From hong kong to tokyo, frankfurt, and washington, our bloomberg voices are on the ground with todays top stories. We begin with the escalating tension in the middle east after the u. S. Killed errani and general soleimani killed iranian general soleimani. Irans president Hassan Rouhani warned of retaliation. They will see the consequent as of their mistake not only today, but in the years to come. Our for the latest, bloomberg correspondent joins us from doha. Telus the latest from iraq and iran. Reporter in iran today, it was an emotional scene, with the Ayatollah Khomeini openly weeping as there were speeches around the burial ceremony for qasem soleimani. He was also joined by palestinian leaders in giving those speeches. In addition to vowing revenge, irans Hassan Rouhani said the country would leave the remaining drags of the nuclear accord. Also, a new Interesting Development with his iraqi counterpart. Of thesehat the blood commanders, also referring to the leader that was tra
Shery the bushfires rage on in australia with at least nine people known to have died. The Prime Minister says there is no direct link to climate change. Paul lets get straight to the Market Action with sophie in hong kong. We have the holidays upon us in tokyo. We are seeing stocks date after a threeday drop in the topix in nikkei. Flipping the board, checking in on bonds. I want to highlight tenured jgbs. , treasuries just opening on change right here with the 10 year yield. Bonds arechmark offering 5th street sessions. Aussie shares are sliding for a Third Straight session led lower by resource players. This morning. We are seeing gains for the korean benchmark. Yuan Holding Steady against the greenback. Shery lets discuss those numbers out of south korea because we saw experts in the first 20 days of september falling only 2 . Exports with china rose 5. 3 year on year. We had a little bit of weakness with chip exports falling 16. 7 . Also, imports falling only half a percent year o
Manus it is all about the oil markets down here. We have had cracking conversations. They reckon it will be tough for the market to get above 64 a barrel. It is great to be back with you. On that trade discussion we are taking a look at the optimism around trade, catching a bid for safe havens as well as the reemergence of geopolitical risk with tensions rising in hong kong and the shooting of a protester. Manus we will get into the be hardoves, going to to get above 64. You have got the daily percentages of trade, aramco discovered more barrels and opecs outlook is not that great. You have got a couple of things we should keep an eye on. Gold, treasuries most important markets indicators. The worst week in three years last week. Slightly better this morning. Are thet positions highest since june this year. A little bit of a shift. People are worried about the rhetoric from donald trump. We have had the weakest shorts piling into the bonds but is it the right moment to do it . Nejra we
Raise 2 billion. Haidi haidi Oil Producers considering extending cuts. Six nations say more time is needed to train the global glut. Rishaad China Southern confirming a stake sale with American Airlines worth 200 million. Suspended butock should resume when the session gets underway. , thatlooking at kaisa forerty developer suspended two years will resume trading. So a lot to look for two in the session ahead. Haidi absolutely. We are seeing a risk off session so far to kickoff the trading day. Lookof fence the two forward to, janet yellen speaking on tuesday, and as you said, hope springs eternal. Aroundd get more color this Monetary Policy trajectory out of the u. S. Given disappointment and concern over President Trumps Political Capital and ability to push through these tax progrowth policies. We are 30 minutes away from that open. Lets get it over to sophie with a look at the markets. What a great way to start off the week in asia. Sophie risk off this monday. We do have singapore
RICHLAND — Richland Town Council received guest speaker Craig McGowen, Indiana United States Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, to their regular council meeting Wednesday, Nov. 1.