Risk sentiment retreats as Trump prepares for fresh tariff decisions

All eyes on Fed Chair Powell today about rate cut hints; UK CPI keeps the door open to May BoE rate cut; Strong possibility of a BoC rate cut today; Dollar’s suffering lingers, gold hits a new all-time high;
XM Group | 132 ngày trước

Perf_Apr_16.png

Risk appetite is on the back foot again

The positive start to the week in risk sentiment is gradually reversing, as US President Trump maintains his tariff rhetoric. While reports point to a plethora of deals being negotiated with countries affected by reciprocal tariffs, the US President has requested a report on tariffs on critical minerals, paving the way for further announcements soon.

This is another episode in the US-China trade war, following Trump's decision to indefinitely ban Nvidia from selling specific chips to China. Meanwhile, the latter is still struggling to overcome its economic difficulties. The Chinese economy grew by 1.2% in the first quarter of 2025, below expectations for a 1.4% increase, despite both the March industrial production and retail sales releases producing upside surprises.

However, this data pre-dates the April 2 reciprocal tariff decisions and the subsequent US tariff hikes applied to Chinese imports, opening the door to an easier PBoC monetary policy stance going forward.

Fed Chair Powell speaks today

With stocks currently surrendering a portion of this week’s gains, euro/dollar edging towards 1.1370 again and gold recording another all-time high, the focus shifts to key US data and Fed speakers. The March retail sales report will be published today, with the market looking for another decent set of figures. More importantly though, there are Fed members scheduled to speak; Cleveland President Hammack and Kansas City President Schmid will be on the wires at 16:00 and 23:00 GMT respectively.

However, investors will be eyeing Fed Chair Powell’s speech at 17:30 GMT. At his April 4 speech, Powell poured cold water on expectations for a Fed rate cut, potentially contributing to the sizeable correction in US stocks. With Trump maintaining his aggressive stance against Powell, the Fed Chair is expected to remain mum about the Fed’s future actions, but highlight their readiness to act if needed, for example to support the bond market.

Interestingly, the Treasury International Capital (TIC) data for February will also be released today. The usually ignored report details the major foreign holders of Treasury securities. Market participants crave information on China and/or Japan shedding their massive Treasury holdings ahead of Trump’s tariff Armageddon.

Could the post-Easter performance of 2017 repeat?

Meanwhile, markets are also preparing for a short festive break. For the first time since 2017, Christians of different denominations will celebrate Easter Sunday on the same day. Interestingly, in 2017, US President Trump was also enjoying his first few months in charge. Back then, the S&P 500 rallied by 0.8% in the first week after Easter, while oil dropped a sizeable 7% in the same period.

UK CPI eases further

There are still three weeks until the next BoE meeting, but the market is already confident that a 25bps rate cut will be announced on May 8. Following yesterday’s positive claimant count figure and the decent average earnings growth, the March inflation report has not materially changed the outlook but produced some smiles from BoE doves. The pound, though, is losing ground against both the euro and the dollar today.

The BoC is closer to a rate cut than expected

The Bank of Canada will conclude its rate-setting meeting today, with the decision announced at 13:45 GMT. Despite the recent positive developments on the US tariffs front, there are strong concerns about a significant economic slowdown during 2025, especially as the country is preparing for the federal election on April 28.

Both economists and the market remain split about the possibility of another 25bps rate cut today, although yesterday’s weaker CPI report has probably tipped the scale in favour of the cut. Such a decision would probably ensure that the BoC stays ahead of the curve and provides further stimulus to a weakening economy.

Dollar/loonie has been dropping aggressively, and, oddly, a rate cut today might not act as a strong headwind to the recent trend, especially if the pair remains below the 200-day simple moving average at 1.4012.

Cal_Apr16.png

Cơ quan quản lý: CySEC (Cyprus), FSC (Belize), DFSA (UAE), FSCA (South Africa)
read more
Markets in Flux: Gold Slips on USD Demand as WTI Rallies Amid Geopolitical Concerns | 26th August 2025

Markets in Flux: Gold Slips on USD Demand as WTI Rallies Amid Geopolitical Concerns | 26th August 2025

WTI rallies above $63.50 as fading hopes for a Russia-Ukraine peace deal boost oil prices. Gold struggles near $3,330 despite Fed rate cut bets, while silver holds firm near $39.00. AUD/USD climbs toward 0.6550 on risk appetite and dovish Fed tone, while USD/CAD stays weak near 1.3500 as oil strength supports the loonie. Markets now eye U.S. jobs and inflation data for direction.
Moneta Markets | 18h 20phút trước
Dollar wobbles as Trump tries to fire Fed’s Lisa Cook

Dollar wobbles as Trump tries to fire Fed’s Lisa Cook

Fed’s independence under attack again as Trump wants to oust Lisa Cook. Dollar skids but later recovers, US yield curve steepens slightly, gold edges up. Stocks turn negative as Fed rally fades, PCE inflation awaited. Euro slips as French government at risk of collapse.
XM Group | 19h 39phút trước
ATFX ​Market Outlook 26th August 2025

ATFX ​Market Outlook 26th August 2025

U.S. new home sales in July declined as persistently high mortgage rates continued to dampen housing demand. U.S. equities closed lower on Monday, with investors weighing the interest rate outlook while focusing on NVIDIA’s upcoming quarterly earnings, all while digesting last Friday’s strong rebound. The Dow Jones fell 0.77%, the S&P 500 lost 0.43%, and the Nasdaq slipped 0.2%.
ATFX | 20h 38phút trước
US 30, EURUSD, USDJPY

US 30, EURUSD, USDJPY

Soft US PCE may support September rate cut; US 30 hits record high; German, French, Italian CPI could guide ECB outlook; EURUSD hovers near 1.1700; Tokyo CPI may prompt BoJ action; USDJPY remains range-bound
XM Group | 22h 9phút trước