Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day: Americas

Fashion Retailer Shein Said to Weigh London IPO Amid US Resistance to Listing

Good morning. Zoom is the standout mover in an otherwise steady start for US markets, while Japan had a big day. The dollar and Bitcoin are emerging as the year’s big winners and Shein is considering a London IPO. Here’s what people are talking about. — Sofia Horta e Costa

S&P 500 futures are flat and US government bond yields are slightly lower ahead of the Treasury’s $42 billion sale of 7-year notes. Zoom shares are surging in early New York trading after the company’s quarterly sales and profit topped estimates. A new $1.5 billion share buyback is also helping sentiment, suggesting the firm — which operates the ubiquitous videoconferencing platform — is prioritizing shareholder returns over large acquisitions for now. Over in Asia, the big focus was Japan, where the two-year bond yield climbed to the highest since 2011 after stronger-than-expected inflation boosted bets that the country’s long era of negative interest rates could end as early as March. Here’s today’s must-read fact: for the first time in over two decades, it’s cheaper for blue-chip companies in the US to sell shares than to borrow debt.

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said problems in commercial real estate will be contained to “pockets” of the sector — as long as the US avoids a recession. Do you agree, or do you consider it a risk for US banks or broader financial system? Fill out Bloomberg's latest MLIV Pulse survey.