International

Foreigners are Net Sellers of Japanese Bonds for Third Straight Week

Foreign investors were net sellers of Japanese bonds last week, as local bond prices fell after the Bank of Japan tweaked its bond yield curve control scheme to allow interest rates to rise more freely in line with increasing inflation.

Foreign investors were net sellers of Japanese bonds last week, as local bond prices fell after the Bank of Japan tweaked its bond yield curve control scheme to allow interest rates to rise more freely in line with increasing inflation.

Data from Japan's Ministry of Finance showed that foreign investors disposed of a net 166.1 billion yen ($1.16 billion) worth of long-term Japanese bonds last week in a third straight week of net selling.

Data from Japanese exchanges showed that foreigners pulled out 256.58 billion yen from domestic equities during the week, snapping a three-week long buying streak.

Yields on 10-year Japanese government bond JP10YTN=JBTC, which move inversely to prices, jumped 10 basis points last Friday after the BOJ adjusted its yield curve control scheme and offered to buy 10-year JGBs beyond the previous 0.5% target rate. The yield on 10-yr JGBs recorded a 9-1/2-year high of 0.655% on Thursday.

U.S. Economy

Fed, Economists Make Course Correction on U.S. Recession Predictions

The first two quarters of 2022 had seen U.S. economic output contract at a 1.6%

International

Thailand’s 2023 Inflation Forecast to Be 1-2%, the Lowest in ASEAN

Thailand’s inflation rate is the lowest among the seven ASEAN countries which have already announced their rates

Investing Ideas

“Magnificent Seven” Stocks to Buy First in August

When volatility picks up, investors have a tendency to gravitate to trusted companies that have a history of outperforming the broad-market indexes.