Here’s what my colleague, market strategist Mike “Willo” Wilson says happened while we were sleeping… US stocks ended at a record and bond yields rose as June job growth exceeded expectations for a fourth straight month and the unemployment rate fell. Stocks were also bolstered by the US House of Representatives granting passage of President Donald Trump’s tax and spending bill. The Aussie and kiwi edged lower amid broad dollar strength. ASX futures point to a solid start for local equities. Today sees Australian household spending data and with American markets closed for the Independence Day holiday it should be a quiet run into the weekend. Headline numbers from the US June jobs report took pressure off the Federal Reserve to consider an interest-rate cut later this month, likely leaving the central bank on hold at least until the fall. US employers added 147,000 jobs last month, exceeding estimates, while the unemployment rate ticked lower to 4.1%. President Donald Trump secured a sweeping shift in US domestic policy as the House passed a $3.4 trillion fiscal package that cuts taxes, curtails spending on safety-net programs and reverses much of Joe Biden’s efforts to move the country toward a clean-energy economy. The 218-214 vote in the House Thursday sends the legislation to Trump, in time for his July 4 deadline. House leaders had to keep earlier procedural votes open for hours to convince a small band of holdouts to support the legislation. Donald Trump Photographer: Ken Cedeno/UPI Trump said his administration may begin sending out letters to trading partners as soon as Friday setting unilateral tariff rates ahead of a July 9 deadline for negotiations. “We’re probably going to be sending some letters out, starting probably tomorrow, maybe 10 a day to various countries saying what they’re going to pay to do business with the US,” Trump told reporters on Thursday. Singapore introduced fresh measures to tame housing prices, raising the stamp duty for those who sell their private homes within four years. The changes take effect for all private residential properties purchased from Friday. The holding period for homes which will incur a seller’s stamp duty will be extended to four years from three. The rates payable will rise to 16% from 12% within the first year. |