Le Figaro : Les JO de Paris 2024 ont coûté 6,6 milliards d’euros pour un impact

Les JO de Paris 2024 ont coûté 6,6 milliards d’euros pour un impact économique modeste

Dans leur dernier rapport sur les Jeux olympiques de l’année dernière, les Sages de la Cour des comptes ont revu à la hausse les dépenses publiques consacrées à l’événement, dont la qualité de l’organisation est par ailleurs saluée.

Passer la publicité
Passer la publicité
Un an exactement après la fin des Jeux Olympiques et Paralympiques (JOP) de Paris 2024, la Cour des comptes publie ce lundi son dernier rapport consacré à l’événement. Avec un premier enseignement : l’impact limité des Jeux sur l’économie française, du moins à court terme, avec un gain évalué seulement à 0,07 point du PIB en 2024. Pour le moyen et long terme, la Cour prévient qu’il est encore trop tôt pour jauger les répercussions de Paris 2024.

Certes, dans leur synthèse, les magistrats de la rue Cambon pointent l’effet positif des dépenses publiques d’infrastructures lors de la préparation des Jeux, mais ils notent aussitôt sa forte atténuation par la hausse des prix. Dans la même veine, les rentrées liées à la billetterie (12,1 millions de tickets acquittés, contre 11 millions à Londres en 2012, le précédent record) et aux droits de diffusion (5 milliards de téléspectateurs) ont pâti d’un phénomène d’éviction, notamment dans le tourisme avec plusieurs foyers de revenus pénalisés. On se souvient que plusieurs grandes institutions culturelles à Paris avaient insisté sur une fréquentation inexistante pendant cette période.

Hausse des dépenses publiques
Ce bilan économique est à mettre en miroir avec l’ensemble des dépenses publiques, revues à la hausse par la Cour, qui parle de « fortes mobilisations » dans son ultime rapport. Tandis que les dépenses d’organisation passent de 2,77 à 3,02 milliards d’euros, celles liées aux infrastructures atteignent 3,63 milliards d’euros contre 3,19 milliards initialement. Sur ce volet, le Comité d’organisation (Cojop) n’est pas d’accord et il l’a déjà fait savoir à la Cour, par échange de courriers.

Sa contestation formelle a pour objet le périmètre très large des dépenses publiques qui sont imputées aux Jeux. Le Comité fait valoir que certains investissements sont programmés sur 30 ans et qu’ils ont été décidés avant le lancement de la candidature de Paris, comme le prolongement de la ligne 14 du métro ou encore le plan Baignade.

Parallèlement, le Cojop dit sa grande déception que la Cour ne se soit pas appliquée à elle-même ce qu’elle réclame très souvent dans ses travaux : estimer l’impact des Jeux sur les dépenses publiques s’ils ne s’étaient pas tenus à Paris. En revanche, le Comité se félicite du satisfecit octroyé à l’organisation globale de l’événement, au point qu’il soit érigé comme un nouveau standard pour la réception d’événements sportifs internationaux. Dès ses premiers rapports, la Cour avait éloigné le risque d’une dérive budgétaire. Le Cojop a finalement chiffré ses recettes à 4,49 milliards d’euros pour des dépenses de 4,41 milliards.

Jeux d’hiver 2030
La lecture du rapport publié lundi se révèle profitable également dans la perspective de la prochaine échéance olympique en France, les Jeux d’hiver en 2030. Dans le cadre de ses préconisations (qui terminent son étude), la Cour se projette pour l’essentiel vers ce nouvel événement prévu dans l’Hexagone et recommande explicitement de limiter le nombre d’instances de coordination pendant la phase préparatoire, de manière à resserrer la gouvernance pendant la phase opérationnelle.

Toujours à l’horizon 2030, les magistrats de la rue Cambon militent pour un fonctionnement plus efficace du conseil d’administration des structures organisatrices - en veillant notamment à la communication des travaux des différents comités. Ce point est complété par un autre conseil insistant : veiller à l’indépendance, à l’adéquation des moyens et à la transparence des travaux des comités d’audit, d’éthique et des rémunérations, pour mieux conseiller les instances dirigeantes et alerter les tutelles.

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 29th of September 2025 V2(+)

>>> Up
* ASML Raised to Buy at Mizuho Securities; PT 930 euros
* Avantium Raised to Outperform at Oddo BHF; PT 9.20 euros
* Danieli Raised to Outperform at Mediobanca SpA; PT 47 euros
* Stora Enso Raised to Neutral at BNPP Exane; PT 9.30 euros
* Stora Enso ADRs Raised to Neutral at BNPP Exane; PT $10.80
* TKH GDRs Raised to Outperform at Oddo BHF; PT 48 euros
* Transocean Raised to Buy at Arctic Securities; PT $3.50

>>> Down
* Diagnostyka Cut to Hold at Jefferies; PT 204 zloty
* Electronic Arts Cut to Hold at Freedom Capital; PT $195
* Elisa Cut to Sell at Nordea; PT 40 euros
* Konecranes Cut to Hold at SEB Equities; PT 75 euros
* Novo ADRs Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley; PT $47
* Sobi Cut to Hold at ABG; PT 280 kronor

>>> Initiation
* ABN Amro GDRs Resumed Buy at Citi; PT 30.60 euros
* Banco BPM Rated New Neutral at Grupo Santander; PT 13.30 euros
* Capita Rated New Buy at Canaccord; PT 900 pence (+)
* Holmen Reinstated Underperform at BNPP Exane; PT 305 kronor
* Norse Atlantic Rated New Buy at Arctic Securities; PT 15 kroner
* Pony AI ADRs Rated New Buy at Citi; PT $29
* Sunrise Communications Rated New Buy at Citi; PT 57 Swiss francs
* Thyssenkrupp Reinstated Hold at Jefferies; PT 11.50 euros
* WeRide ADRs Rated New Buy at Citi; PT $15.50

>>> Call
* Gjensidige Double-Upgraded at Jefferies, Admiral Raised to Buy
* Novo Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley on Slower GLP-1 Growth
* Rentokil Organic Growth Challenged, Berenberg Initiates at Sell
* Sunrise Communications New Buy at Citi on Attractive Dividend

FT : Hedge funds and high-frequency traders are converging

Hedge funds and high-frequency traders are converging
Prop shops versus pod shops

This summer, many systematic, algorithm-powered trading strategies suffered an abrupt and mysterious pummeling that was somewhat reminiscent of the infamous “quant quake” of 2007.

It wasn’t nearly as violent as in 2007 — it was more an unpleasant quiver than an earthquake — but it was enough to fray nerves in some corners of the quantitative hedge fund industry.

The reversal might have been started by a “garbage rally” in heavily shorted stocks, but some think that it might have been exacerbated by one of the biggest new trends in quant investing: the growing overlap between market-making trading firms such as Citadel Securities, Hudson River Trading or Jane Street, and big hedge funds such as DE Shaw, Millennium, Point 72 or Qube Research & Technologies.

Some in the industry are sceptical that this increasing overlap was a factor in the July “quant quiver”, pointing out that the strategies that were the worst hit were mostly longer-term ones, rather the those using quicker signals, where competition is becoming more ferocious. Nonetheless, both proprietary trading firms and hedge funds concede that two industries — that for years virtually operated in separate worlds — are now starting to come together.

As a senior executive at one of the big multi-strategy hedge funds told FT Alphaville:

There are times when an industry’s structure changes. We’re now in the early stages of seeing a reorganisation of systematic trading, where some successful prop trading firms are going to increasingly resemble hedge funds, and some successful hedge funds will start to look like prop trading firms . . . There is an interplay and growing overlap in their skillsets and strategies. It will be interesting to see how it plays out, but they are definitely beginning to converge.

This trend has been quietly emerging since 2020-21, but has become much more apparent in the past year or so. The confluence also has myriad implications for both industries — and the markets where they’re increasingly colliding.

This may test your patience, but to understand how it happened and why it’s so interesting it’s probably worth first diving briefly into the parallel histories of high-frequency trading and the quantitative hedge fund strategy known as “statistical arbitrage”. Feel free to skip the next two sections if you know all this stuff already.


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High-frequency trading has evolved dramatically in the decades since its genesis, whether you think this was the NYSE’s first electronic “designated order turnaround” system in the 1970s, the “bandits” that preyed on the Nasdaq’s Small Order Execution System in the 1980s, or the explosion of automated trading on “electronic communication networks” in the 1990s.

The cottage industry’s first big inflection point came in 2005 with the SEC’s introduction of Regulation National Market System — or RegNMS as it’s usually called. By modernising the US equity market structure and encouraging greater competition, this became “the final structural move that set the stage for the current electronic trading revolution”, as one academic noted in a 2010 study.

Just how far the revolution had come first became apparent to the general public in the 2010 “Flash Crash”, when the US stock market suddenly careened lower at speeds humans struggled to comprehend. The normie view of high-frequency traders as financial parasites that ruin markets was then crystallised by Michael Lewis’ bestselling 2014 book Flash Boys.

Many in the industry — who saw themselves as geeky disrupters that stuck it to Wall Street and made trading cheaper for investors — were horrified at their portrayal. In fact, when Ari Rubinstein, the head of Global Trading Systems, first heard that one of his favourite authors was writing a book about his industry he assumed that they’d naturally be the heroes of the tale. As he told the FT a few years ago:

I thought, finally, someone is going to glorify what we’ve been able to do. A bunch of people were able to disrupt the industry, create a lot of efficiency, save people a lot of money and get rid of the middlemen in the process — and I was like, ‘Holy cow! is he going to call us?’ And then, when I found out that, ‘Oh no, you’re the villain’, I was really surprised.

Politico really nailed the zeitgeist with this illustrative gif back in 2016.

However, the classic view of HFTs as a monolithic group of purely algorithmic, hyperactive speed merchants was never entirely correct, and is now a little outdated.

Pure speed is still essential to swaths of bread-and-butter market-making. What was once measured in milliseconds (thousandths of a second) became nanoseconds (billionths of a second) in the noughties, and is today often done in picoseconds (one trillionth of a second). In this space, microwave towers and “co-location” are still important.

But “low latency trading” — as people in the industry usually call this form of HFT — is butting up against the limits of physics. Moreover, intense competition has made it much less profitable. As one HFT executive says: “There is no alpha, it’s all latency. That gets all the focus, but it doesn’t actually make much money.”

As a result, there’s been a massive amount of consolidation in recent years, with many early HFT pioneers falling by the wayside and others simply stagnating.

The new HFT royalty are therefore primarily (if not exclusively) firms that have evolved into “proprietary” trading firms that also make bets with their own capital — as opposed to only pocketing the spreads between two-sided quotes on securities — and which have broken out from the pure speed game by holding positions for minutes, hours or even days.

The best examples are probably firms such as Jane Street, Citadel Securities, DRW, Susquehanna International Group and Hudson River Trading. Sure, most of these firms still do a lot of classic high-speed, high-frequency, high-volume trading, but increasingly the really big profits are coming from prop trading and slower signals.

And this is starting to bring them into territory historically ploughed by hedge funds that pursue a strategy called “statistical arbitrage”.

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Sometime in the early 1980s a programmer named Gerry Bamberger pioneered something called “pairs trading” at Morgan Stanley. It quickly proved a phenomenon.

Bamberger must have cut an odd figure at Morgan Stanley. This was Wall Street’s Waspiest firm, and he was a tall, cerebral Orthodox Jew with a heavy smoking habit who ate a packed tuna salad sandwich for lunch every single day. But the strategy he developed became a money machine for the bank, which called his new desk Advanced Proprietary Trading.

Pairs trading involved finding pairs of securities that were usually closely correlated — like Pepsi and Coke, Royal Dutch and Shell, or Berkshire Hathaway’s different share classes — but occasionally veer off in opposite directions. You then short one and long the other, betting that the historical link would reassert itself.

Over time this evolved into the broader strategy dubbed statistical arbitrage, where you constantly scour markets for thousands of opportunities like this, hedge out the overall stock market risk and try to just generate pure, sweet market-beating alpha.

These stat-arb bets can range from simple pairs trading to the more complex, such as arbitraging divergences in the price of US equity market exposure through individual stocks, marketwide ETFs, index options and futures. It quickly became a big deal, as former Morgan Stanley risk management supremo Richard Bookstaber later wrote in his book A Demon of Our Own Design:

Thanks to Gerry Bamberger, who started as a programmer on Morgan’s equity desk, the way trading was done and the function it performed had changed. As a result of his work, the computational power for statistical analysis was unleashed on the markets and — using the newfound execution capabilities of the equity market — a machine was created to harvest opportunities to provide liquidity. Bamberger had moved at least one segment of the market from that of hunter-gatherer to farming.

Bamberger later fell out with Morgan Stanley and left for Ed Thorp’s pioneering quant hedge fund Princeton/Newport Partners. Morgan Stanley’s APT desk was taken over by Nunzio Tartaglia, a famously sweary Jesuit-educated former physicist, who for a period took it to new heights. In 1987 APT reportedly made $50mn of profits for Morgan Stanley, a fortune at the time and particularly remarkable given the Black Monday crash that year.

However, by the end of the decade returns started to fizzle, and many of the top quants on Morgan Stanley’s APT desk headed to the exit. Among them was a brilliant technologist called David Shaw. He started his own hedge fund built on statistical arbitrage — which is today’s $70bn DE Shaw.

DE Shaw in turn birthed Two Sigma — another giant of the quant hedge fund industry — while Morgan Stanley’s APT desk was eventually resurrected in the form of Peter Muller’s Process Driven Trading Group. In 2012 this was spun off of the bank as the hedge fund PDT Partners. Between them, DE Shaw, Two Sigma and PDT reportedly manage roughly $150bn, much of it in stat-arb strategies. Renaissance Technologies fabled Medallion fund is also said to mostly consist of statistical arbitrage.

Just like with HFTs, the stat-arb world is not monolithic. Strategies and holding periods can vary enormously. Some hedge funds might use signals that only hold positions for a few hours, but it’s usually days, and they can be weeks.

HFTs also look for often pricing discrepancies that they can arbitrage, but over very different timeframes, and for a long time they overwhelmingly went home “flat” — in other words, most positions were closed out at the end of every trading day. After all, while hedge funds manage other people’s money, prop firms usually only have their own partners’ capital to play with, so they didn’t want to lug around lots of risky positions on their balance sheet for too long.

As a result, they evolved as essentially two different industries, with remarkably little overlap despite being mostly staffed by the same types of programmers, mathematicians and scientists and pursued vaguely similar systematic financial trading strategies.

Until now, at least.

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Industry insiders say the overlap first began in earnest in the wake of the Covid-19 trading boom, when several trading firms made so much money that they had to find new places to deploy it.

After all, in classic “low-latency” strategies there’s a limit to how much capital you can deploy at any given time, given how swiftly securities are traded. What works with $1bn can actually work less well with $10bn. However, longer term trades — and by longer term, we’re obviously talking in relative terms — allow firms to deploy more resources, in terms of capital, people and technology. As the head of one large US trading firm tells Alphaville:

It’s a capacity issue. To keep growing revenues you need to take larger positions. There’s been a lot of investment in research and compute, and those are very high fixed cost investments, so you want as much investment capacity as possible to earn that out. 

At the same time, many trading firms saw with envy how much money Jane Street in particular was starting to make, mostly because of its ability and willingness to carry positions for a bit longer than the norm — the result of its role as a major market-maker for ETFs. In the first half of 2020 alone Jane Street notched up $8.4bn of net trading revenues, more than twice that of its rival Citadel Securities.

Soon enough, more and more trading firms started adding “mid-range” trading strategies to their arsenal, which are now said to be particularly strong profit centres at the likes of Hudson River Trading. At HRT these signals are housed a separate unit called Prism, which reportedly notched up profits of more than $2bn last year.

Citadel Securities has largely remained a classic market-maker — given that Ken Griffin’s separate hedge fund Citadel already does plenty of prop trading — but it too is said to be holding positions for longer these days. A spokesperson for the company said: “Depending on size, product, risk and liquidity dynamics, we warehouse this risk over a range of time durations, sometimes up to weeks.”

Naturally, this has meant that many hedge funds have been eyeing with equal jealousy the huge profits these trading firms have made in recent years.

After all, many of the hedge fund industry’s top names are closed to new investment because their existing strategies also have capacity constraints. As a result, they are constantly on the prowl for new ones that might allow them to keep more investor money rather than sending billions of dollars' worth of gains out the door every year.

Moreover, faster, systematic strategies typically boast high “Sharpe ratios” — a measure of investment returns relative to their volatility — which can make a fund’s overall results look prettier, as one senior hedge fund executive notes:

Hedge funds need high Sharpe capacity strategies, because there is a barbell sort of complementarity between high Sharpe strategies with low capacity and high capacity strategies with low Sharpe ratios. So hedge funds want more high Sharpe strategies — and those are typically lower latency strategies — in order to support strategies like commodities or some fixed income.

As a result, hedge funds with stat-arb strategies and prop trading firms are increasingly competing in trading strategies with holding periods ranging from a few hours to a few days.

Here’s a chart from Goldman’s last annual survey of the quant hedge fund industry, which shows how the estimated market footprint of prop traders has expanded dramatically in recent years (zoomable version):

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Some industry insiders argue the convergence is mostly a case of prop trading firms rolling their tanks on to the stat-arb lawn, rather than stat-arb hedge funds also speeding up and encroaching on prop trading turf.

But the head of one major quantitative hedge fund told Alphaville that he was definitely seeing a move towards lower-latency trading signals by his industry.

At the very short end [of latency], opportunities have compressed; at the very long end [of investment strategies], premia are crowded. Naturally, capital and talent migrate towards the middle. So you see prop firms with execution DNA stretching into multi-day signals, while classical stat-arb firms accelerate their cycles.

For now, prop trading firms are said to have been more successful in adding “slower” trading strategies than hedge funds have been at speeding up. As one quant hedge fund manager we spoke to observed: “It’s easier to go from building a Ferrari to building a Volkswagen, than from building a Volkswagen to a Ferrari.”

However, some prop trading firm executives say this understates the apparent success of some hedge funds such as Qube Research & Technologies and long-established quant powerhouses like DE Shaw, and reckon the trend will become even more pronounced in the coming years. As one put it to us:

The Venn diagram never overlapped before, and now it does. It started overlapping in a tiny way maybe five years ago, but in five years’ time the overlap will probably be even bigger than it is today. 

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So what does this all mean? Why do we even care? We shouldn’t, on a cosmic scale. But here are a handful of implications that Alphaville thinks are worth bearing in mind, in roughly ascending order of importance.

1️⃣ Hedge funds and prop trading companies are going to be increasingly competing not just for entry-level talent — freshly-graduated computer scientists, mathematicians and general brain boxes — but also for mid-career people.

Millennium’s fateful poaching of two Jane Street traders is therefore probably just the beginning. We’re going to see more of this happening — given that some hedge funds can pony up $100mn packages for portfolio managers — but we’re also likely going to see quant hedge fund people migrate to the prop trading world. After all, even the interns make stupid money.

2️⃣ Prop trading firms are becoming increasingly important clients of Wall Street, and this is just going to become even more pronounced. On the current trajectory they soon might rival hedge funds and private equity for importance.

Historically, prop trading firms operated fairly separately from the banks. They might route trades to or through them, but didn’t rely on them in the symbiotic way that hedge funds do. As Jarrod Yuster, the chair and CEO of trading tech provider Pico, says:

It’s a very technology-intensive business, and generally they don’t hold positions overnight. You don’t need financing for that, so the business they offered banks was just execution and trading fees. Banks therefore valued quant funds more than HFTs.

However, as prop trading firms have begun to spread their wings they need more financing and other services. As a result, they have grown radically in importance to the prime brokerage units of big banks that have usually catered only to hedge funds — even though the trading firms are in many respects rivals to other parts of the same bank.

As Goldman Sachs’ markets supremo Ashok Varadhan told IFR earlier this year:

As you grow and become more relevant, there are going to be times when your clients will be your competitors and you just have to manage through that and have the maturity to realise that you’re going to collaborate in some areas and compete in others.

3️⃣ Prop trading firms are going to be raising more external capital, and hedge funds will become increasingly tempted to hive off their best trading strategies in internal funds for their own partners and employees. In fact, both of these things are already happening — at least in some form.

Citadel Securities, Hudson River Trading and Jane Street have all tapped the debt markets to boost the firepower offered by their retained profits. Given how much money these firms have made in recent years they may never want or need to start more traditional fund-like investment vehicles, but Tower Research — one of the HFT pioneers — has talked to investors about doing so, and several industry insiders predict that “proper” HFT-powered long-short equity funds will inevitably emerge.

At the same time, some of the higher-profile star-arb hedge funds are either already entirely employee money (Renaissance’s Medallion) or probably heading in that direction (DE Shaw’s Valence fund). It’s natural that more and more successful hedge funds start housing their low-capacity, high-Sharpe quasi prop-trading strategies in internal funds — even if it annoys investors no end and needs to be done very carefully.

4️⃣ Increasing competition in mid-frequency trading — generally said to be in the 1-5 day range — could cause crowding in some signals. The dangers of this crowding are ramped up by the growing use of leverage to maximise profits.

There are good reasons to be sanguine about this. A more diverse set of participants is generally a healthy thing for a market. Prop trading firms overwhelmingly deploy their own money — the stickiest capital there is. Both prop firms and quant hedge funds are as a rule pretty obsessive about risk, and particularly assiduous about monitoring for signs of herd-like behaviour.

However, as the head of one big trading firm told Alphaville:

It is a concern how much crowding there is in stat arb signals right now. July was a sign that things could be very crowded . . . It’s unclear how much of it is due to this, but there’s a lot of money chasing similar strategies and signals in similar instruments, which can cause correlated drawdowns. 

Where on the Richter scale the next quant quake will measure is beyond Alphaville. But we can see that having nearly two-thirds of US equity trading volume — or ca 20x the total trading volume of the entire long-only investment fund industry — potentially getting locked into correlated drawdowns might not be ideal.

>>> What to look at today - 29th of September 2025

US and European equity-index futures rose alongside Asian shares, signaling Wall Street’s advance after an in-line inflation reading may extend.
Contracts for the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 rose 0.3% after both indexes gained on Friday, snapping three days of declines. European stocks were also set for a stronger open. Asian shares erased earlier losses to advance 0.4% with Hong Kong jumping 1.4%. Japanese shares fell as ex-dividend stocks weighed on the benchmarks. Crude oil fell 0.4% as people familiar with the plans said that OPEC+ will weigh a November supply increase exceeding the 137,000 barrel-a-day hike scheduled for October. Gold rose to a record. A Bloomberg gauge of the dollar headed for a second day of declines, weighed down by month-end flows and the risk of a US government shutdown. Treasuries rose. Top congressional leaders plan to meet with President Donald Trump on Monday, just a day before federal funding runs out if lawmakers can’t agree on a short-term spending bill. The measure, which would only fund the government until mid-November, must pass by Oct. 1 to avert a shutdown that could delay key economic data and unsettle markets. In the event of a shutdown, “federal workers will be furloughed, which could act as a drag on US economic activity, and things like official economic releases will be put on hold,” Peter Dragicevich, a strategist at Corpay Inc., wrote in a note. “The failure to avoid a government shutdown could further highlight the more challenging backdrop in the US which in turn may exert downward pressure on the dollar.”  US stocks saw dip buying on Friday while the Treasury yield curve marginally steepened as the personal consumption expenditures price index, the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, came in as expected.  Traders maintained expectations of a high likelihood the central bank will cut the funds rate again next month in a bid to help bolster a cooling labor market, according to swaps data compiled by Bloomberg. Washington will be the focus as the top four congressional leaders are due to meet with Trump. A closure would threaten the release of data including Friday’s payrolls report, a key gauge for assessing whether the Federal Reserve will continue cutting interest rates next month. Chinese equities were in focus in Asia amid signs that policies to address overcapacity and deflation in the economy began to take hold ahead of the Golden Week holiday that begins Wednesday.  Chinese industrial profits in August climbed 20.4% from a year earlier, the first increase in four months, according to data released Saturday by the National Bureau of Statistics. Factory deflation eased for the first time in six months. Part of the rebound reflected last year’s low base and the government’s recent push to rein in overcapacity in sectors like electric vehicles and heavy industry, said Dilin Wu, a strategist at Pepperstone Group. The numbers give the market “a welcome confidence boost,” Wu said. Elsewhere this week, the Reserve Bank of Australia is expected to keep interest rates on hold, with traders parsing Governor Michele Bullock’s comments for clues to whether the central bank will cut again. Chinese factory and services activity readings are due as well as the Reserve Bank of India policy decision.

Nikkei -0.85% Hang Seng +1.56% CSI +1.05% Shanghai +0.47% Shenzen +1.05%

Eur$ 1.1725 CNH 7.1231 CNY 7.1207 JPY 148.84 GBP 1.3440 CHF 0.7963 RUB 83.5368 TRY 41.5734 WTI$ 65.32 -0.61% Gold 3,806 +1.21% BTC 111,755 +0.82% ETH 4,1115 +1.54%

S&P +0.34% Nasdaq +0.44% EuroStoxx +0.45% FTSE +0.42% Dax +0.36% SMI +0.60%

Macro :
- Kingdom of Spain Upgraded to A3 by Moody's, Outlook Stable
- US Govt Asks Court for Remand of New Jersey Wind Project Case
- UK to Offer to Raise Spending on Medicines to Placate US: FT
- South Korea Unable to Pay $350 Billion in Cash Under Trade Pact
- EU Unveils $638 Million Package to Scale Up Renewables in Africa
- US Postpones Sanctions Against Gazprom’s Refinery in Serbia: RTS
- Private Credit Is On Course for Biggest Year in Emerging Markets

Keep an eye on :
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- BC IM : Italy Probes Brunello Cucinelli Over Short Seller Claims: FT
- CROX US : Crocs Shares Climb 6.6% as Sydney Sweeney Ad Attracts Attention
- DSFIR NA : DSM-Firmenich Reinvites Apollo Into Auction as CVC Bid Hits Snag
- EA US : Electronic Arts Is Said to Near Takeover by Silver Lake, PIF - WSJ --> +15%
- ENTA US : Enanta Pharmaceuticals Shares Rise, to Present Trial Data for RSV Drug +15%
- EQT SS : Advent Pays Breakup Fees to EQT as $1.1 Billion China Deal Fails
- GMAB DC : Genmab to Buy Merus for $97 Per Share in Cash: M&A Snapshot
- IPR PL : Impresa Reaffirms It Won’t Rule Out Analyzing Partnerships
- IPR PL : MFE in Talks on Possible Purchase of Stake in Portugal’s Impresa
- INGA NA : ING Says Completing ING Bank Eurasia Sale in 3Q Is Not Realistic
- IPG US : FTC Order on Omnicom-Interpublic Merger Imposes a Monitor
- ISS DC : ISS Signs Seven-Year Contract With Cowi Covering 11 Countries
- JUVE IM : Juventus FY Net Loss EU58.1M Vs. Loss EU199.2M Y/y
- KCO GY : Germany’s Kloeckner Sells US Sites to Bolster Profitability
- Krakan IPO : Kraken in Talks With Strategic Investor at $20 Billion Valuation
- LAND SW : Landis+Gyr Sells EMEA Business at $215m Ent. Value to Aurelius
- LLBN SW : Liechtensteinische Landesbank Appoints Christoph Reich CEO
- LMT US : Lockheed Martin’s Sikorsky Wins $10.9b Contract with US Navy
- LCID US : EV Maker Lucid Says It Will Need to Raise More Funds in 2026: FT
- LHA GY : Lufthansa To Reduce Around 4,000 Administrative Jobs by 2030, Lufthansa Targets 8% to 10% Adjusted Ebit Margin for 2028-2030
- LULU US : Lululemon Faces New Threat With Debut of Nike-Kardashian Line
- MRUS US : Genmab to Buy Merus for $97 Per Share in Cash: M&A Snapshot --> 40.8% Premium
- MSFT US : Trump Urges Microsoft to Fire Lisa Monaco, Citing US Security
- MSFT US : Why Microsoft Has Lower Borrowing Costs Than the U.S., There are several theories for why anyone would pay more for a bond from Microsoft or Johnson & Johnson than for a Treasury - WSJ
- NEXTA BB : Nextensa Sells Retail Site to Luxembourg State
- NKE US : Lululemon Faces New Threat With Debut of Nike-Kardashian Line
- ORSTED DC : US Govt Asks Court for Remand of New Jersey Wind Project Case
- TGS NO : TGS Starts Amendment West-1 Ultra Long Offset OBN Survey
- TWEKA NA : TKH Group Signs New Term Loan of €200 Million

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 29th of September 2025

>>> Up
* ASML Raised to Buy at Mizuho Securities; PT 930 euros
* Avantium Raised to Outperform at Oddo BHF; PT 9.20 euros
* Danieli Raised to Outperform at Mediobanca SpA; PT 47 euros
* Stora Enso Raised to Neutral at BNPP Exane; PT 9.30 euros
* Stora Enso ADRs Raised to Neutral at BNPP Exane; PT $10.80
* TKH GDRs Raised to Outperform at Oddo BHF; PT 48 euros
* Transocean Raised to Buy at Arctic Securities; PT $3.50

>>> Down
* Diagnostyka Cut to Hold at Jefferies; PT 204 zloty
* Electronic Arts Cut to Hold at Freedom Capital; PT $195
* Elisa Cut to Sell at Nordea; PT 40 euros
* Konecranes Cut to Hold at SEB Equities; PT 75 euros
* Novo ADRs Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley; PT $47
* Sobi Cut to Hold at ABG; PT 280 kronor

>>> Initiation
* ABN Amro GDRs Resumed Buy at Citi; PT 30.60 euros
* Banco BPM Rated New Neutral at Grupo Santander; PT 13.30 euros
* Holmen Reinstated Underperform at BNPP Exane; PT 305 kronor
* Norse Atlantic Rated New Buy at Arctic Securities; PT 15 kroner
* Pony AI ADRs Rated New Buy at Citi; PT $29
* Sunrise Communications Rated New Buy at Citi; PT 57 Swiss francs
* Thyssenkrupp Reinstated Hold at Jefferies; PT 11.50 euros
* WeRide ADRs Rated New Buy at Citi; PT $15.50

>>> Call
* Gjensidige Double-Upgraded at Jefferies, Admiral Raised to Buy
* Novo Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley on Slower GLP-1 Growth
* Rentokil Organic Growth Challenged, Berenberg Initiates at Sell
* Sunrise Communications New Buy at Citi on Attractive Dividend

>>> Stoxx 600 Pre-Market Indications

  • NIBE Industrier (NJB TH) +6.3%
  • EDP Renovaveis (EDW TH) +4.3%
  • UCB (UNC TH) +4.1%
  • Orsted (D2G TH) +2.4%
  • Admiral (FLN TH) +2%
    • Gjensidige Double-Upgraded at Jefferies, Admiral Raised to Buy
  • Legal & General (LGI TH) +1.5%
  • Rolls-Royce (RRU TH) +1.4%
  • Pernod Ricard (PER TH) +1.4%
  • Hensoldt (HAG TH) +1.3%
  • Prosus (1TY TH) +1.2%
  • LVMH (MOH TH) -1.1%
    • NOTE: France Takes Aim at Wealthy as Way Out of Political Paralysis
  • Sandoz Group (D8Y TH) -1.3%
  • Rentokil (RTO1 TH) -1.3%
    • Rentokil Organic Growth Challenged, Berenberg Initiates at Sell
  • Equinor (DNQ TH) -1.5%
    • Watch European Oil Stocks amid Possible OPEC+ Production Hike
  • Var Energi (J4V TH) -1.5%
  • Aker BP (ARC TH) -1.8%

FT : Europe’s bill for extreme weather damage more than doubles this decade

Europe’s bill for extreme weather damage more than doubles this decade
Average economic losses associated with weather including intense floods have soared, according to European agency

Extreme weather and climate change caused more financial damage in Europe between 2020 and 2023 than it did in the whole preceding decade, according to a major survey underlining the impact of increasing ecosystem degradation and water scarcity on businesses.

The average annual economic losses in the EU associated with increasingly intense heat, floods and other extreme weather amounted to €44.5bn between 2020 and 2023, two and a half times as high as between 2010 and 2019, the European Environment Agency (EEA) said in a report on Monday.

Almost three-quarters of companies producing goods and services in the Eurozone are “highly dependent” on at least one natural ecosystem, the report said. It noted that 75 per cent of bank loans are granted to companies that rely on natural resources for their business and almost 15 per cent of industrial assets are on floodplains.

“Nature is really facing degradation, over exploitation and biodiversity loss and of course at the same time we see the accelerating climate change,’’ Leena Ylä-Mononen, executive director of the EEA, told the Financial Times. ‘‘This is posing major risks to Europe’s competitiveness, long term prosperity, security and quality of life.’’

Europe is the fastest-warming continent on Earth, with higher temperatures leading to much more volatile weather patterns and an increase in forest fires and floods.


The EEA survey comes as EU governments debate a legally binding target to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 90 per cent by 2040, compared with 1990 levels. Countries including France and Poland have requested that leaders discuss the target in October, arguing that the pace of the transition will impact their already struggling economies.

To ease the burden, the European Commission has suggested that about 3 per cent of emissions reductions could be accounted for by buying international carbon credits, against the advice of the EU’s scientific advisory board.

This month, the EU missed a deadline to provide an emissions reduction target for 2035 to the UN ahead of its climate conference, which this year will be held in Brazil. Instead it sent a promissory note saying that it would submit a target between 66.25 and 72.5 per cent. This has prompted campaigners to argue that the EU is losing a grip on its role as an international leader on climate action.

“It doesn’t give the right signal,” Ylä-Mononen said.

The environment agency chief highlighted that the EU’s climate targets were at risk not just from political forces. The EU’s natural carbon sinks — such as forests and peatlands — have declined by about 30 per cent in the past decade, the report said, meaning that they no longer absorb as much carbon.

The EEA said that water stress — demand outstripping supply — was affecting around a third of Europe’s population. Agriculture was “responsible for the most significant pressure on both surface and groundwater”, the report said.

FT : Wall Street regulator vows light touch and end to quarterly reporting

Wall Street regulator vows light touch and end to quarterly reporting
Paul Atkins says SEC will ‘remove its thumb from the scales’ while criticising European over-regulation

Wall Street’s top watchdog has pledged to pursue a minimum “dose” of regulation and fast-track President Donald Trump’s proposal to scrap quarterly corporate reporting, underlining an abrupt loosening of financial regulations by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

SEC chair Paul Atkins, appointed by Trump in the spring, said in an opinion article for the Financial Times on Monday that he would look at the option of semi-annual corporate reporting in place of the current requirement that listed companies report results every three months.

“The government should provide the minimum effective dose of regulation needed to protect investors while allowing businesses to flourish,” Atkins wrote. 

The SEC chair, who also took a swipe at Europe’s “ideologue” climate rules, is scrapping the bold and broad regulatory agenda pursued by his predecessor Gary Gensler, as the Trump administration adopts a more business-friendly stance while seeking to exert greater control over independent federal agencies.

Among Atkins’ most notable course reversals has been the SEC’s embrace of the crypto sector — a stark contrast to Gensler’s aggressive approach. The planned relaxation of listed company rules confirms a more wholesale light touch.

In his op-ed Atkins warned against disclosure “driven by political fads or distorted objectives”, singling out Europe’s recently adopted Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive.

They require “the disclosure of matters that may be socially significant but are not generally financially material”, wrote Atkins. “These mandates risk imposing costs that fall on American investors and customers, while doing little to enhance the information that steers capital decisions.”

If “Europe wants to promote its capital markets by attracting more listings and investment, it should focus on reducing unnecessary reporting burdens”, he added. “For our part, I am committed to ensuring that in the US, the SEC prioritises the wellbeing of investors above the wishes of ideologues”.

The European Commission did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

This year, the SEC voted to end its defence of a rule that for the first time would have required company disclosures on climate risks, a central pillar of Gensler’s rulemaking agenda that was challenged in federal court. 

“Rules written for shareholders who seek to effect social change or have motives unrelated to maximising the financial return on their investment . . . fail investors,” Atkins wrote. 

The SEC in recent years “has drifted from the precedent and predictability that sustain [trust in capital markets] — and from the clear mandate that Congress set for the agency over 90 years ago”, Atkins wrote, his latest jab at the aggressive regulatory and enforcement stance that was adopted by Gensler under Joe Biden’s administration. 

Atkins is heeding Trump’s calls for the SEC to drop rules that have been in place for decades that require most public US companies to disclose their financials once every three months.

“It is time for the SEC to remove its thumb from the scales and allow the market to dictate the optimal reporting frequency based on factors such as the company’s industry, size and investor expectations,” he wrote.

Investor advocacy groups have warned against the move, arguing it would dent transparency, harm smaller investors and risk undermining the efficiency that underpins the US capital markets. 

But Atkins argued that abandoning quarterly reporting was not a novel idea and that this flexibility was already granted to some businesses. He pointed to the UK, where some large companies have still chosen to report quarterly despite the country’s return to semi-annual reporting in 2014. 

He wrote: “Giving companies the option to report semi-annually is not a retreat from transparency.”