
Stephen Miran, a Federal Reserve governor whose term ends at the end of January, said Thursday that he is looking for 150 basis points of interest-rate cuts this year to boost the U.S. labor market. Miran told Bloomberg Television's Surveillance program that Fed officials had room to further reduce rates given his view that underlying inflation was likely running at 2.3%. "I'm looking for about a point and a half of cuts. A lot of that is driven by my view of inflation," Miran said. "Underlying inflation is running within noise of our target, and that's a good indication of where overall...
GBP/USD fell again for a second session and is now trading around 1.3250 in the Asian session on Wednesday morning. The pound weakened after data from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) showed food prices in the UK fell at the fastest rate in almost five years. This decline in price pressures has made the market increasingly confident that the Bank of England (BoE) will cut interest rates. Traders now estimate there is a 68% chance the BoE will cut interest rates by 0.25% in December. Expectations of BoE easing are growing due to problems in the UK economy itself. The Office for Budget...
The Japanese yen strengthened, breaking through 152 per US dollar on Wednesday (October 29th), continuing its two-day rally. Market participants are positioning themselves ahead of this week's Bank of Japan (BOJ) decision. The BOJ is not expected to change interest rates now, but officials are said to be opening discussions about when to raise interest rates further in the future. This pressure arises because Japanese inflation remains stubbornly high. Yen sentiment strengthened after US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent met with Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama and said Japan...
Oil held a three-day drop as investors assessed the impact of Western sanctions against leading Russian crude producers alongside a mixed industry estimate of US inventory changes. West Texas Intermediate was steady near $60 a barrel after falling by almost 3% over the prior three sessions, while Brent closed above $64. US President Donald Trump will follow through and enforce harsh new sanctions against Moscow to pressure Vladimir Putin into negotiations to end the war in Ukraine, according to Matthew Whitaker, the US ambassador to NATO. Meanwhile, the US industry report...
Gold prices began to stabilize on Wednesday after three consecutive days of decline. The precious metal was trading around $3,950 per ounce, ahead of a crucial meeting between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping. The market is optimistic due to hopes for a breakthrough in US-China trade. There's even news that the US is ready to lift some tariffs if China takes a firmer stance on the export of chemicals used to make fentanyl. This sentiment has made investors more willing to invest in riskier assets, not just gold. Previously, gold had gone on a rampage, soaring to a...
AU/USD drops 0.63% to $3,955 after rebounding from three-week lows under $3,900 Gold price drops 0.63% on Tuesday during the North American session with the yellow metal suffering from its safe-haven appeal as hopes of a de-escalation of the US-China trade war keep ebbs and flows going toward riskier assets like US equities. At the time of writing, XAU/USD trades at $3,955, after bouncing off three-week lows beneath $3,900. The US-China trade war seems to be fading following last week's meeting between senior officials in Malaysia. Discussions about tariffs, shipping fees, fentanyl and...
Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Kazuo Ueda stated that achieving 2% inflation is getting closer, although real inflation remains low. Ueda emphasized that the BOJ will continue to raise interest rates...
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) maintained its cash rate at 4.1% during its April meeting, holding borrowing costs unchanged after slashing 25 bps in the February meeting, aligning with market...