Market sentiment remains fragile as Trump takes aim at Iran 

Trump stays mum on tariffs, focuses on geopolitics; Risk appetite remains fragile as gold skyrockets; A busy data calendar today that also includes Fed speakers;Yen benefits from strong data prints; oil fails to rally;
XM Group | 150 days ago

Perf_Feb5.png

Trump tunes into geopolitics

Risk appetite is waning today, following Tuesday’s positive session in US equities that managed to recover most of Monday’s losses. US President Trump mostly avoided comments about tariffs on China or the European Union yesterday, but, instead, focused on geopolitics, and specifically Iran and the Gaza strip.

While markets remember the US-Iran tensions during the 2018-2020 period and are aware of Trump’s animosity towards Iran, his comments about the US taking over and rebuilding the Gaza Strip were unexpected. Trump appears to have agreed on a plan already with Israeli PM Netanyahu. However, Gazans might not favour such a development, with Trump’s comments potentially endangering the current fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.

From a market perspective, Trump has essentially brought two new reasons into the spotlight that could potentially result in severe risk-off episodes. At this juncture, the main beneficiary of Trump’s comments has been gold. At the time of writing, it is trading at $2,865, a new all-time high, as market participants are extremely concerned about Trump’s intentions regarding Iran. Meanwhile, oil prices got a small boost yesterday, but the recent bearish trend remains intact.

A busy data calendar today

Amidst these geopolitical developments and with markets on their toes regarding additional comments from Trump about trade tariffs, a crammed data calendar might force market participants to refocus on the real economy. More specifically, the final prints of the January PMI Services surveys, the US ADP employment report and the ISM Services print for January are expected to monopolize today’s session.

Another set of positive US figures, particularly a 200k print in the ADP, might fuel expectations for another blockbuster employment report on Friday, despite the low correlation between the ADP figure and the nonfarm payroll number. Such an outcome could potentially further complicate the Fed’s outlook.

Markets are currently pricing in two 25bps rate cuts in 2025, with the first one expected at the July Fed meeting, assuming that inflation continues its gradual move lower. This is a rather difficult assumption to make considering the ongoing tariffs talk.

Interestingly, Fed Board members Jefferson and Bowman, and regional Fed Presidents Barkin and Goolsbee will be on the wires today, with a non-negligible risk of a tad more hawkish commentary from the known hawk Michelle Bowman, if today’s US data surprises on the upside.

Yen continues to strengthen

With Japan expected to avoid the imposition of US tariffs, solid Japanese data is fueling expectations for another BoJ rate hike soon. Following the latest jump in labour cash earnings - the strongest year-on-year change since 1997 - and another decent PMI Services survey print, markets are pricing in 31bps of tightening in 2025, with the next 25bps rate hike fully priced in by October.

Consequently, dollar/yen has dropped below the busy 154.00 area, recording its strongest weekly loses since late November. These yen gains might be under threat, though, as a strong series of US data this week could reenergize the dollar bulls.

Cal_Feb5_2.png

Regulation: CySEC (Cyprus), FSC (Belize), DFSA (UAE), FSCA (South Africa)
read more
Why Silver could be the precious metal of 2025

Why Silver could be the precious metal of 2025

The gold bar is metallic yellow and slightly behind the silver bar, which is metallic white and positioned in front. Gold may still be the headline act, but silver’s no longer content playing second fiddle. In 2025, silver isn’t just glittering - it’s surging forward as one of the most exciting metals on the market.
Deriv | 1 day ago
Risk-on sentiment fades as tariffs return to the spotlight 

Risk-on sentiment fades as tariffs return to the spotlight 

Dollar surrenders gains posted after robust labour market report; Trump celebrates US budget bill approval; scheduled to sign it today; Most Fed members feel more comfortable as July rate cut is priced out; Oil steadies near $66, gold rally retains momentum;
XM Group | 1 day ago
ATFX Market Outlook 4th July 2025

ATFX Market Outlook 4th July 2025

The U.S. economy added 147,000 jobs in June, beating expectations of 110,000, while the unemployment rate fell to 4.1%. Traders are now betting that the Fed is unlikely to cut rates before September. Meanwhile, the House narrowly passed Trump's major fiscal bill by a vote of 218 to 214. U.S. stocks rallied on Thursday, hitting fresh record highs.
ATFX | 1 day ago
Nonfarm payrolls take center stage

Nonfarm payrolls take center stage

Slide in US private payrolls raise concerns about NFP miss - US strikes trade deal with Vietnam ahead of July 9 deadline - Pound feels the heat of fiscal shenanigans - S&P 500 hits fresh record high ahead of jobs report
XM Group | 2 days ago
Rate Shifts Steer FX Markets as Silver Holds Strong

Rate Shifts Steer FX Markets as Silver Holds Strong

On July 3, silver stays firm above $35.40 as Fed cut bets persist. EUR/USD holds near 1.1800, while GBP/USD lingers near 1.3585 ahead of UK jobs data. JPY strengthens after BoJ signals a hawkish pause. AUD/USD slips on weak trade surplus. Focus turns to US NFP and ISM data for market direction before the US holiday break.
Moneta Markets | 2 days ago