Poging GOUD - Vrij
Markets surge on US rate cut optimism
The Star
|October 03, 2025
EQUITIES jumped yesterday after data showing job losses in the US private sector fanned optimism for more interest rate cuts and overshadowed a partial shutdown of the country’s government.
-
TRADERS work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), in New York City.
(AFP)
Tech firms led the way higher as a deal between South Korea’ biggest chip firms and OpenAI added fuel to the Al-led rally that has helped push markets to record highs.
While debate rages over the impact of the closure of some US departments owing to a standoff between lawmakers in Washington, investors continue to focus on the outlook for more Federal Reserve rate cuts.
And hopes were given a boost Wednesday by figures from payrolls firm ADP showing companies shed 32 000 posts last month, confounding forecasts for a gain of more than 50 000.
The data was the latest in a string of below-par reports indicating the labour market in the world’s top economy continues to slow and will give more impetus for the Fed to cut rates twice more before the end of the year.
Dit verhaal komt uit de October 03, 2025-editie van The Star.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN The Star
The Star
Silver Arrows 'battery' power their way to victory
GEORGE Russell claimed victory at the Australian Grand Prix to open the season with a bang as Mercedes showed they are clear early pacesetters under sweeping new regulations.
2 mins
March 10, 2026
The Star
Why South Africa's tech skills gap is an active solvency threat
IN THE boardroom, we often speak of digital transformation as a goal to be reached.
3 mins
March 10, 2026
The Star
CTIJF 2026: everything you need to know
FESTIVAL FEVER
2 mins
March 10, 2026
The Star
Rotation risks loom for Downs ahead of continental showdown
MAMELODI Sundowns return to Betway Premiership action on Tuesday (kickoff 7.30pm) knowing there is little room for distraction as they travel to Rustenburg to face Orbit College at Olympia Park.
3 mins
March 10, 2026
The Star
Petrol price hike looms, raising alarm for financially strained South Africans
AS SOUTH Africa prepares for an unprecedented petrol price increase in April, financial strain on consumers is set to reach critical levels.
2 mins
March 10, 2026
The Star
Mpact's dividend slashed as economic pressures persist
WITH no letup in sight for the weak economy in the short term, paper and plastics packaging group Mpact has paid out a final dividend of 30 cents, less than half of last year’s 75 cents, while it moves to close its Springs cartonboard mill.
3 mins
March 10, 2026
The Star
We gave Sacha captaincy too soon, Dobson admits
SPRINGBOK sensation Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu will not be captaining the Stormers any time soon as coach John Dobson quiets the noise around the X-factor flyhalf.
2 mins
March 10, 2026
The Star
What the FNB/BER Building Confidence Index reveals about the construction sector in 2026
FNB/BER Building Confidence Index released on Monday indicated a slight decline in the index dropping from 43 in the fourth quarter of 2025 to 42 in quarter one 2026.
2 mins
March 10, 2026
The Star
How Iran war is dividing Team Trump
DONALD Trump's war on Iran marks the US president's final break with his 'America First' allies and embrace of interventionism. It's a decision that will haunt whoever inherits the leadership of his divided movement.
4 mins
March 10, 2026
The Star
Cut now, build later: the Artificial Intelligence strategy that isn't one
OVER the past two weeks, this column has argued two things.Part 1 made the case that the AI conversation has a prediction problem: we are so busy forecasting the future that we have lost the habit of reading our actual horizon. Part 2 made the case that we have been here before: every major technology deployment that ignored the social system alongside the technical one produced the opposite of its intended outcome. The coal mines told us that in 1951. IBM's jarring 13.2% share-price drop in a single day a couple of weeks ago confirmed the machines are arriving again. Part 3 is the harder question. If good navigation is not prediction, and if technology without social redesign is a fairly predictable path to waste, what does a well-calibrated response actually look like? The bar I apply is simple: demonstrate a customer outcome, or do not expect my serious attention. Frameworks and manifestos are a dime a dozen. I am after results.
4 mins
March 10, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
