Finance
In Saudi Arabia, China pushes for a new global financial consensus

China’s central bank governor has offered to deepen cooperation with emerging economies on a series of issues and to help them gain a greater voice in global financial governance during a series of speeches in Saudi Arabia.
Pan Gongsheng, governor of the People’s Bank of China, pledged to work with the Gulf states to promote currency stability, expand bilateral financial investment, and create integrated payment systems during a meeting with central bank governors from the region.
China would also work with Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) members on digital currency and anti-money-laundering efforts, Pan added, according to a news release issued by the PBOC on Tuesday.
China has long sought to internationalise its currency, reduce its reliance on the US dollar, and enhance its financial autonomy to facilitate global trade and investment. This effort is also central to President Xi Jinping’s vision of turning China into a financial powerhouse.
On the same day, speaking at a conference organised by the International Monetary Fund and the Saudi Finance Ministry, Pan urged emerging markets to increase their exchange rate flexibility and strengthen cooperation to safeguard financial stability during a period of heightened currency volatility.
“Emerging markets face mounting challenges such as geopolitical risks, economic fragmentation, rising trade protectionism, slowing medium-term growth, financial market volatility, cross-border capital flow pressures, and rising global debt risks,” Pan said in Alula, Saudi Arabia.

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Finance
Trump executive order threatens small business lending in Philadelphia

While most of the CDFI fund appears to be protected by Congress, Hinkle Brown said he’s concerned that the rules won’t apply.
“It’s unclear what overzealous implementation in this regard would look like,” he said. “If they eviscerate and make non-functional the CDFI fund there’s a lot of costs, the Philly region will suffer.”
It could put a dent in regional economic development efforts in low income communities, said Leslie Benoliel, CEO of Entrepreneur Works in Philadelphia.
“[Community Development Financial Institutions] are like the capillaries of the financial distribution system in our country. And if you cut off the blood flow to those extremities, that will cause enormous harm,” Benoliel said.
Small business owners who may not typically trust the banking system or government often will work one-on-one with a community organization, she said.
CDFIs across Pennsylvania were allocated $32 million under financial assistance, healthy foods and persistent poverty county financial assistance awards last year.
If there’s no federal support, local nonprofits will likely have to raise money another way, said Varsovia Fernandez, CEO of the Pennsylvania CDFI Network.
“There is a possibility of moving to a fee for services model where small businesses need to pay to receive technical assistance education and I would imagine [loans would have] a higher rate to be sustainable,” she said. “I am hoping that it’s not a drastic change what the White House ends up doing.”
On March 17, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement that the Trump administration understands the significance of the federal fund and local community lending organizations.
“CDFIs [Community Development Financial Institutions] are a key component of President Trump’s commitment to supporting Main Street America in the pursuit of job growth, wealth creation and prosperity,” Bessent said.
Finance
Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures rise in search for another bounce-back week
US stock futures rose Sunday, as the major indexes looked for another week of gains toward the end of a rough month and quarter.
Futures attached to the benchmark S&P 500 (ES=F) rose 0.6%, with Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) futures up 0.7%. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average (YM=F) advanced around 0.4%.
As of 9:22:10 PM EDT. Market Open.
ES=F YM=F NQ=F
Tariffs continue to demand investor attention, as the April 2 deadline approaches for President Trump to enact reciprocal duties. Trump indicated on Friday that he is maintaining “flexibility” in relation to the tariffs’ rollout, but he hasn’t given a firm idea of what that would look like.
Other concerns for Wall Street include considerations over whether the year-to-date losses have only been a slowdown blip — or if the economy is heading into a recession. JPMorgan strategist Bruch Kasman, for one, pegs the chance of recession as high as 40%.
On the earnings front, quarterly results from Lululemon (LULU), Gamestop (GME), and Dollar Tree (DLTR) are all due this week amid a slower week of financial releases.
Looking at economic data for the week to come, a reading of the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures Index, is due Friday. The PCE comes alongside a treading of the University of Michigan’s consumer confidence survey, as well as updates to Purchasing Managers’ Indexes for the manufacturing and services sectors.
Coming soon
Stock market coverage for Monday, March 25, 2025.
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