Im Tom Mackenzie in london. These are stories that set the agenda. The bank of japan hikes Interest Rates for the First Time Since 2007 and scraps yield curve control. The yen falls through 150 versus the dollar. Traders cut fed bets as fomc members gather. U. S. Two year fiveyear yields climb to the highest levels this year. Plus, nvidia unveils the successor to its old ai processor. But markets deliver a muted response to the highly anticipated speech. This is hopper. Hopper changed the world. This is blackwell. Tom a new era for the japanese economy. The first hike since 2007, ending of yield curve control, and an ending of etf thats in buying. We have Stephen Engle on the ground in tokyo for all the details and we will cross over momentarily. Lets check in on the markets as we set you up throughout the trading day. The fed starts its own policy meeting with that decision on wednesday and a focus on the dot plots, the focus from the fed officials. European futures up. When it comes
A nice cup of coffee to start the day. In europe, its the finns who drink the most coffee. People drink some 1. 6 billion cups of coffee every day around the world some 80 of the worlds coffee is produced by around 25 million smallholders. And, International Coffee sales totaled over 70 billion u. S. In 2011 so theres plenty of money to be made for big firms exporting coffee but smallscale farmers receive only a fraction of the retail price. Still, for many in the worlds youngest nation, this may be a pretty good deal. The Coffee Harvest season has begun in south sudan. These farmers near the border with the democratic republic of congo are the first generation of south sudanese coffee exporters. Until now, they produced coffee for the local market. Many welcome the opportunity to sell abroad. Its much better to harvest the coffee for export. Here we just take it to the wet mill and get our receipt, thats it. Its much easier than drying the coffee on your own and then having to look fo
A nice cup of coffee to start the day. In europe, its the finns who drink the most coffee. People drink some 1. 6 billion cups of coffee every day around the world some 80 of the worlds coffee is produced by around 25 million smallholders. And, International Coffee sales totaled over 70 billion u. S. In 2011 so theres plenty of money to be made for big firms exporting coffee but smallscale farmers receive only a fraction of the retail price. Still, for many in the worlds youngest nation, this may be a pretty good deal. The Coffee Harvest season has begun in south sudan. These farmers near the border with the democratic republic of congo are the first generation of south sudanese coffee exporters. Until now, they produced coffee for the local market. Many welcome the opportunity to sell abroad. Its much better to harvest the coffee for export. Here we just take it to the wet mill and get our receipt, thats it. Its much easier than drying the coffee on your own and then having to look fo
A nice cup of coffee to start the day. In europe, its the finns who drink the most coffee. People drink some 1. 6 billion cups of coffee every day around the world some 80 of the worlds coffee is produced by around 25 million smallholders. And, International Coffee sales totaled over 70 billion u. S. In 2011 so theres plenty of money to be made for big firms exporting coffee but smallscale farmers receive only a fraction of the retail price. Still, for many in the worlds youngest nation, this may be a pretty good deal. The Coffee Harvest season has begun in south sudan. These farmers near the border with the democratic republic of congo are the first generation of south sudanese coffee exporters. Until now, they produced coffee for the local market. Many welcome the opportunity to sell abroad. Its much better to harvest the coffee for export. Here we just take it to the wet mill and get our receipt, thats it. Its much easier than drying the coffee on your own and then having to look fo
A nice cup of coffee to start the day. In europe, its the finns who drink the most coffee. People drink some 1. 6 billion cups of coffee every day around the world some 80 of the worlds coffee is produced by around 25 million smallholders. And, International Coffee sales totaled over 70 billion u. S. In 2011 so theres plenty of money to be made for big firms exporting coffee but smallscale farmers receive only a fraction of the retail price. Still, for many in the worlds youngest nation, this may be a pretty good deal. The Coffee Harvest season has begun in south sudan. These farmers near the border with the democratic republic of congo are the first generation of south sudanese coffee exporters. Until now, they produced coffee for the local market. Many welcome the opportunity to sell abroad. Its much better to harvest the coffee for export. Here we just take it to the wet mill and get our receipt, thats it. Its much easier than drying the coffee on your own and then having to look fo