Markets
Analysis
User
24/7
Economic Calendar
Education
Data
- Names
- Latest
- Prev












Signal Accounts for Members
All Signal Accounts
All Contests


Former U.S. Ambassador To Bahrain: Iran's Resilience May Outlast Trump; U.S. Domestic Politics Is A Major Variable
Setting A New Record For The Same Period: Yiwu's Foreign Trade Imports And Exports Surpass RMB 200 Billion In The First Quarter Of This Year
Hong Kong-listed Chip Stocks Surged, With Naxin Microelectronics Rising Over 13%, Hua Hong Semiconductor Rising Over 7%, And SMIC Rising Over 5%
The Philippine Presidential Palace Announced That Marcos Will Meet With The Japanese Prime Minister To Discuss A Strategic Partnership
The Philippine Presidential Palace Announced That Marcos Will Pay A State Visit To Japan From May 26 To 29
Hong Kong Stocks See Widening Declines, With The Hang Seng Index Down 1% And The Tech Index Down 1.8%; Among The Constituents Of The Tech Index, Nio Falls By More Than 5%, Li Auto By More Than 4%, Bilibili By Nearly 3%, And Kuaishou, Alibaba, And Baidu By More Than 2%
PLS, An Australian Mining And Exploration Company: We Are Seeing Lithium Demand Deepen And Expand
The Hang Seng Index Fell Further To 1%, While The Hang Seng Tech Index Is Currently Down 1.79%
The Shenzhen Component Index Fell By 1%, The Shanghai Composite Index Fell By 0.7%, And The ChiNext Index Fell By 1.36%
The Main Polysilicon Futures Contract Fell By More Than 8.00% Intraday, Currently Trading At 41,060 Yuan/ton

Canada New Housing Price Index MoM (Mar)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. EIA Weekly Crude Stocks ChangeA:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. EIA Weekly Cushing, Oklahoma Crude Oil Stocks ChangeA:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. EIA Weekly Crude Demand Projected by ProductionA:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. EIA Weekly Gasoline Stocks ChangeA:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. EIA Weekly Crude Oil Imports ChangesA:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. EIA Weekly Heating Oil Stock ChangesA:--
F: --
P: --
Russia PPI YoY (Mar)A:--
F: --
P: --
Russia PPI MoM (Mar)A:--
F: --
P: --
ECB President Lagarde Speaks
Tesla released its earnings report after the US stock market closed.
U.K. CBI Industrial Trends - Orders (Apr)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.K. CBI Industrial Prices Expectations (Apr)A:--
F: --
P: --
Mexico Retail Sales MoM (Feb)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Chicago Fed National Activity Index (Mar)A:--
F: --
U.S. Weekly Initial Jobless Claims (SA)A:--
F: --
U.S. Initial Jobless Claims 4-Week Avg. (SA)A:--
F: --
U.S. Weekly Continued Jobless Claims (SA)A:--
F: --
Canada Industrial Product Price Index MoM (Mar)A:--
F: --
Canada Industrial Product Price Index YoY (Mar)A:--
F: --
U.S. EIA Weekly Natural Gas Stocks ChangeA:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Kansas Fed Manufacturing Production Index (Apr)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Kansas Fed Manufacturing Composite Index (Apr)A:--
F: --
P: --
Argentina Retail Sales YoY (Feb)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Weekly Treasuries Held by Foreign Central BanksA:--
F: --
P: --
Japan National CPI MoM (Mar)A:--
F: --
P: --
Japan National Core CPI YoY (Mar)A:--
F: --
P: --
Japan National CPI MoM (Not SA) (Mar)A:--
F: --
P: --
Japan CPI MoM (Mar)A:--
F: --
P: --
Japan National CPI YoY (Mar)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.K. Retail Sales MoM (SA) (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
U.K. Retail Sales YoY (SA) (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
U.K. Core Retail Sales YoY (SA) (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Germany Ifo Business Expectations Index (SA) (Apr)--
F: --
P: --
Germany IFO Business Climate Index (SA) (Apr)--
F: --
P: --
Germany Ifo Current Business Situation Index (SA) (Apr)--
F: --
P: --
Russia Key Rate--
F: --
P: --
Brazil Current Account (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Mexico Economic Activity Index YoY (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
Mexico Unemployment Rate (Not SA) (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Canada Retail Sales MoM (SA) (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
Canada Core Retail Sales MoM (SA) (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
Canada Federal Government Budget Balance (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Weekly Total Rig Count--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Weekly Total Oil Rig Count--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland Industrial Profit YoY (YTD) (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Germany GfK Consumer Confidence Index (SA) (May)--
F: --
P: --
U.K. CBI Distributive Trades (Apr)--
F: --
P: --
U.K. CBI Retail Sales Expectations Index (Apr)--
F: --
P: --
Mexico Trade Balance (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Canada National Economic Confidence Index--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Dallas Fed General Business Activity Index (Apr)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Dallas Fed New Orders Index (Apr)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. 5-Year Note Auction Avg. Yield--
F: --
P: --
U.S. 2-Year Note Auction Avg. Yield--
F: --
P: --
U.K. BRC Shop Price Index YoY (Apr)--
F: --
P: --
Japan Unemployment Rate (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Japan Jobs to Applicants Ratio (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Japan Benchmark Interest Rate--
F: --
P: --
BOJ Monetary Policy Statement
BOJ Press Conference














































No matching data
Monday ended up being a better session for US and European markets than for Asian ones.
Monday ended up being a better session for US and European markets than for Asian ones. By the time Europeans came to their desks, the slump in gold and silver prices was largely over. Precious metals were already licking their wounds and starting to feel better, as buyers stepped in to rebuild exposure on a dip — a dip close to the 50-DMA for both metals.
For gold, the 50-DMA stands more than 20% below last Thursday's peak, and for silver it is nearly 40% below last week's peak.
In both cases, it was the 50-DMA that revived the urge to buy. So we have an early answer to a complex question: we still don't know whether this marks the end of the metals debacle, but dip-buyers clearly re-emerge when gold and silver move below their 50-DMA levels.
The gold volatility index, meanwhile, is cooling — a sign that support near these 50-DMAs could hold. Metals are up again this morning in Asia. Gold trades above $4'800 at the time of writing, while silver consolidates near $83 per ounce, above the critical 38.2% Fibonacci retracement that separates the past years' bullish trend from a bearish consolidation zone.
We can say it: all's well that ends well — for now.
Ironically, risk appetite appears to be recovering as investors return to gold and silver. The Kospi rebounded more than 5%, the Nikkei hit a fresh record, and US and European futures are higher.
But gold's latest behaviour is a concern. Traditionally, gold acts as protection against market risk. But it is now behaving like a risky asset — worse, at times like a meme stock — and its negative correlation with risk assets has faded. Highly speculative, leveraged positioning is largely responsible for this unusual behaviour.
The problem is that most diversified portfolios have exposure to gold, meaning this volatility affects all risk profiles. That is disquieting. It will be interesting to see whether the latest slump helps temper gold's meme-like symptoms and restores its reputation as a boring, low-risk safe-haven asset. Because today, that description no longer fits.
Still, yesterday's rebound in gold and silver gave investors a sense of relief.
The FTSE 100, for example, shone in London trading, even though mining stocks — a major driver of the recent rally — opened weaker. Early losses were quickly retraced.
As a result, both the FTSE 100 and the Stoxx hit fresh record highs yesterday — who would have thought — as major US indices flirted with all-time highs.
It looks like the worst could be behind us. With leveraged speculative positions flushed out, investors may feel they are returning to a freshly cleaned playground, albeit cautiously.
The long-term outlook for gold remains bullish. The factors supporting gold prices since last year remain firmly in place: trade and geopolitical uncertainty persists; G7 debt dynamics look increasingly unsustainable and are likely to worsen — not only in the US with the "Big, Beautiful Bill", but also in Japan and in Europe amid rising defence spending.
Appetite for the US dollar, other major currencies, and sovereign bonds remains fragile, and that should continue to underpin the bullish case for hard commodities.
One factor to watch is the US 10-year yield, which could come under persistent upward pressure if expectations grow that new Fed leadership will seek to shrink the Fed's balance sheet — pushing yields higher and increasing the opportunity cost of holding non-interest-bearing gold. Whether that would be enough to halt or reverse the metals rally will depend on how quickly trust in the US erodes.
Assuming the worst of the metals stress is behind us for now, attention can turn back to earnings.
Palantir, jumped 5% in after-hours trading after reporting 70% year-on-year revenue growth in Q4, with US revenue up 93%, a sign that AI hype is now turning into hard budgets — exactly what investors have been waiting to see.
Today, AMD is due to report earnings, with the spotlight firmly on AI-related growth. Expectations are high, driven by bets that AI-driven data-centre demand will strengthen further. Last week's earnings from ASML and TSMC reinforced the view that AI-related compute demand remains strong and is still rising.
How strong? Speaking at CES in early January, AMD CEO Lisa Su pointed to a potentially astronomical increase in future AI compute demand, suggesting the world could require more than 10 yottaflops within five years. A yottaflop represents 10²⁴ calculations per second, meaning 10 yottaflops would be 10²⁵. For comparison, global AI compute today is still measured in zettaflops (10²¹). Lisa Su's estimate implies a need for thousands of times more computing power worldwide over the next five years.
That sounds dramatic, but computing has experienced leaps of this magnitude before as technologies moved from niche to mass adoption. Lisa Su's message was simple: AI will require vastly more computing power, and that means more data centres and more chips.
AMD's earnings and guidance are expected to be strong, judging by Lisa Su's tone at CES. But any hint of slowing demand — particularly from hyperscale data-centre customers — delays in AI investment returns, or rising debt burdens could quickly rattle sentiment. Last week's post-earnings slump in Microsoft served as a reminder of that risk.
The risk of loss in trading financial instruments such as stocks, FX, commodities, futures, bonds, ETFs and crypto can be substantial. You may sustain a total loss of the funds that you deposit with your broker. Therefore, you should carefully consider whether such trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances and financial resources.
No decision to invest should be made without thoroughly conducting due diligence by yourself or consulting with your financial advisors. Our web content might not suit you since we don't know your financial conditions and investment needs. Our financial information might have latency or contain inaccuracy, so you should be fully responsible for any of your trading and investment decisions. The company will not be responsible for your capital loss.
Without getting permission from the website, you are not allowed to copy the website's graphics, texts, or trademarks. Intellectual property rights in the content or data incorporated into this website belong to its providers and exchange merchants.
Not Logged In
Log in to access more features
Log In
Sign Up