-
Many investors have significant wealth in their IRAs, and beneficiary designations, which dictate who receives the accounts after you die, can be overlooked.
-
Top Wall Street analysts favor these 3 tech stocks for their growth outlook
TipRanks’ ranking service discusses three stocks that are favored by Wall Street, including Amazon and Alphabet. -
They met on Tinder when they were 19. Now, they’re married and run a cake business that brings in over $650,000 a year
Kai Yang Chan and JiaYi Zhuo matched on Tinder as teenagers in 2019. Now, they are married and run a $650,000 a year cake business together in Singapore. -
Global week ahead: AI wobble casts shadow over ‘Davos for geeks’
After a volatile week for AI stocks and the tech sector more broadly, CNBC travels to Web Summit in Lisbon — ‘Davos for geeks’ — to assess sentiment. -
Jamie Dimon shares why he never reads text messages at work: ‘I don’t have notifications’
“The only notifications I get is from my kids,” JPMorgan boss Jamie Dimon said about his phone habits at work. -
China consumer prices return to growth in October, producer price slump extends to three years
Deflation pressures in China alleviated in October, as consumer prices returned to growth after falling for two straight months, though producer prices extended their slump to three years. -
China October inflation data: CPI 0.2% y/y (expected 0%), PPI -2.1% y/y (expected -2.2%)
Inflation data from China for October 2025, Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Producer Price Index (PPI).
CPI +0.2% y/y
- expected 0.0%, prior -0.3%
CPI +0.2% also for the m/m
- prior +0.1%
PPI -2.1% y/y (producer prices have now fallen for a 37th straight month)
- expected -2.2%, prior -2.3%
This is slightly better than expected. The CPI is still flirting with deflation but has come in a touch stronger than expected. The PPI is still locked into deflation but there has been a small improvement. Its still going to be a long path back out of deflation for producer prices though.
–
Some background to this if you need it.
Deflation in China has persisted since the pandemic, worsened by
- a property slump,
- weak consumer confidence,
- industrial overcapacity that has pushed companies into price wars
- and, of course, tariff headwinds this year impacting demand also
Despite policy efforts to curb excess competition and stabilise prices, China’s GDP deflator—the broadest gauge of economy-wide prices—has been negative for more than two years, the longest such run since records began in 1992.
Beijing has lowered its official 2025 inflation target to around 2%, the lowest in over two decades. Inflation, however, remains near zero, reflecting deep structural imbalances. Analysts expect China remains likely to meet its 5% full-year target.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
-
China Producer Price Index (YoY) above expectations (-2.2%) in October: Actual (-2.1%)
China Producer Price Index (YoY) above expectations (-2.2%) in October: Actual (-2.1%) -
China Consumer Price Index (MoM) up to 0.2% in October from previous 0.1%
China Consumer Price Index (MoM) up to 0.2% in October from previous 0.1% -
China Consumer Price Index (YoY) came in at 0.2%, above forecasts (0%) in October
China Consumer Price Index (YoY) came in at 0.2%, above forecasts (0%) in October
End of content
End of content
