US

U.S. Jobless Claims Fall While Retail Sales Slow in June

The latest U.S. economic data painted a mixed picture of the economy, with the labor market remaining resilient while consumer spending showed signs of moderation.

Initial jobless claims fell to 208,000, beating expectations of 216,000 and improving from the previous week’s revised reading of 216,000. Continuing jobless claims also declined to 1.805 million from 1.821 million, coming in below the 1.820 million consensus estimate. The data suggests layoffs remain limited and the labor market continues to hold up despite elevated interest rates.

Consumer spending, however, showed signs of slowing. Headline retail sales rose 0.2% in June, matching economists’ expectations but decelerating sharply from May’s 1.0% increase. More concerning, core retail sales, which exclude automobiles and are closely watched as a gauge of underlying consumer demand, fell 0.2%, missing expectations for flat growth after rising 1.0% in the previous month.

The combination of resilient employment and softer consumer spending presents a balanced outlook for the U.S. economy. While businesses continue to retain workers, households appear to be becoming more cautious with discretionary spending after a strong performance in previous months.
U.S. Stocks Mixed as Softer Inflation Boosts Tech While Dow Lags

U.S. stocks traded mixed in early trading on Tuesday as investors reacted to a softer-than-expected June inflation report that strengthened expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.

The Nasdaq gained about 0.8%, supported by technology and growth stocks that typically benefit from lower interest rates. The S&P 500 also moved modestly higher, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped slightly as investors rotated away from some defensive and value-oriented sectors.

Markets welcomed the June CPI report, which showed headline inflation fell 0.4% month over month, while annual inflation slowed to 3.5%. Core inflation also came in below expectations, with monthly core CPI unchanged and annual core inflation easing to 2.6%. The weaker inflation data reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve could begin easing monetary policy sooner than previously anticipated.

Technology stocks led gains across the broader market as lower interest rate expectations improved the outlook for high-growth companies. Investors also continued to monitor corporate earnings season, with company-specific results driving notable moves across individual stocks.

Meanwhile, geopolitical developments remained in focus. Recent tensions between the United States and Iran continue to be monitored by investors, particularly after the exchange of military strikes over the past week. Although markets have largely shifted their attention back toward economic data and earnings, any renewed escalation could quickly affect risk sentiment and commodity prices.

Investors will continue watching upcoming economic releases, Federal Reserve commentary, and second-quarter earnings reports for further direction as markets assess the outlook for interest rates and corporate profitability.
U.S. Inflation Cools More Than Expected in June, Strengthening Rate Cut Expectations

U.S. inflation slowed more than expected in June, reinforcing expectations that the Federal Reserve could have greater room to ease monetary policy in the coming months.

Headline consumer prices fell 0.4% month over month, a sharper decline than the expected 0.1% decrease, following a 0.5% increase in May. On an annual basis, CPI slowed to 3.5%, below the 3.8% consensus forecast and down from 4.2% in the previous month.

Underlying inflation also continued to moderate. Core CPI, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, was unchanged on a monthly basis, compared with expectations for a 0.2% increase. Annual core inflation eased to 2.6% from 2.9%, coming in below the 2.8% market forecast.

The broad-based slowdown in both headline and core inflation suggests price pressures are continuing to ease across the U.S. economy. The softer data could strengthen market expectations that the Federal Reserve may begin cutting interest rates sooner if inflation continues to move toward its 2% target.

Following the release, investors are likely to closely monitor upcoming retail sales, and Federal Reserve commentary for further clues on the timing and pace of potential policy easing.
U.S. ADP Employment Growth Slows to 19.8K in Latest Weekly Reading

U.S. private-sector employment growth slowed in the latest weekly ADP report, pointing to a modest cooling in labor market momentum.

ADP Employment Change came in at 19.8K, down from the previous reading of 21.0K.
U.S. Markets Trade Mixed as Investors Monitor U.S.-Iran Conflict and Await Earnings Season

U.S. stocks traded mixed on Monday as investors balanced escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East against expectations for upcoming corporate earnings and a resilient U.S. economy.

The S&P 500 slipped 0.23%, while the Nasdaq declined 0.88% as technology stocks came under pressure. The Dow Jones Industrial Average outperformed, edging 0.20% higher with support from industrial and defensive shares.

Investor sentiment remained heavily influenced by the latest developments in the U.S.-Iran conflict. Military exchanges between the two countries intensified in recent days, with both sides carrying out missile and drone strikes and uncertainty surrounding shipping through the Strait of Hormuz continuing to fuel concerns over global energy supplies. The renewed escalation has pushed oil prices higher and added to inflation concerns, although markets remain hopeful that the conflict will not significantly disrupt global crude exports.

On the macroeconomic front, investors continued to digest recent data showing a mixed but generally resilient U.S. economy. Last week’s weaker-than-expected nonfarm payrolls and softer services activity reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve could still ease monetary policy later this year. At the same time, moderating inflation indicators have helped support the broader outlook for risk assets.

The market is also shifting its focus toward the upcoming second-quarter earnings season, with major U.S. banks set to report results next week. Investors will closely watch corporate guidance for signs that earnings growth can continue despite elevated interest rates, geopolitical uncertainty, and higher energy prices.

Although the major indexes remain near record levels, today’s mixed performance reflects a cautious market environment as investors weigh the economic impact of rising geopolitical tensions against a still-solid U.S. economic backdrop. The direction of the U.S.-Iran conflict, oil prices, and the start of earnings season are likely to remain the primary drivers of market sentiment in the coming days.
US Initial Jobless Claims Fall More Than Expected, Signaling Labor Market Resilience

The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits unexpectedly declined last week, pointing to continued strength in the U.S. labor market despite signs of a gradual economic slowdown.

Initial Jobless Claims Beat Expectations

Initial jobless claims fell to 215,000, below both the 218,000 market expectation and the previous week's 217,000 reading. The lower-than-expected figure indicates layoffs remain limited and employers continue to retain workers despite elevated interest rates.

Meanwhile, continuing jobless claims, which measure the number of people receiving ongoing unemployment benefits, rose to 1.814 million from 1.806 million in the previous week but remained below economists' expectations of 1.820 million.

Labor Market Remains Firm

The combination of lower initial claims and continuing claims that came in below forecasts suggests the U.S. labor market remains relatively resilient. While some workers are taking slightly longer to find new jobs, layoffs remain historically low, indicating businesses continue to hold onto employees.

The data reinforces the view that labor market conditions remain supportive of consumer spending and broader economic activity.

Market Focus Turns to the Federal Reserve

Investors will assess the latest labor market data alongside upcoming inflation reports and other economic indicators as they evaluate the Federal Reserve's next policy move.

A resilient labor market could reduce pressure on the Fed to cut interest rates quickly, as policymakers continue to monitor whether inflation is moving sustainably toward its target.
US Stocks Edge Higher as Tech Shares Lead Early Gains

U.S. stocks traded modestly higher in early trading on Thursday, with technology shares helping lift the broader market as investors reacted to a fresh wave of corporate earnings and analyst upgrades.

The S&P 500 gained 0.15%, while the Nasdaq advanced 0.20%, outperforming the major indexes thanks to strength in semiconductor and AI-related stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average also moved higher, rising 0.10%.

Semiconductor Stocks Extend AI Rally

Chip equipment makers led the market higher after several positive analyst actions.

Lam Research (NASDAQ: LRCX) surged in premarket trading after Mizuho raised its price target to $400 and reiterated its *Outperform* rating. Applied Materials (NASDAQ: AMAT) also received a higher price target from Mizuho, while Dell Technologies (NYSE: DELL) benefited from Evercore's reaffirmed *Outperform* rating and new $500 price target, adding to optimism surrounding continued AI infrastructure investment.

The gains reflect ongoing confidence that semiconductor capital spending will remain strong as demand for AI processors, advanced memory, and next-generation data center infrastructure continues to expand.

Earnings Drive Individual Stock Moves

Corporate earnings remained a key driver of early trading.

Simply Good Foods (NASDAQ: SMPL) soared after investors welcomed results that exceeded management's expectations despite lower year-over-year earnings, suggesting confidence in the company's turnaround strategy.

On the downside, PepsiCo (NASDAQ: PEP) declined after investors focused on softer underlying earnings growth and continued margin pressure despite higher revenue and reaffirmed full-year guidance. Northern Technologies International (NASDAQ: NTIC) also traded sharply lower after reporting a quarterly loss caused by margin compression from elevated raw material costs.

Investors Await More Earnings and Economic Data

Market participants remain focused on the upcoming earnings season as investors assess whether corporate profits can continue to support record equity valuations. At the same time, traders are monitoring economic data and Federal Reserve expectations for further clues on the outlook for interest rates.

The combination of resilient AI-related technology stocks and mixed earnings reactions across other sectors is helping keep the broader market in positive territory during Thursday's opening session.
Nasdaq Leads Wall Street Higher as Technology Stocks Rally Despite Softer U.S. Services Data

U.S. stocks traded mixed on Monday as investors weighed softer-than-expected economic data against continued strength in technology shares. The Nasdaq outperformed, climbing 1.1%, while the S&P 500 gained 0.6%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lagged the broader market, slipping marginally into negative territory.

Technology stocks led the advance, helping lift both the Nasdaq and the broader market as investors continued rotating into growth-oriented sectors. The rally came despite economic data pointing to a modest cooling in the U.S. services sector.

The ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI edged down to 54.0 in June from 54.5 in May, missing economists' expectations of 54.2. Meanwhile, the S&P Global Services PMI also came in slightly below forecasts at 51.2. Although both readings remained above the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction, they suggested the pace of growth in the services sector moderated during the month.

At the same time, inflation pressures showed further signs of easing. The ISM Non-Manufacturing Prices Index declined sharply to 67.7 from 71.3, indicating that input cost growth slowed, even though price pressures remain elevated.

The combination of softer business activity and moderating inflation reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve may have greater flexibility on interest rate policy later this year. Investors largely looked past the slightly weaker economic readings, focusing instead on the prospect of a more accommodative monetary environment, which provided support for high-growth technology stocks.

As trading continues, market participants remain focused on upcoming inflation reports and corporate earnings for further direction on the economy and the outlook for U.S. equities.
U.S. ISM Services PMI Slows in June While Price Pressures Ease

The U.S. services sector continued to expand in June, although growth came in slightly below expectations as the latest ISM data pointed to moderating business activity and easing inflationary pressures.

The ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI declined to 54.0 in June from 54.5 in May, missing the consensus estimate of 54.2. Despite the modest slowdown, the index remained comfortably above the 50-point threshold, signaling continued expansion in the services sector, which accounts for the majority of U.S. economic activity.

Meanwhile, the ISM Non-Manufacturing Prices Index fell sharply to 67.7 from 71.3, while coming in just above expectations of 67.5.
U.S. S&P Global Services PMI Misses Expectations in June, Signals Slight Cooling in Services Activity

The U.S. S&P Global Services PMI came in at 51.2 for June, below the consensus forecast of 51.3 and down slightly from the previous reading of 51.3, indicating a modest slowdown in growth across the U.S. services sector.
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UK

UK Economy Returns to Growth in May as GDP Beats Expectations

The UK economy returned to growth in May, offering fresh signs of resilience after contracting in the previous month.

Monthly GDP rose 0.1% in May, beating economists’ expectations for no growth and reversing April’s 0.1% decline. The better-than-expected reading suggests economic activity stabilized despite ongoing pressure from elevated borrowing costs and a challenging global backdrop.

The broader trend also remained constructive. The three-month-on-three-month GDP measure increased 0.7%, above the consensus forecast of 0.5%, although slightly below the previous 0.8% reading. The data indicates the UK economy continues to expand on an underlying basis despite month-to-month volatility.

The stronger-than-expected figures may ease concerns about the pace of economic growth and could influence expectations for the Bank of England’s monetary policy. While inflation has moderated in recent months, policymakers are expected to continue balancing the need to support growth against the risk of persistent price pressures.

Investors will now turn their attention to upcoming UK inflation, labor market, and retail sales data for further clues on the health of the economy and the timing of future Bank of England interest rate decisions.
UK Retail Sales Growth Slows to 1.7% in June, Missing Expectations

UK retail sales growth slowed sharply in June, pointing to softer consumer spending as households remained cautious amid ongoing economic uncertainty.

The British Retail Consortium (BRC) Retail Sales Monitor showed retail sales increased 1.7% year over year in June, below the 2.6% market expectation and slowing from 3.4% growth recorded in May.
UK Construction Sector Remains Under Pressure Despite Slight Improvement in June

The UK’s construction sector remained deep in contraction in June, as business activity continued to decline despite a modest improvement from the previous month.

The S&P Global UK Construction PMI rose to 38.4 in June from 38.2 in May but missed economists’ expectations of 40.1.
UK Services Sector Remains in Contraction Despite Slight Improvement in June

The UK services sector remained in contraction territory in June, although business activity came in slightly better than expected, suggesting the pace of the slowdown may be easing.

The S&P Global UK Services PMI rose to 48.8 in June, slightly above economists’ expectations of 48.7 but below May’s reading of 49.3.
UK Manufacturing Growth Slows More Than Expected in June

The UK's S&P Global Manufacturing PMI fell to 52.5 in June, below market expectations of 53.1 and down from 53.9 in May.

Although the reading remained above the 50-point threshold, indicating continued expansion, the decline suggests manufacturing momentum slowed at the end of the second quarter.
UK House Prices Rise Less Than Expected in June

UK house prices were unchanged in June, falling short of market expectations and signaling a slowdown in the housing market.

The Nationwide House Price Index was flat on a monthly basis, compared with economists' expectations for a 0.1% increase. The reading marked an improvement from May's 0.6% decline but suggested housing market momentum remains subdued.

On an annual basis, house prices rose 2.2% in June, below the consensus forecast of 2.4% but up from 1.7% in the previous month.
UK Economy Maintains Solid Growth in First Quarter

The U.K. economy expanded 0.6% quarter over quarter in the first quarter, matching market expectations and accelerating from 0.1% growth in the previous quarter.

On an annual basis, GDP increased 0.9% in the first quarter, matching the previous reading but falling short of economists' expectations for 1.1%.
The UK's June PMI data pointed to a mixed economic picture, with manufacturing remaining in expansion territory while the services sector unexpectedly contracted.

The S&P Global Manufacturing PMI came in at 53.1, slightly below expectations of 53.5 and down from 53.9 in May. Despite the modest decline, the reading remains comfortably above the 50 threshold, indicating that factory activity continues to expand and that the manufacturing sector remains one of the brighter spots in the UK economy.

In contrast, the S&P Global Services PMI fell to 48.7 from 49.3 in May, missing forecasts of 50.1 and slipping further into contraction territory. The weaker reading suggests softer demand for services and growing caution among businesses and consumers.
UK Retail Sales Growth Accelerates Sharply in May

UK retail sales rose 3.2% year-over-year in May, significantly exceeding economists' expectations of 1.9% and accelerating sharply from April's 0.1% increase.
Bank of England Holds Interest Rates Steady at 3.75%

The Bank of England left its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 3.75% in its June policy meeting, matching market expectations and maintaining the same rate as the previous decision.
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NYSE:TSM

### TSMC (TSM) Rebounds in Premarket After Citigroup Reiterates Buy Rating

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (NYSE: TSM) rebounded in premarket trading on Monday after Citigroup reiterated its Buy rating on the chipmaker, helping restore investor confidence following Thursday's selloff.

TSMC shares fell 2.3% during Thursday's regular session but gained 2.4% in premarket trading after Citigroup reaffirmed its bullish stance on the stock.

The reiterated Buy rating reflects continued confidence in TSMC's long-term growth prospects as the world's leading contract semiconductor manufacturer. The reaffirmation comes as demand for advanced AI chips and high-performance computing remains a key driver for the company.

TSMC continues to benefit from strong capital spending by leading technology companies developing artificial intelligence infrastructure, with its cutting-edge manufacturing processes positioning the company at the center of the AI semiconductor supply chain.

The premarket rebound suggests investors looked past Thursday's weakness, with Citigroup's positive rating reinforcing expectations that TSMC remains well positioned to capitalize on long-term growth in AI, cloud computing, and advanced semiconductor demand.
TSMC Gains as Susquehanna Reiterates Positive Rating

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (NYSE: TSM) rose 1.2% after Susquehanna reiterated its Positive rating, underscoring continued confidence in the world's largest contract chip manufacturer.

The analyst's stance reflects optimism surrounding TSMC's dominant position in advanced semiconductor manufacturing, where the company remains a critical supplier to many of the world's leading technology firms. TSMC produces cutting-edge chips for customers including Apple, Nvidia, AMD, and numerous AI-focused companies.

Investor sentiment toward TSMC has remained strong as artificial intelligence spending continues to drive demand for advanced processors. The company is widely viewed as one of the most important beneficiaries of the global AI investment cycle because nearly every major AI chip designer relies on TSMC's manufacturing capabilities.

Demand for advanced process technologies, particularly 3nm and future 2nm nodes, is expected to remain robust as customers develop increasingly powerful AI accelerators, data center processors, and next-generation consumer devices.

The stock's advance also comes amid broader strength across the semiconductor sector, where analysts have recently raised expectations for AI-related capital spending and long-term industry growth. Recent bullish commentary on companies such as ASML, Applied Materials, KLA, Lam Research, AMD, and Micron has reinforced confidence in the semiconductor supply chain.

By maintaining its Positive rating, Susquehanna signaled continued confidence that TSMC's technology leadership and unmatched manufacturing scale position the company to remain a key beneficiary of the ongoing AI-driven semiconductor boom.

TSMC stock today: Taiwan Semi slips premarket on Nvidia H200 supply talks and a 2nm production update

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Synopsys (NASDAQ: SNPS) announced an expanded collaboration with TSMC to enable advanced 2D and 3D chip design solutions, targeting applications in AI, high-speed data communications, and advanced computing. The partnership integrates Ansys simulation and analysis tools into TSMC’s latest process technologies, including N3C, N3P, N2P, and A16, with certified workflows for power, thermal, and electromagnetic integrity.

The companies also introduced an AI-assisted optimization flow for TSMC’s COUPE photonic platform, aimed at shortening design cycles and improving quality for optical and photonic systems. By combining Synopsys’ 3DIC design tools with Ansys multiphysics platforms, the collaboration supports larger, more complex designs and enhances resilience against electrical stress, enabling chipmakers to accelerate development of energy-efficient, high-performance semiconductors for next-generation technologies.

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Synopsys and TSMC advance angstrom-scale chip design with certified EDA flows on A16 and N2P processes

Synopsys, Inc. announced continued collaboration with TSMC to accelerate semiconductor design at the angstrom scale, enabling AI and 3D multi-die innovation through advanced EDA and IP solutions certified for TSMC’s leading-edge A16 and N2P processes.

Key developments include:
- Certified digital and analog design flows for TSMC A16 and N2P, powered by Synopsys.ai, supporting improved power, performance, and design migration efficiency
- Ongoing development of EDA flows for TSMC’s upcoming A14 process
- Expanded 3D integration capabilities using Synopsys 3DIC Compiler and TSMC’s CoWoS® technology, supporting 5.5x reticle size interposers
- Certified IC Validator signoff physical verification for A16 and N2P, including 3Dblox and ESD rule support
- Broad portfolio of silicon-proven IP for high-speed interfaces including PCIe 7.0, 1.6T Ethernet, HBM4, UCIe, USB4, DDR5, LPDDR6, and MIPI standards
- Enhanced support for next-generation AI and HPC workloads with advanced PHY IP and integrated multi-physics analysis

Synopsys emphasized its role in delivering mission-critical tools and IP for cutting-edge system-on-chip (SoC) designs, enabling reduced development risk, faster time to market, and higher performance across a range of applications.
The emergence of DeepSeek, a Chinese AI model demonstrating greater efficiency than prevailing technologies, raises concerns about potential overcapacity in AI infrastructure investment. DeepSeek's ability to deliver competitive results with fewer and less advanced semiconductors challenges the necessity of the massive quarterly investments in AI infrastructure, which exceed $50 billion. This shift could lead to more sustainable investment patterns, moderating revenue growth for AI chip makers while accelerating AI adoption through cost-efficient alternatives. However, geopolitical concerns and security issues may limit DeepSeek's adoption in Western markets, maintaining the dominance of existing AI chip leaders.

Source: Fitch Ratings
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US Bonds

The U.S. Treasury's latest 10-year note auction attracted solid investor demand, with the high yield settling at 4.538%, modestly above the previous auction's 4.468% level.
The US 2-Year Treasury note auction cleared at 4.071%, significantly above the previous 3.812%.
The U.S. 10-year TIPS auction drew a yield of 2.169%, up from the previous 1.896%, indicating investors demanded higher real returns to hold inflation-protected government debt.
U.S. 30-year bond auction yield rose to 5.050%, up from the previous 4.876%.
The U.S. 10-year Treasury note auction came in weaker than the previous auction, due to today's inflation data.


High yield: 4.468%

Previous: 4.282%
The U.S. Treasury’s latest 3-year note auction showed slightly higher yields, reflecting persistent caution in the bond market as investors reassess the outlook for Federal Reserve rate cuts and inflation. The auction stopped at a high yield of 3.965%, above the previous 3.897% level.
The U.S. 7-year Treasury note auction came in with a yield of 4.175%, down from the previous 4.255%.
US 2-year Treasury note auction results showed a lower yield, with the auction stopping at 3.812%, down from the previous 3.936%.
The U.S. 8-week Treasury bill auction cleared at 3.605%, slightly lower than the previous 3.615%, indicating marginally stronger demand for short-term government debt and a small easing in yields.
The U.S. 20-year Treasury bond auction cleared at a yield of 4.883%, rising from the previous 4.817%, indicating weaker demand and higher borrowing costs.
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Spain

Eurozone Inflation Eases Further in June, Supporting ECB Policy Outlook

Eurozone inflation continued to moderate in June, reinforcing expectations that the European Central Bank will have greater flexibility to continue easing monetary policy if disinflation remains on track.

Headline consumer inflation came in at 2.8% year over year, matching market expectations and slowing from 3.2% in May. Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, also met forecasts at 2.4%, down from 2.6% in the previous month.
Eurozone Inflation Cools More Than Expected in June

Inflation across the eurozone eased more than expected in June, reinforcing signs that price pressures continue to moderate and strengthening expectations for a more accommodative monetary policy outlook.

The annual Consumer Price Index (CPI) slowed to 2.8%, below economists' expectations of 3.0% and down from 3.2% in May.

Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, also declined to 2.4% from 2.6% in the previous month, coming in below the consensus forecast of 2.5%.
Spain's Inflation Holds Steady in June, Keeping Price Pressures Elevated

Spain's inflation remained elevated in June, with the Consumer Price Index (CPI) holding steady at 3.2% year over year, matching both May's reading and market expectations. Meanwhile, the country's EU-harmonized inflation rate (HICP) came in at 3.6%, unchanged from the previous month.
Eurozone Inflation Accelerates as Core Prices Rise Faster Than Expected

Inflation in the Eurozone accelerated in May, with headline consumer prices rising 3.2% year-over-year, matching expectations and increasing from 3.0% in April.

More notably, Core CPI—which excludes volatile food and energy prices—rose 2.6%, exceeding forecasts of 2.5% and accelerating from 2.2% in the previous month. The stronger-than-expected core reading suggests underlying inflationary pressures remain more persistent than policymakers had hoped.
Eurozone Investor Sentiment Turns Positive as ZEW Index Surges

Investor confidence in the Eurozone improved sharply in June, with the ZEW Economic Sentiment Index rising to 9.5 from -9.1 in May, easily beating expectations for a reading of -7.2.
Eurozone Economy Shows Signs of Weakness as Trade Balance Turns Negative and Factory Output Misses Expectations

Fresh economic data pointed to a softer start to the second quarter for the Eurozone, with both trade and industrial production figures coming in below market expectations.

The Eurozone recorded a trade deficit of €1.0 billion in April, a sharp deterioration from the €4.9 billion surplus reported in the previous month and well below economists' expectations for a €7.8 billion surplus. The unexpected swing into deficit suggests external demand conditions weakened during the month and highlights ongoing challenges facing the region's export-oriented economies.

Industrial production also disappointed. Factory output rose just 0.1% month-over-month in April, missing forecasts for a 0.2% increase and slowing from the previous month's 0.4% gain.

The weaker-than-expected figures reinforce concerns that the region's recovery remains fragile. Europe's industrial sector continues to face headwinds from soft global demand, trade uncertainty, and uneven economic growth among key trading partners.
The final May PMI data paint a mixed picture for the Eurozone economy.

The HCOB Eurozone Services PMI rose to 47.7, comfortably above the 46.4 forecast and slightly higher than April's 47.6. While this is an improvement, the index remains below the 50 threshold, indicating that the services sector is still contracting, albeit at a slower pace.

More importantly, the HCOB Eurozone Composite PMI, which combines manufacturing and services activity, came in at 48.5. This was stronger than the 47.5 consensus estimate but slightly below April's 48.8.
Spain's HCOB Services PMI rose to 50.1 in May, beating expectations of 48.2 and improving from 47.9 in April.
Eurozone inflation accelerated in May, reinforcing concerns that underlying price pressures remain persistent despite the European Central Bank’s easing efforts. Headline CPI rose 3.2% year-over-year, matching expectations and increasing from 3.0% in April, while monthly inflation slowed sharply to 0.1% from 1.0% previously.

More importantly for policymakers, core inflation—which excludes volatile food and energy prices—climbed to 2.5% year-over-year, exceeding expectations of 2.4% and accelerating from 2.2% in April. The stronger-than-expected core reading suggests that underlying inflationary pressures remain more stubborn than anticipated.
Spain’s labor market continued to improve in May, but the pace of job gains was weaker than expected. The number of unemployed people fell by 36,300, marking another month of declining unemployment, though the decrease was smaller than economists’ forecast of 56,800 and below the previous month’s decline of 62,700.
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NASDAQ:NVDA

NVIDIA shares climbed approximately 4.5% today as investors reacted positively to the company’s latest artificial intelligence chip announcements and expanding vision for AI-powered computing.

The rally was fueled by NVIDIA’s unveiling of a powerful new AI supercomputer chip scheduled for release this fall, reinforcing the company’s position at the center of the global artificial intelligence infrastructure boom. Investors view the new product as another step in NVIDIA’s effort to maintain its technological lead as demand for AI training and inference continues to accelerate across enterprises, cloud providers, and government organizations.

Markets also welcomed news highlighting how NVIDIA’s next-generation AI processors could bring advanced artificial intelligence capabilities directly to Windows PCs. The move expands NVIDIA’s opportunity beyond data centers and cloud computing, potentially opening a massive consumer and enterprise PC market for AI-powered applications.

The announcements come just days after NVIDIA delivered another strong earnings report, which showcased continued growth in AI-related revenue and robust demand for its Blackwell platform. Today’s gains suggest investors remain confident that the company can sustain its leadership position despite increasing competition from rivals such as AMD, Intel, and custom chip developers.

With a market value exceeding $5 trillion and analysts maintaining an average price target well above current levels, NVIDIA continues to be viewed as one of the primary beneficiaries of the global AI spending cycle. Investors are betting that the company’s expanding portfolio of AI chips, software, and computing platforms will drive another wave of growth as businesses increasingly adopt artificial intelligence technologies.

Today’s move highlights the market’s belief that NVIDIA’s innovation pipeline remains strong and that demand for advanced AI computing is still in the early stages of a multi-year expansion.
Nvidia Barely Moves in Premarket Despite Historic Quarter as Monster Guidance Already Priced In

Nvidia reported what may be the most extraordinary quarter in semiconductor history yesterday, yet shares edged up just 0.08% in premarket trading — a reaction that speaks volumes about how thoroughly the AI infrastructure bull case has been priced into one of the world's most closely watched stocks.

Revenue for Q1 fiscal 2027 came in at a record $81.6 billion, up 85% year over year and 20% sequentially, beating the consensus expectation of approximately $78 billion. Data Center revenue reached a record $75.2 billion, up 92% year over year, with compute revenue up 77% and networking revenue — a figure that had been less scrutinized — surging 199% to $14.8 billion. GAAP net income tripled to $58.3 billion and GAAP diluted EPS of $2.39 was more than triple the $0.76 reported a year ago. Gross margin expanded to 74.9% from 60.5% a year ago. The company returned a record $20 billion to shareholders in the quarter alone.

The forward guidance was the number the market had been waiting for. Nvidia guided Q2 revenue of $91.0 billion, plus or minus 2%, representing another roughly 12% sequential acceleration and approximately 76% year-over-year growth. Critically, the company stated it is not assuming any Data Center compute revenue from China in its outlook — meaning the guidance stands entirely on non-China demand, a significant reassurance given ongoing export restriction concerns.

The company also announced an $80 billion additional share repurchase authorization and a dramatic dividend increase, raising the quarterly payout from $0.01 per share to $0.25 per share — a 2,400% increase that signals management's confidence in sustained cash generation.

CEO Jensen Huang framed the moment in sweeping terms, describing the buildout of AI factories as the largest infrastructure expansion in human history and positioning Nvidia as the only platform running in every cloud, powering every frontier model and scaling from hyperscale data centers to the edge.

The company is also transitioning to a new reporting framework with two market platforms — Data Center and Edge Computing — reflecting its evolution beyond chips into a full-stack AI infrastructure company. The Vera Rubin platform, NVIDIA Dynamo 1.0 and a broad suite of agentic AI tools underscore that the product roadmap extends well beyond the current Blackwell cycle.

The near-flat premarket reaction is not a sign of disappointment — the results were objectively exceptional by any historical standard. It is instead a reflection of a stock that has already rallied 20% in the past month and trades at a valuation that embeds extraordinary future growth. When a company beats $78 billion estimates with $81.6 billion and guides to $91 billion next quarter, and the stock barely moves, it tells you that the market had already bought the dream. The question now is whether $91 billion in Q2 will finally surprise to the upside of even the most bullish expectations — and whether the Vera Rubin ramp can extend this cycle well into 2027 and beyond.
US Markets Open Cautiously Higher as All Eyes Turn to Nvidia

US equity markets opened in positive territory today, with the S&P 500 up 0.31%, the Dow adding 0.14% and the Nasdaq gaining 0.38%, as investors adopted a measured stance ahead of what is arguably the most consequential earnings report of the season — Nvidia's first quarter fiscal 2027 results, due after the closing bell today.

The cautious optimism comes after two consecutive sessions of declines driven by rising bond yields and geopolitical anxiety. The modest green open reflects a market catching its breath rather than making a bold directional call, with most participants holding their positions ahead of Nvidia's numbers.

Nvidia is expected to report roughly $78 billion in revenue and $1.77 in non-GAAP earnings per share, implying approximately 77% to 78% year-on-year revenue growth. Buy-side whispers run higher, with some sell-side desks modeling closer to $79 billion and the most aggressive houses above $80 billion. Nvidia has beaten the Street every quarter of this cycle, meaning a beat alone is already priced in. What markets will be watching most closely is the Q2 guidance and any commentary on the China export restrictions and gross margin sustainability.

The broader earnings backdrop heading into today is genuinely strong. With approximately one-third of S&P 500 companies reported, the blended year-over-year earnings growth rate stood at 15%, up from 13% expected at the end of March, putting the index on track for a sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit earnings growth. Eighty-four percent of reporting companies have beaten EPS estimates, with the magnitude of beats averaging 12%, well above the five-year historical average of 7.3%.

Today's earnings slate is also busy, with Target, Lowe's, TJX, Analog Devices and Hasbro among the morning reporters. From the earnings covered over the past two days, CAVA's 9.7% same-restaurant sales growth driven by actual traffic gains and 8x8's first GAAP-profitable fiscal year since 2015 were standouts, while Red Robin's margin improvement and Agilysys' record revenue quarter added to a broadly constructive picture across sectors.

On the macro front, the tension between a strong earnings season and a difficult rate environment remains unresolved. Bond yields have been climbing, with the 30-year Treasury recently crossing 5.18%, its highest level in nearly two decades. Iran ceasefire diplomacy continues to generate daily headlines and oil price swings, keeping inflation expectations elevated and Fed rate cut hopes pushed further into the future.

For today, Nvidia is the market. A strong print with confident guidance could provide the catalyst the broader indices need to break decisively higher. Anything short of that, and two days of bond-driven selling could resume.
Nvidia Extends Rally as Jensen Huang Joins Trump in Beijing, May 20 Earnings in Sight

May 14, 2026 | NASDAQ: NVDA

Nvidia is building on yesterday's 2.29% gain with a further 1.93% rise in premarket, extending a five-day winning streak that has added approximately $590 billion in market cap and pushed shares back toward all-time highs. Two converging forces are driving the momentum — a dramatic geopolitical development in Beijing and accelerating anticipation ahead of the May 20 earnings report.

The headline development from the last 24 hours is Jensen Huang's last-minute addition to President Trump's China delegation. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has joined Trump's trip to China after initial indications he had not been invited. After seeing media coverage of Huang's absence from the delegation, Trump called the Nvidia executive and asked him to join, and Huang flew to Alaska to board Air Force One (CNBC).

Trump had previously approved Nvidia H200 chip exports to China in January 2026, but not a single one has been sold, making Huang's presence at the summit a potential catalyst for breaking that impasse. The market is treating that possibility as a meaningful positive for Nvidia's China revenue outlook.

Wells Fargo raised its price target on Nvidia from $265 to $315 with an overweight rating, saying AI will drive the stock more than 40% higher from current levels (CNBC). The broader analyst community is similarly positioned ahead of the May 20 earnings report. Nvidia has guided for Q1 fiscal 2027 revenue of $78 billion, plus or minus 2%, while the Wall Street consensus expects approximately $78.8 billion in revenue and adjusted EPS of $1.77 (Motley Fool). Hyperscaler capex commitments provide strong demand visibility — Microsoft plans to spend $190 billion in calendar 2026, Amazon approximately $200 billion, and Alphabet between $180 and $190 billion, all largely AI-driven (Motley Fool).

Nvidia shares have gained approximately 20% year to date, outpacing the S&P 500's 7.5% and the Nasdaq's 14% gains, with the stock trading near its 52-week high of $225 and a market cap of approximately $5.5 trillion. At roughly 27 times forward earnings, the valuation has actually compressed relative to prior peaks, giving bulls a reasonable entry point ahead of what most expect will be another beat-and-raise quarter.

The China angle is the wildcard. If the Beijing summit produces any signal of a pathway to H200 shipments resuming, the revenue upside for Nvidia could be significant — and the market appears to be starting to price in that possibility.
NVIDIA Rises as AI Momentum and China Hopes Lift Sentiment

NVIDIA shares rose about 2.65% today, extending a strong rally as investors continued to price in demand for artificial-intelligence chips and looked ahead to the company’s next earnings report. The stock traded near record levels, on pace for a record close after four straight days of gains.

One key driver appears to be renewed optimism around China. Investing*com reported that the move was helped by news of President Trump’s planned state visit to China on May 13–15, which investors interpreted as a possible opening for discussions around AI chip export restrictions. Since China remains a major potential market for advanced AI hardware, any easing or renegotiation of restrictions could be meaningful for NVIDIA’s future sales outlook (Investing*com).

The rally also reflects positioning ahead of NVIDIA’s upcoming earnings, expected on May 20 on which analysts remain highly bullish. Expectations for revenue is about $78.6 billion, up 78% year over year.

Recent AI infrastructure news has also supported sentiment. Reuters reported last week that NVIDIA plans to invest up to $2.1 billion in data-center operator IREN as part of a broader deal to deploy up to 5 gigawatts of AI infrastructure, underscoring the scale of demand for computing capacity (Reuters).

Overall, today’s gain seems to be driven by three factors: record-high momentum, expectations for another strong earnings report, and hopes that U.S.-China talks could improve the outlook for AI chip sales. The main risk is valuation: after such a sharp rally, investors may expect near-perfect earnings and guidance.
NVIDIA and ServiceNow announced an expanded partnership to develop autonomous AI agents for enterprise use, unveiled at ServiceNow Knowledge 2026.

The collaboration focuses on delivering governed, secure AI agents capable of executing complex, multi-step workflows across enterprise systems. A key highlight is “Project Arc,” a self-evolving desktop agent designed to assist knowledge workers such as developers and IT teams by interacting directly with local systems and applications.

The solution integrates NVIDIA’s accelerated computing and open models with ServiceNow’s workflow and governance platforms, enabling enterprises to deploy AI agents with greater control, auditability, and security. The initiative also emphasizes efficiency, leveraging NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure to significantly reduce operational costs for large-scale AI deployments.

The partnership reflects a broader shift toward autonomous, action-oriented AI systems, where enterprises prioritize not just AI reasoning but real-world execution within controlled environments.
Nvidia Slides 4% in Pre-Market as Custom Chip Threat and China Restrictions Cloud the AI Chip Throne

Nvidia shares are down around 4% in pre-market trading on May 1, a jarring contrast to the broader AI optimism generated by a wave of blowout Big Tech earnings, as two converging headwinds move to the forefront of investor concern.

The primary catalyst for the drop is growing anxiety about competition in the AI chip market. Amazon recently disclosed that its in-house chip business is growing quickly, while Alphabet announced plans to sell its custom AI chips to select outside customers, prompting investors to question whether Nvidia's dominant position may begin to erode as hyperscalers increasingly develop alternatives. (CNBC)

The China situation is adding a second layer of pressure. A recent crackdown on chip smuggling in China has pushed prices of Nvidia's B300 servers close to $1 million each. Since these advanced systems are restricted in China, supply is constrained and prices are surging, but this also risks reducing demand and accelerating the push by Chinese customers toward competitor hardware. Separately, Chinese AI and tech firms including Alibaba and Tencent are increasingly betting on Huawei chips as they seek to break their dependence on Nvidia given ongoing US export restrictions. (CNBC, Investing*com)

The irony of the sell-off is that the hyperscaler earnings released overnight were uniformly bullish for AI infrastructure demand. Alphabet raised its 2026 capex guidance to $180 to $190 billion, while Amazon and Microsoft also flagged significant AI infrastructure increases, with Big Tech capital expenditures now seen topping $1 trillion collectively in 2027. Yet markets are increasingly asking whether that spending will flow to Nvidia or to proprietary custom silicon. (Stocktwits)

Nvidia closed at $209.25 on April 30 and is trading around $199.57 in pre-market, with a 52-week range of $110.82 to $216.83. The stock is still up more than 92% over the past year. Nvidia's next earnings report is scheduled for May 20, where the company will need to demonstrate that demand for its Blackwell architecture remains insulated from the custom chip threat. (The Motley Fool)
Nvidia stock volatile this week as AI optimism meets rising concerns

Shares of NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA) showed volatile performance this week, as strong momentum in the AI sector was offset by growing investor concerns about sustainability of demand and broader market risks.

The stock initially surged to a new record high, supported by continued enthusiasm around artificial intelligence and expectations of strong spending by major tech companies. According to Investopedia, Nvidia’s rally has been driven by its dominant position in data center GPUs and its central role in AI infrastructure.

However, the rally lost momentum as the broader market turned cautious. Reuters reported that semiconductor stocks, including Nvidia, came under pressure amid concerns that AI growth could slow and uncertainty around large-scale data center investments.

Additional headwinds also weighed on sentiment. Reports cited by KuCoin News highlighted risks from potential U.S. export restrictions on advanced AI chips, which could limit Nvidia’s access to key markets such as China.

Despite these short-term pressures, the longer-term outlook remains supported by strong structural demand. Investopedia noted that continued investment in AI infrastructure is expected to sustain Nvidia’s growth, even as valuation and macro concerns create near-term volatility.

Overall, this week’s price action reflects a balance between strong AI-driven fundamentals and rising investor caution, keeping Nvidia among the most closely watched stocks globally.

Source: Reuters, Investopedia, KuCoin News
NVIDIA has unveiled Nemotron 3 Nano Omni, a new open multimodal AI model designed to integrate vision, audio, and language capabilities into a single system, significantly improving efficiency for AI agents.

The model enables up to 9x higher throughput compared to similar open multimodal systems, reducing latency and costs while maintaining strong accuracy across tasks such as document analysis, video and audio understanding, and interface navigation. Built on a hybrid mixture-of-experts architecture, it eliminates the need for separate models, streamlining agentic workflows.

Nemotron 3 Nano Omni is aimed at enterprises and developers building advanced AI agents and is available across multiple platforms, with early adoption from companies including Foxconn and Palantir.

Source: NVIDIA blog
NVIDIA announced that OpenAI’s latest GPT-5.5 model is now powering its Codex application on NVIDIA infrastructure, marking a significant step in enterprise AI adoption. The system runs on NVIDIA’s GB200 NVL72 platforms, delivering substantial efficiency gains, including lower costs and faster processing speeds compared to previous generations.

More than 10,000 NVIDIA employees have already begun using the GPT-5.5-powered Codex across various functions, reporting major productivity improvements such as faster debugging, accelerated experimentation, and enhanced software development workflows. The deployment also emphasizes enterprise-grade security, with isolated cloud environments and strict data controls.

The development builds on a decade-long collaboration between NVIDIA and OpenAI, highlighting their continued efforts to scale advanced AI models and infrastructure for broader enterprise use.

Source: NVIDIA Blog
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Gold

Gold Holds Above $4,000 as Cooling Inflation and Geopolitical Risks Offset Strong Labor Data

Gold prices edged higher on Friday, holding above the psychologically important $4,000-per-ounce level as easing inflation and lingering geopolitical tensions continued to support safe-haven demand despite signs of resilience in the U.S. labor market.

The precious metal gained around 0.2% to trade near $4,001 after this week’s softer-than-expected U.S. inflation report strengthened expectations that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates later this year. June CPI and core CPI both came in below market expectations, reinforcing the view that inflationary pressures are gradually easing.

At the same time, Thursday’s U.S. jobless claims data pointed to a still-solid labor market. Initial claims fell to 208,000, below expectations of 216,000, while continuing claims also declined, suggesting layoffs remain limited. However, weaker core retail sales indicated consumer spending may be losing some momentum, helping preserve expectations for policy easing.

Geopolitical developments also remained a key driver for gold. Investors continued to monitor tensions involving the United States and Iran following recent military exchanges, while broader conflicts in the Middle East and Eastern Europe maintained demand for defensive assets.

Looking ahead, traders will focus on upcoming Federal Reserve commentary and additional economic data for clues on the timing of the first rate cut. Any renewed geopolitical escalation could provide additional support for gold prices in the near term.

Gold and silver rally as CPI cools Fed-rate pressure - Kitco AM Report | Kitco News

Gold and silver rally as CPI cools Fed-rate pressure - Kitco AM Report
...

(kitco.com)

Gold is becoming the reserve asset of the new multipolar world – Sprott’s Paul Wong | Kitco News

Gold is becoming the reserve asset of the new multipolar world – Sprott’s Paul Wong ...

(kitco.com)
Gold Holds Above $4,000 as Investors Balance Geopolitical Risks and Economic Data

Gold prices edged higher on Tuesday, trading around $4,020 per ounce as investors continued to balance geopolitical uncertainty in the Middle East against a steady stream of global economic data and expectations for central bank policy.

The precious metal has remained well supported in recent weeks following renewed military tensions between the United States and Iran. Although immediate fears of a broader regional conflict have eased, the recent exchange of attacks has reinforced gold's appeal as a safe-haven asset, helping prices remain above the psychologically important $4,000 level.

At the same time, investors are digesting a series of mixed economic releases from major economies. China's trade data exceeded expectations, with both exports and imports posting strong growth, while recent inflation figures from India pointed to persistent price pressures. In Japan, industrial production missed forecasts despite stronger household spending, reflecting an uneven global economic backdrop.

Meanwhile, markets continue to assess the outlook for monetary policy. Softer inflation trends in some regions have strengthened expectations for future interest rate cuts, while resilient economic activity in others suggests central banks may remain cautious. This combination has helped limit downside pressure on non-yielding assets such as gold.

Looking ahead, traders will closely monitor upcoming U.S. inflation data, Federal Reserve commentary, and any further developments surrounding U.S.-Iran relations. While easing geopolitical tensions could reduce safe-haven demand, any renewed escalation or signs of slowing global growth could provide fresh support for gold prices.

Gold Sinks to $4000 on Trump's Hormuz Tariff Ahead of US Inflation, Fed Testimony, Earnings | Gold News

Gold sank near $4000 on Monday as silver also fell on the worsening US-Iran and Russia-Ukraine wars ahead of US inflation and Fed testimony

(bullionvault.com)
Gold Falls as U.S.-Iran Conflict Fuels Inflation Fears and Higher-For-Longer Fed Expectations

Gold prices fell nearly 1% on Monday, with August COMEX futures dropping below $4,080 per ounce, as escalating tensions between the United States and Iran pushed oil prices higher and shifted investor focus from safe-haven demand to the inflationary consequences of the conflict.

Middle East Conflict Lifts Oil Prices, Pressures Gold

While geopolitical uncertainty typically supports gold, the latest escalation in the Middle East has had the opposite effect.

Renewed military exchanges between the U.S. and Iran, along with concerns over potential disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, have driven crude oil prices sharply higher. The prospect of higher energy costs has increased fears that inflation could remain elevated for longer, reducing expectations for easier monetary policy.

Higher Treasury Yields and Stronger Dollar Weigh on Bullion

The inflation outlook has pushed U.S. Treasury yields and the U.S. dollar higher, creating headwinds for gold.

As investors price in a greater likelihood that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates elevated for longer, the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets such as gold has increased. Rising bond yields and a firmer dollar have therefore outweighed gold's traditional appeal as a safe-haven asset.

Markets Turn Attention to U.S. Inflation Data

Investors are now looking ahead to key U.S. economic releases, including inflation data and additional labor market indicators, for clues on the Federal Reserve's next policy move.

A stronger-than-expected inflation reading could reinforce expectations that policymakers will maintain a restrictive stance, potentially extending pressure on gold prices. Conversely, signs that inflation is easing despite higher energy costs could help stabilize the precious metal.

For now, the market remains focused on the inflationary implications of the U.S.-Iran conflict rather than its safe-haven characteristics, leaving gold under pressure despite heightened geopolitical risks.
Gold Rises Above $4,120 as Weaker Dollar and Safe-Haven Demand Offset Fed Rate Concerns

Gold prices climbed more than 1% today, with August COMEX futures rising to around $4,124 per ounce after recovering from a sharp selloff earlier this week. The rebound pushed the precious metal back above the key $4,100 level, although prices remain below recent highs reached earlier this month.

The recovery was driven primarily by a softer U.S. dollar, which made gold more attractive for overseas buyers, while renewed geopolitical uncertainty in the Middle East supported demand for safe-haven assets. Fresh tensions involving the United States and Iran continued to keep investors cautious despite gold's volatile trading over recent sessions.

However, gold's upside remains constrained by expectations that the Federal Reserve could keep monetary policy restrictive for longer. Rising oil prices have renewed inflation concerns, prompting investors to price in a higher probability of additional interest rate increases later this year.

The market's recent price action highlights the conflicting forces currently driving gold. On one hand, geopolitical tensions and safe-haven demand continue to provide support. On the other, higher Treasury yields and persistent inflation expectations are preventing a sustained breakout.

Investors are now closely watching upcoming U.S. economic data and Federal Reserve commentary for further clues on the interest-rate outlook. Any signs of easing inflation or a softer Fed stance could provide additional support for gold, while stronger economic data and rising yields may once again pressure the precious metal.
Gold Holds Near Record High as Rate Cut Expectations Continue to Support Prices

Gold traded higher on Monday, with August futures rising 0.9% to around *$4,162 per ounce*, as investors continued to favor the precious metal amid growing expectations that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates later this year.

The rally follows last week's weaker-than-expected U.S. labor market data, which showed the economy added just *57,000 nonfarm payrolls* in June, well below market expectations. The disappointing employment figures strengthened expectations for monetary policy easing, providing continued support for non-yielding assets such as gold.

Investor sentiment has also been supported by recent comments from Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh, who signaled that policymakers should remain flexible as economic conditions evolve. Combined with expectations of lower borrowing costs, the remarks have reinforced demand for safe-haven assets.

Beyond monetary policy, ongoing geopolitical tensions and steady central bank purchases continue to provide a favorable backdrop for gold prices, helping the metal remain close to record highs.

Investors will now turn their attention to upcoming U.S. inflation data and additional comments from Federal Reserve officials for further clues on the timing and pace of potential interest rate cuts, which are likely to remain a key driver of gold prices in the coming weeks.
Gold Climbs While Brent Holds Steady as Markets Weigh Weak U.S. Jobs Data and Fed Outlook

Gold prices advanced sharply while Brent crude oil ended nearly unchanged on Friday, as investors assessed weaker-than-expected U.S. labor market data and its implications for Federal Reserve policy.

August gold futures settled at $4,181.10 per ounce, gaining 1.34%, after the June U.S. Nonfarm Payrolls report showed the economy added just 57,000 jobs, well below economists’ expectations of 114,000. Although weekly initial jobless claims came in at 215,000, slightly below forecasts, the sharp slowdown in hiring reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates later this year.

Lower interest rates tend to support gold by reducing the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets. The precious metal also continued to benefit from recent remarks by Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh at the ECB Forum in Portugal, where he emphasized that policymakers should remain flexible as economic conditions evolve. Ongoing geopolitical uncertainty and continued central bank demand also provided additional support for bullion.

Meanwhile, Brent crude finished the session near $71.76 per barrel, little changed despite early volatility. Oil prices initially came under pressure following the disappointing U.S. jobs report, as weaker employment growth raised concerns about future fuel demand in the world’s largest economy.

However, losses were limited by continued attention to global supply conditions, including OPEC+ production policy and broader geopolitical risks. Investors also weighed the possibility that weaker economic data could accelerate Fed rate cuts, which could eventually support economic growth and energy demand.

With U.S. financial markets closed on Friday for the Independence Day holiday, trading volumes remained relatively light. However, gold outperformed on growing expectations of monetary policy easing, while Brent crude held broadly steady as demand concerns were balanced by ongoing supply-side support.
Gold Rises as Weak U.S. Data Offsets Fed Remarks

Gold prices climbed on Wednesday as weaker-than-expected U.S. economic data strengthened expectations that the Federal Reserve could eventually lower interest rates, outweighing comments from Fed Chair Kevin Warsh.

The precious metal found support after the ADP employment report showed U.S. private payrolls increased by just 98,000 in June, below economists' expectations of 118,000. Additional economic data also pointed to easing inflation pressures, with the ISM Manufacturing Prices Index falling more than expected, reinforcing expectations that the U.S. economy is gradually cooling.

At the same time, remarks from Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh at the ECB Forum in Sintra, Portugal added another layer to the market narrative. Warsh declined to provide any guidance on the Fed's July meeting and emphasized that inflation remains "too high," reaffirming the central bank's commitment to restoring price stability and maintaining its 2% inflation objective.

Although Warsh's comments sound relatively hawkish, investors focused more heavily on the softer economic data, which increased expectations that slowing growth could eventually pave the way for Federal Reserve rate cuts. Lower interest rates typically support gold by reducing the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets.

Warsh also stressed that future policy decisions would remain data dependent and highlighted the Fed's plans to improve its use of real-time economic data and artificial intelligence in policymaking, while avoiding any commitment on the timing of future rate moves.

With attention now shifting to Thursday's U.S. nonfarm payrolls report, investors are looking for further evidence that the labor market is cooling. Another weaker-than-expected employment report could reinforce expectations for future Fed easing and provide additional support for gold prices.
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Italy

Eurozone Inflation Eases Further in June, Supporting ECB Policy Outlook

Eurozone inflation continued to moderate in June, reinforcing expectations that the European Central Bank will have greater flexibility to continue easing monetary policy if disinflation remains on track.

Headline consumer inflation came in at 2.8% year over year, matching market expectations and slowing from 3.2% in May. Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, also met forecasts at 2.4%, down from 2.6% in the previous month.
Eurozone Services PMI Sends Mixed Signals as Germany Improves, France Remains Weak

The latest HCOB Services PMI data painted a mixed picture for the eurozone economy in June, with Germany showing signs of improvement, Italy returning to modest expansion, while France remained in contraction.

Germany’s HCOB Services PMI rose to 48.6 in June from 48.1 in May, comfortably beating economists’ expectations of 46.8. Although the index remained below the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction, the stronger-than-expected reading suggests the downturn in Germany’s services sector is easing.

Italy also showed encouraging signs, with its Services PMI rising to 50.2 from 49.4. While the figure came in just below the consensus estimate of 50.3, it moved back above the 50 mark, indicating a return to modest expansion after contracting in the previous month.

France, however, continued to lag behind its eurozone peers. The country’s Services PMI improved to 46.8 from 44.3 but missed expectations of 47.4, remaining firmly in contraction territory.
Eurozone Inflation Cools More Than Expected in June

Inflation across the eurozone eased more than expected in June, reinforcing signs that price pressures continue to moderate and strengthening expectations for a more accommodative monetary policy outlook.

The annual Consumer Price Index (CPI) slowed to 2.8%, below economists' expectations of 3.0% and down from 3.2% in May.

Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, also declined to 2.4% from 2.6% in the previous month, coming in below the consensus forecast of 2.5%.
Eurozone Inflation Accelerates as Core Prices Rise Faster Than Expected

Inflation in the Eurozone accelerated in May, with headline consumer prices rising 3.2% year-over-year, matching expectations and increasing from 3.0% in April.

More notably, Core CPI—which excludes volatile food and energy prices—rose 2.6%, exceeding forecasts of 2.5% and accelerating from 2.2% in the previous month. The stronger-than-expected core reading suggests underlying inflationary pressures remain more persistent than policymakers had hoped.
Eurozone Investor Sentiment Turns Positive as ZEW Index Surges

Investor confidence in the Eurozone improved sharply in June, with the ZEW Economic Sentiment Index rising to 9.5 from -9.1 in May, easily beating expectations for a reading of -7.2.
Eurozone Economy Shows Signs of Weakness as Trade Balance Turns Negative and Factory Output Misses Expectations

Fresh economic data pointed to a softer start to the second quarter for the Eurozone, with both trade and industrial production figures coming in below market expectations.

The Eurozone recorded a trade deficit of €1.0 billion in April, a sharp deterioration from the €4.9 billion surplus reported in the previous month and well below economists' expectations for a €7.8 billion surplus. The unexpected swing into deficit suggests external demand conditions weakened during the month and highlights ongoing challenges facing the region's export-oriented economies.

Industrial production also disappointed. Factory output rose just 0.1% month-over-month in April, missing forecasts for a 0.2% increase and slowing from the previous month's 0.4% gain.

The weaker-than-expected figures reinforce concerns that the region's recovery remains fragile. Europe's industrial sector continues to face headwinds from soft global demand, trade uncertainty, and uneven economic growth among key trading partners.
The final May PMI data paint a mixed picture for the Eurozone economy.

The HCOB Eurozone Services PMI rose to 47.7, comfortably above the 46.4 forecast and slightly higher than April's 47.6. While this is an improvement, the index remains below the 50 threshold, indicating that the services sector is still contracting, albeit at a slower pace.

More importantly, the HCOB Eurozone Composite PMI, which combines manufacturing and services activity, came in at 48.5. This was stronger than the 47.5 consensus estimate but slightly below April's 48.8.
Italy's HCOB Services PMI came in at 49.4 in May, slightly above the 49.2 consensus forecast but below April's 49.8 reading.
Eurozone inflation accelerated in May, reinforcing concerns that underlying price pressures remain persistent despite the European Central Bank’s easing efforts. Headline CPI rose 3.2% year-over-year, matching expectations and increasing from 3.0% in April, while monthly inflation slowed sharply to 0.1% from 1.0% previously.

More importantly for policymakers, core inflation—which excludes volatile food and energy prices—climbed to 2.5% year-over-year, exceeding expectations of 2.4% and accelerating from 2.2% in April. The stronger-than-expected core reading suggests that underlying inflationary pressures remain more stubborn than anticipated.
Eurozone manufacturing activity remained in expansion territory in May, but the pace of growth slowed more than expected. The HCOB Eurozone Manufacturing PMI declined to 51.6 from 52.2 in April, although it still came in slightly above economists' expectations of 51.4.
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COINBASE:ADAUSD

XRP, SOL, ADA's Coinbase Premium Surges to One-Month High After Trump's Crypto Reserve News

Tokens traded at a notable premium on Coinbase relative to Binance after Trump announced plans for establishing strategic crypto reserve.

(finance.yahoo.com)
what is next for cryptos ?
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Brent Crude

Brent Crude Climbs Toward $80 as Supply Risks Outweigh Economic Concerns

Brent crude oil advanced nearly 1% on Friday, extending its recent gains as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East continued to support concerns over potential supply disruptions.

Oil prices remained elevated after recent military exchanges between the United States and Iran heightened uncertainty across the region. Investors continue to price in a geopolitical risk premium given the strategic importance of the Middle East to global energy markets.

The market also assessed this week’s U.S. economic data. Softer inflation strengthened expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts, a development that could support future fuel demand by improving economic activity. However, mixed retail sales data suggested consumer spending may be moderating, limiting some of the optimism surrounding the demand outlook.

Meanwhile, traders continued monitoring global supply conditions, including OPEC+ production policy and U.S. inventory trends, while keeping a close watch on developments involving Russia and broader geopolitical risks.

With Brent approaching the $80-per-barrel level, price action is likely to remain highly sensitive to both macroeconomic developments and geopolitical headlines. Investors will continue watching Middle East tensions, central bank policy expectations, and global demand indicators for the next direction in the oil market.
Brent Crude Jumps Above $86 as Middle East Tensions Rekindle Supply Concerns

Brent crude oil climbed nearly 4% on Tuesday, trading above $86 per barrel as renewed geopolitical tensions involving the United States and Iran overshadowed broader macroeconomic developments and reignited concerns over global oil supplies.

Oil prices have rallied sharply over the past several sessions following a fresh escalation in the Middle East. Recent exchanges between the U.S. and Iran have increased fears that the conflict could disrupt energy infrastructure or shipping routes in the region, particularly around the Strait of Hormuz, a critical corridor for global crude exports.

The rally has also been supported by a generally constructive global economic backdrop. China's latest trade data surprised to the upside, with exports and imports both growing much faster than expected, pointing to resilient industrial activity and potentially stronger oil demand from the world's largest crude importer. Meanwhile, Germany reported a larger-than-expected trade surplus, reinforcing signs of stability in Europe's largest economy.

Despite these supportive demand signals, investors continue to monitor the outlook for global monetary policy. Mixed economic data from the United States and other major economies have kept expectations for future interest rate moves uncertain, leaving demand forecasts balanced against geopolitical risks.

Looking ahead, Brent's direction will likely remain driven by developments in the Middle East. Any further escalation between the U.S. and Iran could push prices even higher by increasing concerns over supply disruptions, while signs of de-escalation could quickly remove part of the geopolitical premium that has fueled the recent rally.

Oil prices rise as Trump vows to reinstate Hormuz strait blockade, US and Iran exchange strikes

Oil prices rose further on Monday as the US and Iran traded a new round of strikes.

(finance.yahoo.com)
Brent Crude Oil Rises 2.6% as U.S.-Iran Conflict Raises Supply Disruption Fears

Brent crude oil climbed more than 2.5% on Monday, extending its recent rally as escalating tensions between the United States and Iran renewed concerns over global oil supplies. Brent futures traded near $78 per barrel after investors priced in the growing risk of supply disruptions in the Middle East.

Middle East Tensions Drive Oil Higher

The latest gains came after the military conflict between the U.S. and Iran intensified, raising fears that crude exports from the region could be disrupted.

A key concern for energy markets is the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world's most important oil shipping routes. After Iran declared the Strait is closed, geopolitical risk premiums have returned to the oil market as traders prepare for the possibility of further escalation.

Supply Risks Outweigh Demand Concerns

The renewed geopolitical tensions have largely overshadowed concerns about slowing global economic growth and weaker fuel demand.

While investors continue to monitor the outlook for China and other major economies, the immediate focus has shifted toward potential supply shocks. Higher oil prices also reflect increased uncertainty surrounding shipping, insurance costs, and production risks across the Middle East.

The rebound follows several weeks of relatively stable prices, with traders now reassessing the balance between adequate global inventories and rising geopolitical risks.

What Investors Are Watching Next

Oil markets will remain highly sensitive to developments in the Middle East over the coming days. Any escalation that threatens production facilities or shipping routes could push prices higher, while signs of diplomatic progress could quickly remove part of the current geopolitical risk premium.

Beyond geopolitics, investors will also monitor upcoming U.S. inflation data, Federal Reserve expectations, and global demand indicators for additional direction.

For now, concerns over potential supply disruptions stemming from the U.S.-Iran conflict remain the dominant driver of Brent crude, helping lift prices despite ongoing uncertainty about the global economic outlook.
Brent Crude Slips as U.S.-Iran Tensions Keep Risk Premium Elevated While Macro Data Clouds Demand Outlook

Brent crude oil edged lower today, slipping nearly 1% to around $77.25 per barrel, as traders assessed renewed U.S.-Iran tensions alongside mixed global macroeconomic data.

Oil prices remain supported by geopolitical risk after attacks between the United States and Iran in recent days raised concerns over potential disruption risks in the Middle East. Although no major supply interruption has been confirmed, any escalation involving Iran increases market sensitivity because of the region's importance to global oil flows and the Strait of Hormuz.

At the same time, macroeconomic data created a more cautious demand backdrop. China’s consumer inflation slowed to 1.0% in June, slightly below expectations, while producer prices rose 4.1%, pointing to uneven economic momentum in the world’s largest crude importer.

The market is therefore balancing two opposing forces: geopolitical risk that supports prices and macro uncertainty that limits stronger upside. Traders are also watching U.S. inventory data, OPEC+ production decisions, and further developments in the U.S.-Iran conflict for the next direction.

For now, Brent remains elevated compared with last week, but the latest decline shows that demand concerns and uncertainty over the scale of any supply disruption continue to keep the market volatile.
Brent Crude Holds Near $72 as Traders Balance Supply Risks and Demand Outlook

Brent crude oil traded little changed on Monday, holding near *$71.80 per barrel* as investors balanced expectations of ample global supply against improving demand prospects following last week's weaker-than-expected U.S. economic data.

Oil prices remain under pressure after OPEC+ signaled another production increase beginning in August, raising concerns that additional supply could weigh on the market. At the same time, uncertainty over global economic growth continues to limit bullish sentiment.

However, downside pressure has been tempered by expectations that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates later this year after the U.S. economy added just *57,000 nonfarm payrolls* in June, well below market expectations. Lower borrowing costs could help support economic activity and energy demand in the coming months.

Investors are also monitoring geopolitical developments in the Middle East and global trade negotiations, both of which could influence the supply-demand outlook for crude markets.

With competing forces offsetting each other, Brent crude remained broadly stable around the *$72 per barrel* level as traders awaited fresh catalysts, including upcoming U.S. inflation data and further signals on global oil supply and demand.
Gold Climbs While Brent Holds Steady as Markets Weigh Weak U.S. Jobs Data and Fed Outlook

Gold prices advanced sharply while Brent crude oil ended nearly unchanged on Friday, as investors assessed weaker-than-expected U.S. labor market data and its implications for Federal Reserve policy.

August gold futures settled at $4,181.10 per ounce, gaining 1.34%, after the June U.S. Nonfarm Payrolls report showed the economy added just 57,000 jobs, well below economists’ expectations of 114,000. Although weekly initial jobless claims came in at 215,000, slightly below forecasts, the sharp slowdown in hiring reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates later this year.

Lower interest rates tend to support gold by reducing the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets. The precious metal also continued to benefit from recent remarks by Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh at the ECB Forum in Portugal, where he emphasized that policymakers should remain flexible as economic conditions evolve. Ongoing geopolitical uncertainty and continued central bank demand also provided additional support for bullion.

Meanwhile, Brent crude finished the session near $71.76 per barrel, little changed despite early volatility. Oil prices initially came under pressure following the disappointing U.S. jobs report, as weaker employment growth raised concerns about future fuel demand in the world’s largest economy.

However, losses were limited by continued attention to global supply conditions, including OPEC+ production policy and broader geopolitical risks. Investors also weighed the possibility that weaker economic data could accelerate Fed rate cuts, which could eventually support economic growth and energy demand.

With U.S. financial markets closed on Friday for the Independence Day holiday, trading volumes remained relatively light. However, gold outperformed on growing expectations of monetary policy easing, while Brent crude held broadly steady as demand concerns were balanced by ongoing supply-side support.
Brent Crude Falls as Geopolitical Risk Premium Continues to Fade

Brent crude oil traded lower on Wednesday, extending its recent decline as easing geopolitical tensions reduced the risk premium that had supported prices earlier.

At the time of writing, Brent crude was down 1.05% at $70.82 per barrel. Over the past five days, prices have fallen nearly 6%, reflecting a sharp shift in sentiment after fears of a wider Middle East conflict eased.

The decline suggests traders are moving away from supply-disruption concerns and refocusing on fundamentals, including global demand, OPEC+ production policy, and signs of slower economic activity.

Recent U.S. data showed private job growth and manufacturing momentum weakening, raising concerns that softer economic growth could weigh on energy demand. At the same time, the U.S.-Iran ceasefire has reduced immediate fears of disruption in key oil-producing regions.

For now, Brent remains under pressure as the market unwinds geopolitical risk pricing. Unless new supply risks emerge, traders are likely to keep watching demand indicators and upcoming inventory data for the next clear direction.
Gold and Brent Crude Extend Losses as Easing Geopolitical Tensions Weigh on Commodities

Gold and Brent crude oil traded lower on Wednesday as easing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East reduced demand for traditional safe-haven and risk-premium assets, while investors shifted their focus back to broader macroeconomic fundamentals.

At the time of writing, Brent crude futures were down 1.4% at $71.90 per barrel, while gold futures fell 1.3% to $3,986.40 per ounce.

# Brent Crude Slides as Geopolitical Risk Premium Fades

Brent crude extended its recent decline after the ceasefire between the United States and Iran eased concerns over potential supply disruptions from the Middle East.

With the immediate threat of a broader regional conflict diminishing, traders have continued to remove the geopolitical risk premium that had supported oil prices during recent tensions. Investors are now turning their attention back to global supply and demand fundamentals, including OPEC+ production policy, economic growth, and fuel demand.

# Gold Pulls Back as Investors Take Profits

Gold also came under pressure as investors reduced safe-haven positions amid improving market sentiment.

The easing of geopolitical risks encouraged investors to rotate into equities, particularly technology stocks, while the precious metal faced additional selling following its exceptional rally over the past year. After climbing to record highs, gold appears to be experiencing a period of profit-taking as some investors lock in gains.

Despite the recent pullback, the longer-term outlook for gold remains supported by continued central bank buying, ongoing geopolitical uncertainty, and expectations that major central banks could gradually ease monetary policy over time.

# Risk Appetite Improves Across Financial Markets

The decline in gold and oil coincided with another positive session for global equity markets. U.S. stocks advanced, led by technology shares, as investors welcomed easing geopolitical tensions and continued to favor risk assets.

The improving market sentiment reduced demand for defensive investments, contributing to weakness across both commodities.

# What Investors Are Watching

Looking ahead, market participants will closely monitor:

* Developments surrounding the U.S.-Iran ceasefire.
* OPEC+ production policy and global oil demand.
* Upcoming U.S. labor market and inflation data.
* Central bank policy expectations and broader risk sentiment.

With geopolitical risks easing and investors rotating back into equities, both gold and Brent crude could remain under pressure in the near term, although any renewed geopolitical tensions or deterioration in the economic outlook could quickly restore demand for defensive assets.
Brent crude extended its decline on Friday, falling more than 3% to around $73 per barrel as easing geopolitical tensions and improving oil flows from the Middle East continued to pressure prices.

The recent risk premium that lifted crude prices during the Iran conflict has largely faded after signs of a sustained ceasefire and the gradual normalization of tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. With supply disruption fears easing, traders have shifted their focus back to underlying market fundamentals.

Oil also remains under pressure from concerns about global demand. Slowing economic activity in several major economies and expectations for ample supply have weighed on sentiment, reinforcing the recent pullback in crude prices. Analysts have also begun lowering their near-term oil price forecasts as geopolitical risks recede and supply conditions improve. (The Wall Street Journal)

Despite today's decline, investors continue to monitor developments in the Middle East, as any renewed disruption to regional oil exports or shipping routes could quickly restore volatility to the energy market.
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