| By Julia Horowitz • Friday, August 23 | | | | It's Friday. 🎉 In today's newsletter: What to expect from Jerome Powell's Jackson Hole speech, why a potential US recession could be self-inflicted and a deal to buy Peppa Pig. US stock futures point higher in anticipation of Powell's remarks. Markets in Europe gained in early trading. Stocks in Asia got the ball rolling earlier in the session, with major indexes all closing higher. ▸ Forwarded this newsletter? Want global markets news and analysis from CNN Business reporters every morning? You can sign up here. | | | What's happening now in markets: MARKET DATA AS OF 8/23/19 6:15 AM ET | | MARKET FLASH It all comes down to Jackson Hole This week in markets has mostly been about what Jerome Powell has to say. The Federal Reserve chairman speaks Friday at the annual gathering of central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. It's his biggest test yet. My CNN Business colleague Donna Borak in Washington on the stakes: "Powell will need to assure markets — which appear to have already assumed another rate cut will come in September — that the Fed will do whatever it can to support the economy amid growing fears of a US slowdown. At the same time, he can't overpromise and risk further turmoil." | | Analysts at Morgan Stanley warn that all the anticipation could lead to disappointment. "It is premature to expect a signal on the size of the Fed's September move," economist Ellen Zentner and strategist Matthew Hornbach wrote in a research note this week, noting that there will be more data to decipher between now and the next meeting. They expect Powell will try to maintain flexibility with a reminder that the Fed "will act as appropriate to sustain the expansion." That's hardly the big promise that investors are banking on. Remember: Powell framed the rate cut in July, the first since 2008, as a "mid-cycle adjustment," dismissing the idea that it was the beginning of a series. Markets balked, and President Donald Trump has continued to hammer Powell ever since, pressuring the Fed to cut rates by as much 100 points to offset the trade war. That type of move would typically be reserved for a severe downturn or a recession. And the US economy is still growing, despite some signs of turbulence. Investor insight: Powell's Jackson Hole speech is scheduled for 10 a.m. ET. Expectations could soon run up against reality, but Jackson Hole has surprised before. | | VOICES On the Fed chief's tough balacing act "Regardless of what Powell does, he will be criticized." EDWARD MOYA, SENIOR MARKET ANALYST AT OANDA Read more from CNN Business on the debate. | | READ THIS The next US recession may be self-inflicted | | My CNN Business colleague Matt Egan in New York has a thoughtful new piece analyzing how two big economic events — Trump's tax cuts, and his trade war with China — may have set the stage for a self-inflicted recession. From Matt: "The biggest problem facing the United States economy is a slowdown that has struck China, Germany, South Korea and other manufacturing powerhouses." Trump's escalating trade war with China has only amplified the pre-existing weakness overseas. That's started to affect America's factories, which are contracting for the first time in a decade, he points out. And that's not all. "The United States is also coming off the 2018 sugar high of Trump's tax cuts and the bipartisan surge in government spending. There was always a risk that stimulating an already-healthy economy would backfire by creating a boom-to-bust scenario." Read more from Matt's story here. | | UP NEXT Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speaks at 10 a.m. ET. Also today → ▸ US new home sales hit at 10 a.m. ET as well. ▸ A busy retail earnings week ends closes out with results from Foot Locker. This weekend: The G7 summit kicks off in southwestern France. | | WHAT WE'RE READING AND WATCHING ▸ Facebook's Libra backers are distancing themselves from the project (FT) ▸ Hasbro scoops up Peppa Pig owner for $4 billion (CNN Business) ▸ Tesla launched a stealth plan to replace defective solar panels (Business Insider) ▸ YouTube shuts down 210 channels posting about Hong Kong (CNN Business) ▸ Inside India's messy electric vehicle revolution (New York Times) ▸ US attorneys general, telecoms announce plan to tackle illegal robocalls (CNN) ▸ Overstock CEO resigns after 'deep state' comments cause alarm (CNN Business) | | | | | |
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