Global FX DATA:

      • ASIAN MARKET

        Asian share markets fought to keep a global rebound alive on Tuesday after U.S. President Donald Trump seemed to quash hopes of a trade truce with China, clouding what had been a bright start to the week.
    •  
      • GOLD
      •  
      • Gold prices inched lower on Tuesday while investors awaited clues on the pace of future U.S. interest rate hikes and as the U.S.-China trade spat sours ahead of a G20 summit.
    •  
      • OIL
      • Oil markets were trading cautiously on Tuesday, with mixed signals coming from top exporter Saudi Arabia ahead of an OPEC meeting in Austria next week.
         
      • EURO

        The Euro pair had good two-way moves at the start of a new trading week and finally ended the day with modest losses, reversing Friday's goodish rebound from over two-month tops. 
      • CRYPTOCURRENCY
         

        Bitcoin and other major cryptocurrency prices fell on Friday as Elvira Nabiullina, the head of the Central Bank of the Russian Federation, said markets’ excitement toward virtual coins have begun to fade.
         
      • CHINA

        Profit growth at China’s industrial firms slumped for a sixth straight month in October as demand cooled further amid mounting uncertainties stemming from the U.S.-China trade war.
         
      • KOREA

        Korean Air Lines Co Ltd is very likely to order more Boeing Co 787 widebody jets to mainly replace its existing aircraft, as it seeks to streamline its fleet and reduce costs.
         
      • BRAZIL
        Brazil’s exiting President Michel Temer signed into law a 16 percent pay rise for Supreme Court justices on Monday, disregarding a request from his President-elect Jair Bolsonaro that he veto the bill to avoid increasing next year’s budget deficit.
         
      • AREGENTINA

        Argentine President Mauricio Macri is used to seeing bad poll numbers as he struggles to drive through an unpopular austerity program that has cut fuel subsidies, raised taxes and sent utility bills soaring.
         
      • INDIA

        The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Monday partially eased a requirement for companies to hedge dollars while raising funds from overseas markets - a move that will encourage companies to raise funds offshore and reduce demand for dollars in the domestic market.
      • CHINA
         

        China’s banking regulator said it plans to start letting funds from products publicly sold by banks’ wealth management subsidiaries be directly invested in shares.
         
      • AUSTRALIA

        About 300 staff of National Australia Bank have been fired or left the company as a result of internal investigations into wrongdoing, following public revelations of misconduct across the sector.
      • US

        The U.S. Mega Millions jackpot climbed to nearly $1 billion, the largest ever for the contest, and the second biggest U.S. lottery on record, trailing a $1.586 billion Powerball jackpot paid out in 2016.
         

      • JAPAN

        Japan’s Toshiba Corp and IHI Corp have decided to dissolve their joint venture that make turbines for nuclear power plants due to weakened demand following the Fukushima disaster.