U.S. Economy

Surging Rents Lift U.S. Consumer Prices; Underlying Inflation Grinding Lower

U.S. consumer prices increased in September amid a surprise surge in rental costs

but a steady moderation in underlying inflation pressures supported financial market expectations that the Federal Reserve would not raise interest rates next month.

The report from the Labor Department last week showed the annual increase in consumer prices excluding the volatile food and energy components last month was the smallest in two years.

Economists expected the jump in rents, which was at odds with the rising supply of multi-family housing and independent surveys showing asking rents declining, to reverse in the coming months. With the labor market still tight, however, reaching the Fed's 2% inflation target could be a long slog, making it likely that the U.S. central bank could keep rates elevated for longer. Higher U.S. Treasury yields and conflict in the Middle East are also likely to discourage the Fed from tightening monetary policy further.

Investing Ideas

Block’s Q3 Earnings Show $2.42 Billion Bitcoin Revenue, Marking 37 Percent Annual Growth

Block Inc. (SQ, formerly Square) reported an increase in Q3 earnings of 55 cents per share, beating the Zacks consensus estimate of 44 cents, with total net revenue climbing to $5.62 billion, marking a 24% YoY growth.

U.S. Economy

The Federal Reserve May Not Hike Interest Rates This Week, but Consumers Unlikely to Feel Any Relief

The U.S. Federal Reserve is expected to announce it will leave rates unchanged at the end of its two-day meeting next week, even though the central bank's preferred inflation indicator remains well above the 2% target rate.

International

Central Banks of China and UAE Sign MoU to Strengthen Digital Currency Cooperation

The Central Banks of China and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have recently signed memoranda of understanding (MoUs) relating to digital currencies during the third "Belt and Road" International Cooperation Summit Forum in Beijing last week.