Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing
Podcast Image

每日晨读金融时报|英语口语听力|原文及实用单词短语

每日晨读金融时报 27Dec2022 英语口语听力 附原文及实用单词短语

27 Dec 2022

Description

【今日单词&短语】sliver /ˈslɪvə/nouna small, thin piece of something cut or split off a larger piece."a sliver of cheese"in earnestto a greater extent or more intensely than before."work began again in earnest"----------------------------原文如下:Wall Street inches higher on back of economic data as holiday loomsby  George Steer in London and Jennifer Hughes in New York(来自:The Financial Time 金融时报)Wall Street stocks closed higher on Friday, injecting a much-needed sliver of holiday cheer after investors probed new data for clues on likely Federal Reserve thinking.The benchmark S&P 500 erased earlier losses to end 0.6 per cent higher, eventually dragging the Nasdaq Composite with it. The tech-heavy index closed up 0.2 per cent. Volumes were generally light as year-end holidays began in earnest.Friday’s gains were not enough, however, to stop either benchmark closing lower for a third consecutive week — the first such losing streak since September. With just four days of trading left in 2022, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite have this year lost about 20 per cent and 33 per cent, respectively, putting them on course for their worst performances since the 2008 financial crisis.Elsewhere, the FTSE All World share index has shed about a fifth of its value this year, while Bloomberg’s broad aggregate index of the global bond market is off about 16 per cent.“The past two weeks have been a weak gruel of fatalism mostly and halfhearted optimism,” said Mike Zigmont, head of trading and research at Harvest Volatility Management. “It’s a weird psychological condition and it strikes me that the market [and] investors need a rest.”Treasuries slid, pushing yields on benchmark 10-year bonds to 3.75 per cent — their highest this month. The two-year Treasury yield was up 0.06 percentage points at 4.33 per cent. Debt markets closed early on Friday for the holiday.Data earlier in the day showed US consumer income held up in November but spending slowed slightly, mostly in line with economists’ forecasts. Also in-line were inflation figures in the report, showing the core personal consumption expenditure price index — the Fed’s favoured measure of price pressures — rose 0.2 per cent month-on-month in November.

Audio
Featured in this Episode

No persons identified in this episode.

Transcription

This episode hasn't been transcribed yet

Help us prioritize this episode for transcription by upvoting it.

0 upvotes
🗳️ Sign in to Upvote

Popular episodes get transcribed faster

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Please log in to write the first comment.