Fed Debated Options to Provide More Economic Support 
 

Federal Reserve officials reviewed how to design more support for an economy reeling from the coronavirus pandemic after they had earlier cut interest rates to zero and sharply expanded their asset portfolio, minutes from their most recent meeting show.


 
Hong Kong Security Law Means It's No Longer Business as Usual 
 

The breadth of the law and rapidly deteriorating relations between China and the West raise the prospect that international businesses or their employees could eventually become targets.


 
S&P 500 Edges Up to Start Third Quarter 
 

The S&P 500 rose in the first session of July after data showed the labor market continued to improve last month.


 
U.S. Daily Coronavirus-Case Count Crosses 50,000 
 

New coronavirus cases in the U.S. rose above 50,000, a single-day record, as some states and businesses reversed course on reopenings and hospitals were hit by a surge of patients.


 
House Passes $1.5 Trillion Infrastructure Bill 
 

The House passed a broad, $1.5 trillion effort to rebuild the nation's roads, railways and schools, as Democrats pursued their own infrastructure legislation without the bipartisan deal discussed for years during the Trump administration.


 
Saudis Threaten New Oil-Price War With OPEC Brethren 
 

Saudi Arabia has threatened to ignite an oil-price war unless fellow OPEC members make up for their failure to abide by the cartel's recent production cuts.


 
South Korea Inflation Accelerates Slightly 
 

South Korea's inflation accelerated slightly, but still remained subdued in June as the coronavirus pandemic continued to weigh on price growth.


 
Hedge Fund Star John Paulson Calls It Quits 
 

John Paulson made billions of dollars anticipating the 2008 financial collapse. But after running into difficulties in recent years, Mr. Paulson will now convert his hedge fund firm into a private investment firm.


 
Fed's $600 Billion Main Street Lending Program Sees Lukewarm Interest 
 

The government is offering to lend up to $600 billion to help small and midsize businesses weather the coronavirus-induced recession, but so far interest has been sparse.


 
Junk Bonds Underperform as Covid Cases Climb 
 

Worry about a second wave of Covid-19 cases is pushing junk bond yields to their highest levels in a month, causing the risky debt to underperform other credit markets.