EST

Japan’s central bank is caught in a bind as soaring government bond yields risk upending its policy normalization process.

The Bank of Japan faces a stark choice: sticking with its policy of raising rates and risking even higher yields and further slowing an already sagging economy, or holding, even cutting rates to support growth that could accelerate inflation further.

Japanese government bonds have been scaling new peaks over the past month. On Thursday, yield on the benchmark 10-year JGBs hit a high of 1.917%, surging to their strongest level since 2007. The 20-year JGB yield reached 2.936%, a level not seen since 1999, while 30-year hit a record high of 3.436%, LSEG data going back to 1999 showed.

Japan abandoned its yield curve control program in March 2024, under which benchmark 10-year bond yields were capped at around 1%, as part of its policy normalization that also saw the country end the world’s last negative interest rate regime.

Now, as the country weighs increasing rates at a time when inflation has been rising — it has stayed above the BOJ’s 2% target for 43 straight months — the specter of bond yields spiking further looms large.

Anindya Banerjee, head of currency and commodities at Kotak Securities, told CNBC’s “Inside India” that if the BOJ reverts back to quantitative easing and YCC to cap bond yields, the yen may also weaken and feed imported inflation, which is already a problem.

Rising bond yields mean higher borrowing costs for Japan, further straining the country’s fiscal situation. Asia’s second-largest economy already boasts of the world highest debt-to-GDP ratio, standing at almost 230%, according to data from the International Monetary Fund.

Add to that a government that is poised to unleash its largest stimulus package since the pandemic to curb cost of living and prop up the struggling Japanese economy, and the concerns around Japan’s ballooning debt become even more stark.

More

Japan's record JGB yields are presenting the BOJ with a policy problem

Dollar heads for ninth straight loss as Fed outlook dominates

3 December 2025

Dec 3 (Reuters) - The dollar headed for its ninth straight decline on Wednesday as traders ramped up bets on Federal Reserve rate cuts following U.S. economic data and growing expectations of a more dovish central bank.

Fed Governor Christopher Waller said last week the labour market is weak enough to justify another quarter-point rate cut in December, while White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett emerged as the frontrunner to become the next Fed chair.

U.S. President Donald Trump said he would be announcing his pick as Fed chair early in 2026.

“Such an announcement, if it occurs this early, will create a ‘shadow Fed chair’ since current Fed Chair Powell’s term does not end until May," said Kristina Hooper, chief market strategist at Man Group.

"This could complicate the Fed’s ability to communicate monetary policy and could create some confusion for markets at a time when they need clarity,” she added.

Markets priced in an 87% chance of a rate cut this month on Wednesday, according to the CME Group's FedWatch tool. The probability was at 30% on November 19. 

Now that a December move is almost fully priced in, investors will shift their focus to the Fed following decisions, with markets indicating cuts for 88 basis points by December 2026.

The dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against six other units, was 0.15% lower at 99.10, set for a nearly 9% decline in the year. 

EURO RISES WITH TALKS OVER UKRAINE IN FOCUS

The euro rose 0.11% to $1.1639 as investors monitored progress in Ukraine peace talks, which could bolster energy security and lower costs, supporting the single currency.

However, Russia and the U.S. did not reach a compromise on a possible peace deal to end the war in Ukraine after a five-hour Kremlin meeting between President Vladimir Putin and Trump's top envoys, the Kremlin said on Wednesday.

Analysts said the euro could rally further if a ceasefire or full peace agreement is reached, particularly if elevated defense spending, which is expected to support the economy in coming years, remains in place.

Euro zone inflation data came in slightly above expectations on Tuesday, but bets on the policy rate path were unchanged, with the European Central Bank expected to stay on hold through early 2027.

YEN NOT FAR FROM DANGER ZONE FOR INTERVENTION

The Japanese yen dropped 0.13% to 155.69 against the dollar on Wednesday after rising 0.25% to 155.89 the day before as Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda provided the strongest signal yet of a rate hike later this month. 

"The initial price action casts some doubt on whether an earlier BoJ rate hike will be sufficient on its own to reverse the yen weakening trend that has been in place since Sanae Takaichi won the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) leadership election in early October," said Lee Hardman senior currency economist at MUFG.

Prime Minister Takaichi is expected to favour an expansionary fiscal policy and lower rates.

"It may still require intervention if the yen continues to weaken," he added.

Analysts said Washington is likely to push back against any yen slide to or beyond 160.00 making intervention likely around that level, while noting U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has repeatedly blamed BoJ policy for keeping the currency undervalued.

More

Dollar heads for ninth straight loss as Fed outlook dominates

Covid-19 Corner

This section will continue only occasionally when something of interest occurs.

Study compares immune responses from three major COVID-19 vaccine types

December 2, 2025

A recent study has provided the first side-by-side comparison of how three major COVID-19 vaccine types differ in triggering immune responses and sustaining protection, according to an analysis published in JCI Insight.

While three vaccine subtypes (adenovirus-based, mRNA, and protein-based) were widely deployed during the pandemic, investigators say their immunological profiles and optimal use cases are more nuanced than previously understood.

"During the COVID-19 pandemic, three main types of vaccines were used around the world: Adenovirus-based vaccines like the AstraZeneca, ChAdOx1, and Johnson & Johnson shots, mRNA vaccines like Pfizer and Moderna, and protein vaccines like Novavax," said Pablo Penaloza-MacMaster, Ph.D., adjunct associate professor of microbiology-immunology, who was senior author of the study. "All of them worked, but we didn't have a clear and rigorous side-by-side comparison of how they differ in the way they trigger the immune system… This study was designed to fill that gap."

The study, conducted in mice, revealed that adenovirus-based (Ad5) vaccines induced the most sustained antigen expression lasting more than a week and produced stronger immune responses after a single dose. In contrast, mRNA vaccines elicited robust immune responses but only after two doses, and triggered early immune activation within just a few hours, which could explain transient side effects. Protein-based vaccines were the weakest overall, particularly for T-cell responses, but caused less inflammation, potentially making them more tolerable for individuals sensitive to vaccine reactions.

More

Study compares immune responses from three major COVID-19 vaccine types

Technology Update.

With events happening fast in the development of solar power and graphene, among other things, I’ve added this section. Updates as they get reported.

7 EVs That Lead the Pack in Battery Longevity

Discover the electric vehicles with the best battery health, designed to retain capacity and deliver long-term value for drivers.

December 1, 2025

All cars are depreciating assets, but electric vehicles (EVs) add a whole new layer to the equation. In a marketplace where range is one of the most significant factors influencing consumers, battery health is a major concern.

The battery is the single most valuable component in the vehicle, often representing 30-40% of the total manufacturing cost. That makes its long-term health an important part of the ownership equation. Where internal-combustion components tend to degrade gradually and predictably, lithium-ion cells follow chemical aging pathways that are heavily influenced by a myriad of variables. Considerations like charging habits, thermal exposure, cell chemistry, and vehicle-level energy management all influence cell capacity retention, and, therefore, car value.

High-voltage fast charging, for example, exposes cells to elevated temperatures and higher current densities, which can cause wear in some chemistries. Conversely, vehicles with conservative charging algorithms and liquid cooling tend to preserve capacity far more effectively over time.

User behavior and environment also impact cell life. That’s why two vehicles with the same odometer reading can have dramatically different states of health. A pack that has spent years in a mild climate, routinely charged between 20% and 80%, will age very differently from one that is repeatedly fast-charged to 100% in extreme heat or cold. 

A Swedish used‑car broker, Kvdbil, recently analyzed 1,366 used EVs and plug‑in hybrids and found that battery health depends more on use patterns than on brand. Age, climate, charging habits, and driving style are the main drivers of degradation. The Swedish study ranked vehicles by state of health (SoH), and below are the seven vehicles with the best capacity retention. Read on to learn about the seven EVs with the best battery lifetimes. 

More

7 EVs That Lead the Pack in Battery Longevity

Next, the world global debt clock. Nations debts to GDP compared.

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

“I am enclosing two tickets to the first night of my new play; bring a friend ... if you have one."
George Bernard Shaw, playwright (to Winston Churchill)

"Cannot possibly attend first night; will attend second, if there is one."
Churchill's response”


Wednesday, 3 December 2025

Stocks, Bitcoin Seesaw. A New Japanese Carry Trade Risk.

 Baltic Dry Index. 2600 +17        Brent Crude 62.51

Spot Gold  4240            US 2 Year Yield 3.51 -0.03  

US Federal Debt. 38.360 trillion

US GDP 31.615 trillion.

There is no art which government sooner learns of another than that of draining money from the pockets of the people.

Adam Smith

In the stock casinos, seesaw markets.  But in Asia a new threat to casino stability is emerging in Japan.

In the commodity markets, how will precious metals, copper and crude oil close out the year?

To dinosaur Graeme stagflation at best, seems likely to inflict north America, the UK and Europe and most of Asia in 2026.

At worst, an AI led unemployment bust sets off a major global recession.

But for now in the stock casinos, everyone’s betting on the US central bank cutting their key interest rate next Wednesday setting off the Santa Clause rally. But what if that’s already priced in?

SoftBank soars 8% as Japanese tech stocks track gains in U.S. peers

Published Tue, Dec 2 2025 6:44 PM EST

SoftBank led gains in Japanese tech-related stocks Wednesday, tracking Wall Street peers, and boosting the Nikkei 225.

Tech-focused investment major SoftBank rose more than 8%, snapping a three-session streak of losses. Japan’s Tokyo Electron, which provides essential chipmaking equipment to foundries that manufacture Nvidia chips, rose more than 5%; chip equipment maker Lasertec added as much as 7%, and chipmaker Renesas Electronics advanced more than 7%. Semiconductor testing equipment supplier Advantest also gained as much as 5%.

The Nikkei led gains in Asia, up 1.54%. The broad-based Topix was down marginally.

Bitcoin climbed over 7% to cross the $90,000 mark in overnight trading after a sharp sell-off a day earlier, and was last trading at $92,980.01.

South Korea’s Kospi rose 1.06%, while the small-cap Kosdaq reversed gains to fall 0.14%.

The country’s revised third-quarter GDP numbers indicated that country’s economy grew at 1.8% year on year, compared to 1.7% in the initial estimate, data from the central bank showed Wednesday.

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung also addressed the country on the first anniversary of former President Yoon Suk Yeol’s failed attempt to declare martial law.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 gained 0.11% as the country’s third-quarter GDP data missed estimates.

The country’s GDP expanded 2.1% year on year, marking its strongest expansion since the third quarter of 2023, but fell short of the 2.2% expected by economists polled by Reuters.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index traded 0.95% lower, while the mainland CSI 300 hovered above the flatline.

India’s Nifty 50 fell 0.48%, while the BSE Sensex index declined 0.32%. The Indian rupee weakened for a fifth straight day, and was trading about 0.30% lower at 90.157.

U.S. stock futures were little changed during early Asia hours after major U.S. indexes recovered some losses from the previous session.

Overnight in the U.S., the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.39%, while the S&P 500 climbed 0.25% and the Nasdaq Composite advanced 0.59%.

SoftBank soars 8% as Japanese tech stocks track gains in U.S. peers

CNBC Daily Open: A year-end rally is still on every trader’s wishlist

Published Tue, Dec 2 2025 8:51 PM EST

U.S. markets may have had a rocky start in December, but there seems to be some steam in the trading engine for a turnaround from a tumultuous November.

Bitcoin recovered part of its recent slide and tech names rallied Tuesday stateside, giving stocks a recovery from a pullback in the previous session that snapped a five-day winning streak. The rebound suggested investor appetite to take on market risk hasn’t vanished; it just needed a moment to catch its breath.

Other indicators point to lingering confidence in a year-end rally.

Investors are pricing in an 89.2% chance of a quarter percentage point rate cut at the U.S. Federal Reserve’s upcoming meeting on Dec. 10, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. That expectation has climbed sharply from a month ago, when the odds were closer to a coin toss.

Barring any surprises, attention is shifting back to fundamentals. Markets appear to be “focusing instead on better-than-expected earnings projections for the fourth quarter and calendar year 2026, in addition to looking beyond the economic soft patch we’re currently experiencing to growth accelerating later next year,” said Doug Beath, global equity strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

If investors are hunting for a narrative to close out the year, they may have finally found one: Cautious optimism trying its best to outweigh the noise.

— CNBC’s Sean Conlon and Pia Singh contributed to this story.

What you need to know today

Tech lifts U.S markets. All three key benchmarks closed higher Tuesday stateside, on the back of tech gains and a crypto recovery. The Europe Stoxx 600 ended just above the flatline. Shares of German biotech giant Bayer popped after the Trump administration curbed U.S. litigation related to its weedkiller product.

Digital Assets Treasury under scrutiny. DAT companies — publicly-listed entities that hold cryptocurrencies and provide investors with exposure to the underlying digital currency — are coming into focus as crypto markets plunged in recent weeks. As crypto prices fall, companies are trading at a discount to their crypto holdings, which can create a number of issues.

Tariffs’ delayed bite. President Donald Trump’s tariffs could prompt U.S. companies to reduce domestic headcount, according to statements from corporate executives and economic forecasters. The Institute for Supply Management’s November survey showed its employment gauge slipping 2 points to 44%, its lowest reading since August.

French AI startup releases new models. The release by Mistral, one of Europe’s leading AI startups, included a large model which it claims is the “world’s best open-weight multimodal and multilingual.” Mistral raised 1.7 billion euros in September, which saw participation from Nvidia and Dutch chip equipment maker ASML.

[PRO] Brace for crypto winter? Bitcoin’s recent price drawdown reached 20%, suggesting the crypto bull run has turned bearish. But whether a true bear market is here depends on several factors, analysts say.

More

CNBC Daily Open: A year-end rally is still on every trader's wishlist

1 big thing: How Japanese rates affect U.S. markets

December 02, 2025

A potential increase in interest rates from the Bank of Japan is weighing on one of the most popular trades on Wall Street: the yen carry trade.

Why it matters: A rise in Japanese rates while the Federal Reserve cuts rates would thwart a borrowing strategy long used to buy risky assets like bitcoin and tech stocks.

What they're saying: The Japanese carry trade will become a "thing of the past" within the next few years, Nic Puckrin, an investment analyst and cofounder of Coin Bureau, a crypto information platform, tells Axios.

How it works: For decades, investors have borrowed cheap Japanese yen and used it to buy higher-yielding assets abroad, pocketing the difference.

  • It works as long as the yen stays weak and Japanese rates stay low.
  • That is changing, with the Bank of Japan considering higher rates just as the Fed is expected to make another cut, bringing the interest rates of the two nations closer together.

Driving the news: Bank of Japan governor Kazuo Ueda teased a potential rate hike yesterday, saying the central bank would weigh the "pros and cons" at its next policy meeting later this month, Reuters reported.

  • His comments led two-year Japanese yields to spike to their highest level since 2008 as traders priced in a 76% chance of an interest rate increase.
  • In response, traders sold off assets to pay back the yen they borrowed.
  • Bitcoin tumbled overnight, triggering about $1 billion in liquidations.

Zoom out: This is not the first time a Bank of Japan shift has rattled markets.

  • In August 2024, an unexpected hawkish turn by the central bank triggered a much more violent unwind of yen-funded positions.
  • Bitcoin plunged about 18% in a matter of days, and currency markets, emerging markets and U.S. stocks were all swept up in the shock.
  • Today's turbulence is smaller since much of the trade was flushed out last year, and a possible Japanese rate hike has been more widely anticipated.

What to watch: Where the yen carry trade goes from here.

  • As Japan normalizes rates, markets are adjusting to a world where one of the biggest behind-the-scenes drivers of global risk appetite is no longer guaranteed.
  • Short term, that shift is weighing on crypto and other more speculative investments. Longer term, it could be the end of an era when ultra-loose Japanese monetary policy reliably underwrote risk-taking worldwide.

Axios Markets

In other news.

ECB refuses to provide backstop for $163 billion Ukraine loan, FT reports

Dec 2 (Reuters) - The European Central Bank has refused to backstop a 140 billion euros ($162.53 billion) payment to Ukraine, undermining an EU plan to raise a “reparations loan” backed by frozen Russian assets, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday.

The ECB concluded the European Commission proposal violated its mandate, the newspaper said, citing multiple officials, adding to Brussels’ difficulties in raising the loan against Russian central bank assets immobilised at Euroclear, the Belgian securities depository.

Reuters could not immediately verify the report.

ECB refuses to provide backstop for $163 billion Ukraine loan, FT reports

Bank of England eases bank capital requirements by 1 percentage point

2 December 2025

LONDON, Dec 2 - Britain's central bank on Tuesday eased the capital requirements for lenders by 1 percentage point to 13%, reducing the amount they need to hold in reserve against adversity in a boon to banks already riding high from record recent profits.

The Bank of England said its capital framework review showed that the benchmark for Tier 1 capital requirements for lenders, set at 14% since 2015, could be reduced.

The BoE said its change reflected an updated assessment of the benefits of capital, helping banks withstand crises, against the drawback of higher capital costs weighing on growth.

The new level of 13% comprises an underlying optimal level of 11%, plus 2 percentage points to account for outstanding gaps and shortcomings in measurement of risk-weighted assets, the BoE said.

British bank executives in recent weeks had sounded optimistic about the potential for such a change, especially after BoE deputy governor Sarah Breeden earlier this year said the central bank was considering how to free up banks' use of their capital.

The BoE's Financial Policy Committee (FPC) has been reviewing potential changes to the capital structure since July, amid a broader push by Britain's Labour government for regulators to prioritise economic growth as well as financial stability.

"Given the reduction in the FPC’s benchmark, banks should have greater certainty and confidence in using their capital resources to lend to UK households and businesses," the BoE said in its report.

In the United States, the Trump administration is expected to ease capital rules for the biggest banks, while the European Union is working on plans to simplify its prudential framework. Industry body UK Finance has warned that without similar moves, British banks could lose market share to global rivals.

Bank of England eases bank capital requirements by 1 percentage point

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

Given our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians, inflation now needs an entire section of its own.

Euro zone inflation up a notch to 2.2% in November, flash data shows

Published Tue, Dec 2 2025 5:02 AM EST

Euro zone inflation stood at 2.2% in November, marking a slight rise from the previous month, flash data from data agency Eurostat showed Tuesday.

The latest consumer price index reading is just a shade above the European Central Bank’s 2% target. Economists polled by Reuters expected a reading of 2.1% for the twelve months to November.

Looking at the main components of euro area inflation, services is expected to have the highest annual rate in November, at 3.5% compared with 3.4% in October, Eurostat said.

Core inflation, which excludes more volatile energy, food, alcohol and tobacco prices, was at 2.4% in November, unchanged from the previous month.

The ECB held its key deposit facility rate at 2% for the third consecutive time in late October, having last cut rates in June.

The trim, which coincided with euro zone inflation hitting the ECB’s target rate of 2%, was part of a rate-cutting cycle that has brought rates down from last year’s record high of 4%.

Top ECB board members have told CNBC in recent months that the easing cycle is close to, or at its end although the central bank has repeatedly said it will take a meeting-by-meeting and data dependent approach to rate setting.

After the October trim, ECB President Christine Lagarde told CNBC that from a monetary policy point of view, the economy is in a good place.

“Is it a fixed, good place? No. But we will do whatever is needed to make sure we stay in a good place,” she said.

Euro zone inflation in November 2025

Covid-19 Corner

This section will continue only occasionally when something of interest occurs.

 

Technology Update.

With events happening fast in the development of solar power and graphene, among other things, I’ve added this section. Updates as they get reported.

Below, a daft question. Does winter bring no daylight for most of the two hemispheres on planet Earth?

Do solar panels work in winter?

1 December 2025

When the clocks go back and the days close in, it’s natural to wonder whether solar panels can still pull their weight. The UK’s short daylight hours and famously grey skies fuel a common misconception that solar panels ‘switch off’ in winter. In reality, photovoltaic (PV) systems continue producing electricity throughout the colder months, and in some cases, they even work more efficiently. The catch is simply that there’s less light to work with, so output inevitably dips.

Winter performance varies by region, weather and system design, but the core principle remains the same: solar panels don’t need heat to generate electricity. They need daylight. And in the UK, there’s enough of it year-round for a well-installed system to make a meaningful contribution to your home’s energy use.

Do solar panels still generate electricity in winter?

Yes. Solar panels convert sunlight into electricity using PV cells, which respond to light rather than temperature. Cold conditions can actually improve panel efficiency. The challenge is reduced daylight time. A typical December day in the UK has around eight hours of daylight – far less than the 16 or so hours seen in midsummer – so overall production drops.

Even so, solar panels remain active whenever light hits them. They’ll generate less than in summer, but they certainly don’t stop.

How much electricity do solar panels produce in winter?

Production can fall to around 15–30 per cent of summer output, depending on your location and the specifics of your roof and system. National Grid and Energy Saving Trust data consistently show January as one of the lowest‑generation months of the year.

Factors that influence winter output include:

  • Orientation and pitch: south-facing roofs at a 30–40° angle capture the most winter light.
  • Shading: trees or neighbouring buildings can have a bigger impact when the sun is low.
  • Panel type: Monocrystalline panels generally perform better in low-light conditions.
  • Geography: Southern England receives more winter sun than northern Scotland, but all regions see seasonal variation.

While generation is lower, it’s still significant enough to reduce grid reliance, especially for households with efficient appliances or those who are home during daylight hours.

More

Do solar panels work in winter?

Next, the world global debt clock. Nations debts to GDP compared.

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

All money is a matter of belief.

Adam Smith