Here’s what my colleague, market strategist Mike “Willo” Wilson says happened while we were sleeping… Weak US personal income and spending data was shrugged off by stocks and the dollar as both rose. The latter was helped in part by gains made over Canada’s loonie after President Donald Trump said he was ending all trade discussions with Canada. This posture does not auger well for other nations with the tariff pause ending in about a week. Today Australia has a private inflation gauge to consider, while New Zealand’s ANZ activity outlook and business confidence warrant focus. China’s manufacturing data also merits attention. The Aussie and kiwi snapped a four-day rally Friday but look set to post solid monthly gains. ASX stock futures imply a positive opening to the week’s trading. With just 10 days to go until Trump’s country-specific tariffs are set to resume, the White House appears poised to fall short of the sweeping global trade reforms it promised to achieve during the three months they were on hold. Trump said he has identified a buyer for the US operations of TikTok, the social media app owned by Chinese company ByteDance, but he won’t provide details for two weeks. “We have a buyer for Tiktok, by the way. I think I’ll need probably China approval and I think President Xi will probably do it,” he said, referring to Chinese leader Xi Jinping, in an interview on Fox News’s Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo. Elon Musk slammed the US Senate’s latest version of Trump’s multi-trillion dollar tax bill Saturday, warning that the cuts to electric vehicle and other clean energy credits would be “ incredibly destructive” to the country. The bill would destroy millions of US jobs and give “handouts to industries of the past while severely damaging industries of the future,” Musk said. Tibet’s spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, turns 90 this week. This isn’t just a milestone birthday, it’s an opportunity to define his legacy, writes Karishma Vaswani for Bloomberg Opinion. Ahead of those celebrations, he’s expected to make a long-anticipated announcement about his heir. China is determined to shape the narrative around this succession, to prevent the erosion of its grip on Tibet. China wants to control the succession of the Dalai Lama. Photographer: SANJAY BAID/AFP |