A newsletter designed to prepare you for the day, offering a concise summary of overnight developments and key events ahead that could influence your workday.
By Richard Fargose
April 17, 2025 at 1:24 AM IST
QUICK SNAPSHOT
Global Sentiment: Risk-off
Factors: Nvidia see $5.5 billion hit; Powell says growth slowing
TODAY’S WATCHLIST
THE BIG STORY
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell struck a deliberately cautious tone Wednesday, emphasizing the central bank will remain in data-watching mode even as President Trump's tariff policies threaten to pull inflation and employment in opposite directions. In his first remarks since the administration paused some tariffs last week, Powell framed recent market volatility as investors rationally digesting policy shifts rather than signalling financial stress requiring Fed intervention.
"The economy continues to give us conflicting signals," Powell told the Economic Club of Chicago, noting the unusual challenge of tariffs simultaneously boosting prices while potentially weakening growth and labour markets. With the Fed's dual mandate goals now potentially moving farther apart, Powell stressed patience: "We are well positioned to wait for greater clarity before considering any adjustments."
DATA
The Commerce Department reported Thursday that retail sales jumped 1.4% month-over-month in March—the strongest gain since January 2023 and slightly above economists' 1.3% forecast—as consumers rushed to make big-ticket purchases ahead of impending price hikes from new tariffs. The year-over-year increase was even more dramatic at 4.6%, with strength in auto sales as buyers sought to avoid the 25% vehicle tariffs that took effect in April. While the spending spree likely provided critical support to first-quarter GDP, analysts caution this may represent front-loaded demand rather than sustainable growth, with the full impact of higher tariffs yet to be felt across consumer wallets.
WHAT HAPPENED OVERNIGHT
US stocks slumped on Wednesday after Nvidia flagged heavy losses from US chip export curbs to China, while Fed Chair Powell signalled slowing economic growth.
US Treasury yields dropped as Powell's cautious remarks on growth and inflation rattled markets on Wednesday, with the 10-year yield slipping 4 basis points to 4.283%. The move reversed some of last week's surge, which was driven by economic stability fears. While, the US dollar index tumbled 0.7%, hitting its weakest level since April 2022, as risk aversion weighed on demand for US assets. Safe-haven currencies surged, with the yen jumping 0.8% to a September high and the Swiss franc soaring 1.2% to a decade peak.
Brent crude oil prices jumped nearly 2% on Wednesday, with Brent crude climbing to $65.85 a barrel – a two-week high – as new US sanctions on Chinese buyers of Iranian oil stoked supply concerns.
Day’s Ledger
Economic Data:
Corporate Actions
Policy Events
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