American polls show that half of Americans lack confidence in Trump's ability to nominate qualified cabinet members. A recent poll by the Associated Press -NORC Public Affairs Research Center shows that half of Americans lack confidence in President-elect Trump's ability to nominate qualified people for the new cabinet or key administrative positions. According to the survey results, 55% of American respondents have "a little confidence" or "no confidence at all" in Trump's ability to select qualified candidates during his second term, and another 27% have "very confidence". The poll was conducted from December 5 to 9, and the respondents were 1251 American adults, with a margin of error of 3.7 percentage points.Dennis Shen, an economist at Scope Ratings: The reasons for the Fed to cut interest rates further after December are obviously reduced. Inflation is still sticky, the economic and financial markets are overheated, and the slight increase in unemployment rate earlier this year has been reversed. The Trump administration may bring more inflation risks in the short term.According to the data of Cat's Eye Professional Edition, the movie "Romantic Generation" was released for 23 days, and the total box office broke 10 million.
Reuters survey: All 25 analysts expect the Colombian central bank to cut the benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points to 9.25%.According to sources, the US Securities and Exchange Commission's investigation involved Musk's purchase of Twitter shares in 2022 and whether he intended to benefit from it.The statement showed that US House of Representatives member Pelosi was injured and was taken to Luxembourg Hospital. It is reported that Pelosi has received good treatment and will continue to work.
Japanese yen moves towards the longest losing streak since June. Traders bet that the Bank of Japan will stay put and the yen will move towards the longest losing streak against the US dollar since June. Traders bet that the Bank of Japan will not raise interest rates next week. The yen continued to fall on Friday, falling 0.7% against the US dollar to 153.72 yen, the lowest level since November 26th. The yen has fallen for the fifth day in a row, and is heading for the worst weekly performance in more than two months. Earlier this week, it was reported that the Bank of Japan thought that it would not pay a huge price to wait until January or later, because there were signs that there was little risk that inflation might exceed the target. It is reported that officials are still open to taking action next week, depending on data and market trends.US stocks fell, with the S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow Jones all down 0.1%.Market information: According to satellite photo analysis and Ukrainian intelligence assessment, Russia seems to be withdrawing some troops from Syria after the sudden collapse of the Assad regime.
Strategy guide
12-14
Strategy guide
12-14