Good morning. US stocks are on course for their best week of the year after reassuring economic data. SpaceX is launching a methane satellit [View in browser](
[Bloomberg](
Good morning. US stocks are on course for their best week of the year after reassuring economic data. SpaceX is launching a methane satellite. And the yen carry trade is back. Hereâs what markets are talking about â [Morwenna Coniam]( Want to receive this newsletter in Spanish? [Sign up to get the Five Things: Spanish Edition newsletter](. âGoldilocksâ scenario US stocks are on course for their[best week so far this year]( after a flurry of data spurred optimism the economy will avoid a recession and is heading for a âGoldilocksâ scenario of contained price pressures and resilient growth. The S&P 500 has rallied 3.7% this week, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 is up more than 5%, the biggest gains for both indexes since November. Carry is back Asian stocks also headed for their best weekly performance in over a year, led by Japan as a weak yen boosts exportersâ earnings prospects. The currency is set for its sharpest weekly drop since May, easing fears that yen-based carry trades are unwinding. Nomura has seen a variety of investors start [borrowing the yen again]( to invest the proceeds elsewhere in higher-yielding assets, suggesting corporate clients and hedge funds, who have been enthusiastic [carry traders]( are getting back into those deals. Steel crisis Itâs been a [brutal week for Iron ore]( which hit the lowest level since 2022 on concern steel mills in China are cutting back on output due to lackluster demand and sinking product prices. Supplies from miners have also remained robust. The steel ingredient has lost almost 9% this week â the most since March. If weak prices persist, itâll be a challenge for the highest-cost producers as their operations risk becoming unprofitable. Bayer win Bayer shares jumped in Germany following a significant win in long-running cancer litigation over its [Roundup weedkiller](. A Philadelphia appeals court said federal regulations governing the pesticideâs warning label supersede laws under which a Roundup user in the state claimed Bayerâs Monsanto unit should have warned them about cancer risks. The ruling suggests one of the central claims against the company may fail in state court, where the majority of the current cases are. Methane Satellite SpaceX is launching a[methane satellite]( hold super polluters accountable. The Tanager-1 satellite, scheduled to launch on Friday, will be managed by a nonprofit carbon mapper and will make the data available once itâs operational in the coming months. Itâs the [second methane-detecting satellite]( launched in the past six months by a nonprofit, reflecting the growing scrutiny around the potent greenhouse gas and the satellitesâ low cost relative to others used for atmospheric monitoring. What Weâve Been Reading This is whatâs caught our eye over the past 24 hours. - Kamala Harris is considering a $25,000 assistance for[first-time homeowners](
- Chinese convertible bonds are being rocked by [once-unthinkable defaults](
- Denmarkâs Bavarian Nordic wants permission to use its [Mpox jab for adolescentsÂ](
- Greece is on [high alert for wildfires]( temperatures soar
- Trump's financial disclosure shows [$513 million from golf clubs]( and resorts
- The Big Take: As US-backed ceasefire [talks restart in Doha]( calls to reconstruct the Gaza Strip are becoming louder And finally, here's what Justinaâs interested in this morning
 More than a year ago, I [interviewed]( a few hedge funds about how theyâre using ChatGPT. At the time, it already seemed clear the new tech could be very helpful in automating grunt work, but it was unclear what more it could do and data security was a big question mark. Over the last few months I've been [speaking]( to hedge funds again and trying to get a sense of how their gen AI applications have evolved. Here are a few observations: - No one talks about data security any more, presumably because theyâve become comfortable their queries are not being used for training by the AI companies. The system (at these more resourceful places) now seems to be to build an interface that can plug into the different closed-source models (ChatGPT, Claude) and also some open-sourced ones that can be fine-tuned internally.
- Boosting productivity of specific tasks like coding and extracting information from documents is still the main use. Some people wonder if gen AI ultimately has to be used for more complex tasks to justify its cost, but it seems at least the time savings are real and substantive.
- Some funds are exploring more sophisticated uses. Man Group's moonshot idea is to use it to search through research, generate a hypothesis and even test it all on its own.
- Itâs clear that anything more complex requires much more than typing a prompt into ChatGPT. Balyasny said that in order to get the AI to analyze a question like âwhich stocks will be winners and losers from higher tariffs?â, it had to first train it to break the topic down into sub-questions. (In computer science, this is called chain of thought.)
- Relatedly, in a lot of the cool use cases -- like one Balyasny showed me where the gen AI read an academic paper and backtested the strategy in it -- youâre combining the GPTâs mastery of natural language with other tools. For instance, in that case, the GPT itself can't actually conduct a backtest, so it was relying on a separate program coded by Balyasny.
- For quants, there is a particular use case: sentiment analysis, or finding systematic signals in text. The most cutting-edge firms have been doing that for ages, but as Two Sigma told me, you used to have to code a tool that looks for particular keywords or expressions. Now because large language models are able to parse context you can build the signal by just asking them, say, âIs this story about an executive departure?â That means they can test far more signals. The upshot seems pretty positive. One thing I wondered throughout my reporting is whether these gen AI tools level the playing field; now sentiment analysis is no longer the preserve of a firm that can build out a natural-language processing team, for instance. But even putting aside the cost of using ChatGPT and the like, it seems that putting it to good use still requires a team of engineers. The important caveat to all that is that OpenAI says theyâre working on taking ChatGPT toward âhuman-levelâ problem-solving, so it might be that we all just need to wait for it to get there. Justina Lee is a cross-asset reporter based in London. Follow Bloomberg's Justina Lee on X [@Justinaknope](. [Bloomberg Markets Wrap: The latest on what's moving global markets. Tap to read.]( Follow Us Stay updated by saving our new email address Our email address is changing, which means youâll be receiving this newsletter from noreply@news.bloomberg.com. Hereâs how to update your contacts to ensure you continue receiving it: - Gmail: Open an email from Bloomberg, click the three dots in the top right corner, select âMark as important.â
- Outlook: Right-click on Bloombergâs email address and select âAdd to Outlook Contacts.â
- Apple Mail: Open the email, click on Bloombergâs email address, and select âAdd to Contactsâ or âAdd to VIPs.â
- Yahoo Mail: Open an email from Bloomberg, hover over the email address, click âAdd to Contacts.â Like getting this newsletter? [Subscribe to Bloomberg.com]( for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and subscriber-only insights. Before itâs here, itâs on the Bloomberg Terminal. Find out more about how the Terminal delivers information and analysis that financial professionals canât find anywhere else. [Learn more](. Want to sponsor this newsletter? [Get in touch here](. You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Five Things to Start Your Day: Americas Edition newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, [sign up here]( to get it in your inbox.
[Unsubscribe](
[Bloomberg.com](
[Contact Us]( Bloomberg L.P.
731 Lexington Avenue,
New York, NY 10022 [Ads Powered By Liveintent]( [Ad Choices](