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SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SPX
S&P 500 Index
6932.04
6932.04
6932.04
6937.32
6904.90
+22.25
+ 0.32%
--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
48731.17
48731.17
48731.17
48771.32
48386.59
+288.77
+ 0.60%
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
23613.30
23613.30
23613.30
23621.72
23527.97
+51.46
+ 0.22%
--
USDX
US Dollar Index
97.610
97.690
97.610
97.650
97.380
+0.060
+ 0.06%
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.17761
1.17809
1.17761
1.18077
1.17725
-0.00160
-0.14%
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.34997
1.35134
1.34997
1.35338
1.34911
-0.00145
-0.11%
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4479.98
4480.39
4479.98
4525.79
4448.21
-4.18
-0.09%
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
58.218
58.248
58.218
58.655
58.045
-0.171
-0.29%
--

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Share

SPDR Gold Holdings Up 0.35%, Or 3.71 Tonnes

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KCNA: Russian President Putin Sent A Message To North Korea's Supreme Leader Kim To Celebrate New Year's Day

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Japan Will Increase The Cost Of Certain OTC Drugs For Patients

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KCNA: North Korea's Supreme Leader Kim Jong UN Oversees Test-Firing Of Long-Range Missile

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US President Trump Spoke About “fighting Drug Traffickers” And Reiterated That Taking Action From Land (which Is “easier” Than From The Sea)

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[Ukrainian Army To Receive 3 Million First-View (FPV) Drones This Year] Ukrainian Defense Minister Shmyhal Stated On The 24th That The Ukrainian Armed Forces Will Receive A Total Of 3 Million First-view (FPV) Drones For Precision Strikes This Year, Almost 2.5 Times The Number Received Last Year. Shmyhal Said On Social Media That The Role Of Unmanned Systems On The Battlefield Is Increasingly Prominent, And Developing Innovative Combat Tools Is A Top Priority For Ukraine. The Vast Majority Of Drones Currently In Service With The Ukrainian Military Are Domestically Produced

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The Yen Rose About 0.2%, Testing 156 Yen. In Late New York Trading On Wednesday (December 24), The Dollar Fell 0.18% Against The Yen To 155.96 Yen, Trading Between 156.28 And 155.56 Yen During The Day, Mostly Declining. A Significant Drop Occurred Before 10:00 AM Beijing Time, Followed By Low-level Consolidation. The Euro Fell 0.34% Against The Yen To 183.61 Yen; The Pound Fell 0.32% Against The Yen To 210.479 Yen

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Russian President Putin Sent A Message To North Korea's Supreme Leader Kim To Celebrate New Year's Day

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On Wednesday (December 24), In Late New York Trading, The ICE Dollar Index Rose 0.01% To 97.949, Trading Between 97.749 And 98.012, Exhibiting A Three-wave V-shaped Pattern. The Bloomberg Dollar Index Fell 0.10% To 1200.68, Trading Between 1201.41 And 1199.07

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North Korea's Supreme Leader Kim Says South Korea's Building Of Nuclear Submarine Poses A Risk To National Security

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Sean Bratton, A Meteorologist At Commodity Weather Group, Says Another Cold Front, Accompanied By Precipitation, Will Sweep Across The Midwest And East Coast Of The United States Next Week, Bringing Cold Weather During The New Year's Holiday. We Are Currently In A Rather Variable Weather Pattern

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[New York City To Receive Winter Storm And Snowfall After Christmas] Snowfall And Path Forecasts Indicate That A Fast-moving Storm Known As The "Alberta Clipper" Will Push Cold Air Across The Northeastern United States And Mid-Atlantic States On Friday (December 26). According To The National Weather Service, New York City And Surrounding Areas May Receive 4-8 Inches (approximately 10-20 Cm) Of Snowfall Between Friday And Saturday Afternoon, Potentially Causing Dangerous Disruptions To Friday Evening's Rush Hour Traffic. As The Clipper Moves South, The Precipitation Will Gradually Turn Into Rain

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Trump-Backed Nasry Asfura Wins Honduras Election After Conclusion Of Delayed Manual Vote Count - National Electoral Council

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Toronto Stock Index .GSPTSE Unofficially Closes Down 58.97 Points, Or 0.18 Percent, At 31999.76

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(US Stocks) The Philadelphia Gold And Silver Index Closed Down 0.68% At 358.01 Points, Retreating From Its Record Closing High And Marking The Second Consecutive Trading Day That It Has Fallen From Its Intraday Record High. (Global Session) The NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index Closed Down 0.37% At 2545.80 Points

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Ecuador Receives $500 Million Balance-Of-Payments Support Loan Disbursement From Latin American Reserve Fund- Ecuador Central Bank

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[Former Trump Administration Doge Advisor Elon Musk: AI Could Help US GDP Achieve Triple-digit Growth In Five Years] Tesla CEO Elon Musk: The US Will Achieve Double-digit (percentage) GDP Growth In The Next 12-18 Months. If The Application Of Artificial Intelligence (AI) Is Considered A Substitute Indicator For Economic Growth (which Should Hold True), Then Triple-digit Growth Within About Five Years Is Achievable

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White House Has Ordered Its Forces To Focus Almost Exclusively On Enforcing The Quarantine Of Venezuela. Sanctioned Oil For At Least The Next Two Months - USA.Official

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California Governor Newsom Declared A State Of Emergency In Response To The Impending Torrential Rains In Southern California

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The Union At Glencore's Mantovede Copper-gold Mine In Chile Has Stated That Workers Are Prepared To Strike If Labor Negotiations Fail, With A Work Stoppage Potentially Starting On December 29. The Government Has Initiated A Five-day Preliminary Mediation Process, Which Could Be Extended For Another Five Days If Both Parties Agree

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Q&A with Experts
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    john flag
    Galileo
    any economic data releases on 25th
    @Galileono bro ppl are on holiday
    john flag
    Galileo
    any economic data releases on 25th
    @GalileoGovernments and agencies are closed.
    john flag
    Price action is mostly technical or sentiment-driven
    Galileo flag
    but on 26th the real activity resumes right?
    john flag
    Galileo
    but on 26th the real activity resumes right?
    @GalileoYes, though liquidity only gradually returns.
    Jamolla flag
    john
    @johnBoxing Day still sees lighter participation.
    john flag
    Jamolla
    @Jamollabut better than Christmas Day
    john flag
    So the smart play is patience
    john flag
    Christmas trading is more about observation than execution
    Jamolla flag
    Well said protect capital, plan for the next move
    RPGFX flag
    Galileo
    but on 26th the real activity resumes right?
    @GalileoYes, on the 26th trading activity will resume again
    RPGFX flag
    Jamolla
    Well said protect capital, plan for the next move
    @JamollaIt is only those who preserve their capital that will see what to trade after the Christmas holiday break
    RPGFX flag
    Galileo
    any economic data releases on 25th
    @GalileoToday is more like a bank holiday so nothing can actually come out today
    RPGFX flag
    Jamolla
    @JamollaBut for today's case, the market participation does not just drop, the market actually closes out
    RPGFX flag
    Sanjeev Ku
    @Sanjeev KuWith thin liquidity I can see that you are just working with a small achievable target 🎯
    RPGFX flag
    Sanjeev Ku
    @Sanjeev KuMeanwhile, how did it go,have you hit target yet?
    Sanjeev Ku flag
    RPGFX
    @RPGFX yeh now 87770. almost nearing my tgt but can be jackpot will exit half and hold half
    Sanjeev Ku flag
    RPGFX
    @RPGFX bro purely chart analysis
    Sanjeev Ku flag
    RPGFX
    @RPGFX bro when MKT is running their is always opportunity for trade
    Sanjeev Ku flag
    Sanjeev Ku
    exact high 87900 till now
    Type here...
    Add Symbol or Code

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          Canadian Dollar Rises to Five-Month Gigh Despite Downbeat Factory Sales

          Manuel

          Forex

          Economic

          Summary:

          The price of oil, one of Canada's major exports, edged higher for a sixth straight day as investors weighed the risk of supply disruptions from Venezuela and Russia. U.S. crude futures were up 0.1% at $58.43 a barrel.

          The Canadian dollar strengthened to a near five-month high against its U.S. counterpart on Wednesday as recent strength in commodity prices helped support the currency, offsetting preliminary domestic data that showed a steep decline last month for factory sales.
          The loonie was trading 0.1% higher at 1.3672 per U.S. dollar, or 73.14 U.S. cents, after touching its strongest intraday level since July 25 at 1.3666.
          "The broader softening in the USD over the past month has helped lift the CAD but narrower US/Canada spreads, positive economic data surprises - relative to US economic data outcomes - and recent gains in commodity prices are all helping lift CAD sentiment," Shaun Osborne and Eric Theoret, strategists at Scotiabank, said in a note.
          The price of oil, one of Canada's major exports, edged higher for a sixth straight day as investors weighed the risk of supply disruptions from Venezuela and Russia. U.S. crude futures were up 0.1% at $58.43 a barrel.
          The gap between Canada's 2-year yield and its U.S. equivalent has narrowed to 94 basis points in favor of the U.S. note from 120 basis points at the end of October, reducing the relative attractiveness of the U.S. currency.
          Minutes released on Tuesday of the Bank of Canada's latest interest rate decision on December 10 showed that policymakers found it hard to predict whether the central bank's next move would be a hike or cut.
          Domestic data added to recent evidence that has pointed to an economic slowdown in the current quarter after a stronger-than-expected increase in third-quarter GDP. According to a preliminary estimate, factory sales fell 1.1% in November from October on decreases in the transportation equipment and food subsectors.
          Canadian bond yields edged lower across the curve, with the 10-year down 1 basis point at 3.408%. The bond market was set to close early ahead of the Christmas Day and Boxing Day holidays.

          Source: Reuters

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Apple spent 2025 setting itself up for the future — and its biggest moves weren't about AI

          Adam

          Commodity

          It’s been quite a year for Apple (AAPL). The company reported record revenue on the back of strong iPhone sales. Its Services business continued its impressive growth, hitting $109.2 billion in sales. And its market capitalization topped $4 trillion, joining Nvidia (NVDA) as just the second company to reach the milestone.
          But the company is also contending with major changes amid its executive ranks. CFO Jeff Williams retired — he was previously considered the top choice to take up the mantle of CEO after Tim Cook eventually steps down.
          Head of government affairs Lisa Jackson and general counsel Kate Adams are retiring in late January and late 2026, respectively.
          And then there's AI chief John Giannandrea and design vice president Alan Dye. Giannandrea is retiring and turning Apple's AI efforts over to Amar Subramanya, who previously worked on AI initiatives at Google (GOOGL, GOOG) and Microsoft (MSFT).
          Dye, meanwhile, left Apple to lead Meta (META) Reality Labs' new design studio.
          All of this comes as Cook is reportedly preparing senior vice president of hardware engineering John Ternus to take over as CEO when he departs.
          It all adds up to an Apple in flux as it transforms itself for a post-Cook era. According to the Financial Times, Cook could step down as soon as early 2026. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, meanwhile, said there’s still no firm timeline for when Cook will leave his post.
          Regardless of exact timing, Apple will eventually have to say goodbye to Cook, and 2025 helped the company set itself up for its biggest change in years.
          Apple stock edged lower during premarket trading on Wednesday.

          Cook is steering a $4 trillion behemoth

          Cook, who joined Apple in 1998, took over as CEO 14 years ago following the death of founder Steve Jobs. Jobs turned around an ailing Apple when he returned to the company in 1997 after being fired in 1985. He subsequently released a string of groundbreaking products, including the iPod and iPhone, which continues to bring in the majority of Apple's revenue.
          Cook has carried that success forward during his time at the company's helm, overseeing the debut of the Apple Watch and AirPods, as well as the explosion of Apple's Services business. He has also pushed Apple to use its own chips in its products, giving the company more control over the design and functionality of its devices.
          That, coupled with Cook's deft abilities as a negotiator, helped Apple weather a series of crises, including showdowns with the US Department of Justice, the COVID-19 pandemic, and President Trump's ongoing trade war with China. Trump eventually exempted smartphones and certain other tech products from his tariffs on Chinese goods.
          Cook's decisions drove Apple's stock price ever higher. As a result, the company's market cap has increased from $1 trillion in 2018 to a whopping $4 trillion in 2025.
          Revenue has also continued its steady upward pace, with Apple reporting $416 billion in total sales for its fiscal 2025, up from $391 billion in the prior year.
          Apple is also reportedly preparing some of the biggest changes in years to its iPhone lineup in 2026. According to Gurman, the company will roll out a foldable iPhone, a first for Apple, in the latter half of the year.
          That could help further goose already record iPhone sales. Apple is also reportedly preparing a new low-cost MacBook model, which would open up the company to a broader customer segment.
          And while it may not have the same margins as a high-powered MacBook Pro, a lower-cost MacBook could still help draw more customers to Apple's services, driving increased revenue over the long run.

          New challenges ahead

          If Ternus is chosen to succeed Cook, he'll inherit an Apple at the peak of its power. While smartphone sales have slowed over time, the company is reaping the benefits of its massive install base, which still upgrades devices every few years and increasingly subscribes to Apple's various services.
          But he'll also have to navigate his share of headaches. Wall Street is eagerly awaiting some kind of movement on Apple's AI strategy. And though the company is making progress on its AI rollout, it still needs to showcase its next-generation version of Siri.
          He'll also have to prepare to take on the likes of Meta, Google, and Samsung (005930.KS) in the smart glasses space. Meta already has two smart glasses on the market, and Google and Samsung are each working on their own intelligent eyewear.
          For now, though, Cook is still Apple's CEO. We'll just have to see if that changes in 2026.

          Source: finance.yahoo

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Why Are Copper Prices Surging to All-Time Highs?

          Adam

          Commodity

          On Monday night, copper prices, as shown below, reached an all-time high of over $12,000 per metric ton. Copper is often referred to as “Doctor Copper” because it serves as a barometer of global economic activity. However, the current surge in prices is not due to sharply rising demand; tariffs and physical dislocation are heavily impacting the supply side. The bullet points below help appreciate why copper is hitting all-time highs.
          Traders are front-running U.S. tariff policy, bringing the metal into the U.S. ahead of potential tariffs. This has distorted global trade flows, tightening inventories elsewhere, and creating artificial scarcity.
          The scarcity is enhanced by inventory stockpiling, not end-user consumption.
          Adding to supply woes, copper mine disruptions, declining ore grades, and years of underinvestment limit miners’ ability to meet growing demand quickly.
          Copper trades on the futures exchanges. Accordingly, it is leveraged and traded by speculative momentum traders. As we are witnessing with silver, speculative traders make a living chasing trends.
          Because the price increase is primarily supply-related, if tariff threats fade and trade routes normalize, excess inventories could quickly hit the market, causing speculative trades to unwind. In such an instance, copper prices could fall just as fast as they have risen.
          Why Are Copper Prices Surging to All-Time Highs?_1
          Watch The Yen In 2026
          As we share below, the yen is again approaching its lowest levels against the dollar since at least 1995. We circle the sharp, short-term increase in the yen occurring in August 2024. This was the market swoon related to the supposed liquidation of the yen carry trade. It is rumored that tens of billions of dollars are propping up US assets, supported by loans made in Japan through the yen carry trade. The relatively low Japanese borrowing rates and a declining yen make such a trade highly attractive to hedge funds and other institutional money managers. Moreover, Japanese citizens and corporations, facing low interest rates, are incentivized to invest their money abroad. By doing so, they can profit from high-yielding assets they cannot access at home and from a depreciating yen.
          The depreciating yen fortifies the yen carry trade. However, looking ahead, there are growing rumors that Japan will intervene to support the yen. Japan heavily depends on energy and materials imports. A depreciating yen makes these goods more expensive. As a result, per Bloomberg:
          The resulting cost-of-living crunch helped bring down two prime ministers before the current leader, Sanae Takaichi, took office.
          Given the domestic economic and political situation, along with pressure from the US, we should expect the Japanese government to take steps to strengthen the yen. If an upward adjustment is done gradually, the impact on financial markets should be minimal. However, if it occurs suddenly, such as in August 2024, volatility could spike. Stay aware of this risk in 2026!
          Why Are Copper Prices Surging to All-Time Highs?_2

          Source: investing

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Markets May Be Underpricing the Risk to Fed Independence

          Adam

          Economic

          President Trump’s recent statement that “anybody that disagrees with me will never be the Fed Chairman” may sound like political theater. For markets, it’s something else entirely: a reminder that central bank independence which is a cornerstone of modern monetary stability, is no longer a guaranteed assumption.
          Markets don’t trade personalities. They trade credibility. And right now, there’s a credibility question hanging over the Federal Reserve that bond yields, equity valuations, and currency markets may not be fully pricing in.

          Why Fed Independence Actually Matters for Your Portfolio

          Central bank independence isn’t an abstract concept debated in economics seminars. It’s the foundation of how markets price inflation expectations, government debt, and the dollar’s reserve currency status.
          When markets believe the Fed sets rates based purely on economic data, unemployment, inflation and growth. They can price risk with confidence. Interest rate futures behave predictably. Treasury yields reflect real economic fundamentals. The dollar maintains credibility as a store of value.
          But when political pressure enters the equation, that entire framework starts to crack. If markets suspect rate decisions might be influenced by electoral cycles or executive preferences rather than inflation targets, the risk premium on everything changes.
          This isn’t hypothetical. We’ve seen it before.

          The Nixon-Burns Precedent Markets Forgot

          The 1970s offer a textbook case. Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns, under pressure from President Nixon to keep rates low ahead of the 1972 election, accommodated an inflationary monetary policy. The result wasn’t just bad economics. It was a market catastrophe.
          Inflation spiraled into double digits. Treasury yields exploded. The dollar collapsed against gold and foreign currencies. Equity markets stagnated for a decade in real terms.
          It took Paul Volcker’s credibility-restoring rate hikes in the early 1980s, pushing the Fed funds rate above 19%—to rebuild trust in the Fed’s inflation-fighting commitment. The cost was a brutal recession, but the alternative was unanchored inflation expectations and currency collapse.
          Markets today seem to have forgotten this lesson. Or perhaps they’re betting it can’t happen again.

          What Changes When Credibility Is Questioned

          The immediate market risk isn’t that Trump fires Jerome Powell or appoints a dovish successor. Though both are technically possible under certain legal interpretations. The risk is subtler and potentially more damaging: a slow erosion of the belief that Fed policy is truly independent.

          Consider what happens when that belief weakens:

          Treasury markets start demanding higher term premiums to compensate for political risk. Long-duration bonds become less attractive. The yield curve reflects not just growth and inflation expectations, but also policy uncertainty.
          The dollar loses some of its safe-haven appeal. If Fed decisions might be politically influenced, why hold dollars over other reserve currencies? Currency markets begin pricing in a Fed that’s less credible as an inflation anchor.
          Inflation expectations become unmoored. If markets suspect the Fed might keep rates lower than fundamentals justify, inflation breakevens rise. Real yields fall. Hard assets and inflation hedges gain appeal.
          Equity valuations face pressure from both higher discount rates and greater uncertainty around future policy paths. The “Fed put” becomes less reliable if markets don’t trust Fed independence.

          Why This Matters Right Now

          The timing of this credibility question couldn’t be more delicate. The Fed is navigating one of the trickiest policy paths in recent history: trying to maintain restrictive rates long enough to ensure inflation stays near the 2% target, while avoiding a hard landing.
          Inflation has cooled from its 2022 peak, but progress has been uneven. Core PCE remains above target. Labor markets are softening but not collapsing. The last thing the Fed needs right now is markets questioning whether rate decisions will be driven by data or by political considerations.
          If traders start pricing in even a small probability that the Fed might cut rates prematurely due to political pressure, you’d expect to see it first in rate-sensitive sectors: a steepening yield curve, weaker dollar positioning, higher gold prices, and increased demand for Bitcoin as a non-sovereign store of value.
          Some of that is already happening. Gold hit record highs this year. Bitcoin is consolidating near elevated levels. Whether that’s due to Fed credibility concerns or other factors is debatable, but the correlation is worth watching.

          The Credibility Trade

          When central bank independence comes into question, markets historically rotate toward assets that don’t depend on government policy credibility. Gold, traditionally, has been the primary beneficiary. But in 2025, the playbook has expanded.
          Bitcoin and other decentralized assets gain appeal precisely because they can’t be influenced by central bank decisions. Institutional investors increasingly view them as hedges against monetary policy uncertainty not inflation itself, but the credibility of the institutions managing inflation.
          This doesn’t mean crypto replaces traditional hedges. It means the toolkit for protecting against central bank credibility risk has broadened.

          What Investors Should Watch

          The key question for markets isn’t whether Trump will actually interfere with Fed policy. It’s whether the possibility of interference changes how risk is priced.
          Watch the Fed’s response. If Powell and other officials feel the need to publicly reaffirm their independence more frequently, that’s a signal markets are beginning to price in credibility risk. Watch term premiums on long-duration Treasuries. Watch how gold and Bitcoin respond to Fed communications.
          Most importantly, watch whether inflation expectations start to drift upward without corresponding economic data to justify the move. That would be the clearest sign that markets are beginning to doubt the Fed’s ability or willingness to maintain price stability independent of political considerations.
          Central bank credibility is built slowly and lost quickly. Right now, markets seem comfortable assuming Fed independence remains intact. But the cost of being wrong on that assumption is substantial. And history suggests it’s a risk worth taking seriously.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

          Source : investing

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
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          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Gold’s bull run is set to continue in 2026, and crypto’s weakness could boost silver higher – ByteTree’s Charlie Morris

          Adam

          Commodity

          While Bitcoin, AI and the tech sector are likely to take a step back in 2026, gold’s bull run still has legs – and crypto’s weakness could add to silver’s strength, according to Charlie Morris, CIO and founder of ByteTree.
          ByteTree created the BOLD Index, which blends Bitcoin and gold on a risk-weighted basis, and the 21Shares BOLD ETP (BOLD) which tracks the index is listed across Europe. The theory behind the BOLD index is that gold and Bitcoin are uncorrelated alternative assets, so balancing between them is very advantageous.
          Morris is very bullish on both Bitcoin and gold over the long term. Five years ago – well before the current bull market had even begun – he predicted that the yellow metal would hit $7,000 per ounce by 2030. This was an extreme outlier at the time, but with gold prices gaining around $2,500 in the five years since, it looks less outlandish by the day.
          “Generally speaking, I don't make projections, but I did in 2020 make that projection,” Morris told Kitco News. “It's not looking so stupid now.”
          “It's all worked for the wrong reasons, which is hilarious,” he said. “And maybe the [original] reasons come true later, but my simple thesis was that long-term expectations for inflation rose in the Western world, from 2% to about 4%, and the money printing would see lasting inflation.”
          Morris said markets have since seen monetary inflation, but not yet sustained consumer inflation. Still, he believes this will materialize eventually. “It just seems so inevitable with these persistent deficits that at some point it will come through,” he said. “I just don't see how you can come into this world full of money and for it not to feed through eventually, particularly with policymakers so focused these days on the real economy. As money finds its way into the real economy, then that's got to be inflationary sooner or later.”
          Morris said that when this same thesis is applied to silver, it produces a projection that looks even more dramatic – even after silver’s recent run to fresh all-time highs.
          “The silver forecast was just logical,” he said. “Silver is in a nice bull market, and if gold is $7,000 and you have a gold-silver ratio of 40 – which is not particularly aggressive for the top of a bull market – it takes you to $175,” he said. “It was as simple as that, and I just pointed out the obvious.”
          Morris said his philosophy on Bitcoin and gold is very simple: the two assets are not in competition.
          “Gold is the reserve asset of the real world, and Bitcoin is the reserve asset of the internet. That's why the price of gold correlates with things in the real world like bonds, real yields and stuff, and that's why Bitcoin correlates with internet stocks and anything to do with technology and the internet. It's obvious in that sense.”
          And unlike many Bitcoin maximalists, Morris’ bullishness does not rely on BTC becoming a fully mainstream reserve asset. “Why the hell should Bitcoin be the reserve asset of the real world, and why the hell would gold be the reserve asset of the internet?” he mused. “There are people waiting for the central banks to buy Bitcoin. It's just not going to happen. Not in my lifetime, not in anyone's lifetime. Gold has that role.”
          “I think that's really important to understand,” he added. “That's why they're fundamentally different, and they're uncorrelated, and that's why BOLD works.”
          Morris said this logic results in a simple yet powerful strategy for long-term investment – one that relies on the ability of gold and Bitcoin to sniff out the likely trajectory of their respective sectors.
          “When is Bitcoin going to go up? When gold goes down,” he said. “I think that when we get bored of gold and silver, then it's Bitcoin's turn. I don’t know when that is; it could be today, it could be next year, it could be the year after, but they seem to take it in turns.”
          And the two assets are clearly at opposite ends of the investor sentiment spectrum at the moment.
          “Bitcoin is currently very oversold; it's been more oversold in the past,” Morris said. “And gold and silver are very over bought, [but] they've been more overbought in the past. One's hot, one's not, that's pretty obvious.”
          The BOLD thesis would also suggest that AI and tech are indeed overvalued – and overdue for a significant correction. “I do think that the Internet's going down, because it's just been too hot for too long,” he said. “AI obviously is a frenzy in terms of capital expenditure and returns on net capital, and the no-profit stocks have overdone it.”
          “We are in a historic equity momentum bubble; the extension of net positive momentum has never been large for 25 years at least,” Morris added. “And Bitcoin is correlated to the internet, so I think anything internet is probably going to say, ‘Thanks, it's been great, time to take a break.’”
          That said, Morris believes that gold and Bitcoin will both continue to post strong gains for many years to come – even as they take turns as the top performer – in part because neither has yet achieved mainstream industry support.
          “On gold, I would say institutional investors are underweight and retail and family offices are probably okay,” he said. “And where are we on Bitcoin? The world is underweight – given the size of the asset and its likely future importance, no one owns it.”
          “Most average wealth managers in America, I still don't believe are allocated to Bitcoin,” he added. “If you go and buy a balanced portfolio off your bank or wealth advisor, I get the impression you're not getting Bitcoin. We look at the [iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF] holders, and it's all the pirates of Wall Street. It's all the trading firms and the hedge funds and the high-frequency crowd. It's not really the mom-and-pop, Merrill Lynch-type wealth managers.”
          “That's what keeps me more bullish than anything else, is the fact that the allocation, certainly in UK wealth management, European wealth management, U.S., Canadian wealth management, is approximately zero.”
          Morris said that in the near term, silver also stands to benefit from the crypto correction.
          “Kitco people love silver like I love silver, and silver's just been forgotten,” he said. “The gold/silver ratio is at 68 or so at the moment, but it's been hanging around 100 or just below for years. All the fun money went, ‘Ah, I’m bored of silver, let's have a go at this digital stuff,’ so they all went away. Then silver had no friends and it just was dirt.”
          “Then a few weirdos like me and Kitco readers said, ‘Let's buy this thing.’ And guess what? Its time has come.”
          That said, Morris cautioned against getting too attached to silver, characterizing it as more of a short-term play. “Gold and Bitcoin are the daddies in their respective categories, global neutral assets,” he said. “Silver's the tourist. You don't need to own silver; you rent silver. You own Bitcoin and gold.”
          And while others are ready to call the top of the precious metals bull market, Morris sees other indications that gold has further to fly.
          “The VanEck GDX still hasn't had any inflows,” he noted. “It's got the same number of shares that it did at the end of 2013. Oil's on the floor, and with the miners, they've had this perfect setup with a high gold price and a low oil price, margins through the roof… and I just don't think Wall Street's that interested.”
          The general public also appears to still be skeptical, even after the yellow metal’s record-breaking run. “You look at the comments section in a credible newspaper whenever they talk about gold, and you just get these ridiculous comments about ‘barbaric relic’ still, after all these years,” Morris said. “There's just no societal consensus that gold is useful.”
          “I think that's really bullish,” he said. “[The top isn’t in] until everyone agrees that actually this is what you ought to be doing. And I just don't see a frenzy in the Western gold bullion space.”
          Asked about the bear case for gold and Bitcoin, Morris pointed to their fundamental drivers as reasons why they’re both good long-term bets.
          “Both of them could, of course, collapse,” he said, tongue-in-cheek. “If every country was managed like Switzerland, there would indeed be no purpose to have gold or Bitcoin. If we all balanced the budgets and didn't have debt problems, and we didn't have asset confiscation and these sorts of things, they would serve no purpose. They'd just sit in the background for wedding rings, and intellectual curiosity in the case of blockchain or Bitcoin."
          "If [former Prime Minister of Singapore] Lee Kuan Yew was in charge of the Western world, and Japan, and frankly most other emerging markets too, then there'd be no need for Bitcoin and gold,” Morris added. “Unfortunately, Lee Kuan Yew is pretty singular, and dead.”

          Source: kitco

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Amb Huckabee: Iran "Didn't Get The Full Message"

          Winkelmann

          Political

          US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee said on Monday that Iran "didn't get the full message" following the US airstrikes that targeted Iranian nuclear facilities in June, comments that came as Israel is pushing for the US to support another attack on the country.

          "Iran, I don't know if they ever took [President Trump] seriously until the night that the B-2 bombers went to Fordow," Huckabee said in an interview with Israel's Institute for National Security Studies, referring to one of the underground Iranian nuclear facilities bombed by the US.

          "I hope they got the message, but apparently they didn't get the full message because … they appear to be trying to reconstitute and find a new way to dig the hole deeper, secure it more," Huckabee added, referring to reports that say there's been activity at the bombed nuclear sites.

          Source: Israel National News

          Huckabee made the comments when asked if the US would support another attack on Iran if Israel determined "further military action was necessary" based on Iran's work on its civilian nuclear program and ballistic missile program.

          According to a report from NBC News, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will ask President Trump to back another attack on Iran over Israeli concerns about Iran's ballistic missiles, which were effective at striking Israeli territory during the 12-Day War.

          "It's hard for me to tell you what the US would do because that's a policy decision that'll be made at the White House," Huckabee said. "All I can do is point to you what the president has said repeatedly, and he consistently has said Iran is never going to enrich uranium."

          Since the ceasefire that ended the US-Israeli war on Iran, President Trump has repeatedly threatened to bomb Iran again if it resumes enriching uranium. Earlier this month, he also suggested that he could "obliterate" Iran's ballistic missiles. "We can knock out their missiles very quickly. We have great power," Trump said.

          For its part, Iran has said its uranium enrichment has been halted by the US bombing campaign, but it has vowed to restart the program, framing it as a matter of national pride, while maintaining its policy that it will never pursue a nuclear weapon.

          Iran has also rejected the idea of entering a deal with the US that requires limits on its ballistic missile program since its missiles are its only way to deter Israel and the US.

          Source: Zero Hedge

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Asia’s year in review: Who had it best — and who had it worst — in 2025

          Adam

          Economic

          What a year this has been. Understandably for many, it could not be over soon enough.
          From the impact of President Donald Trump’s tariffs to natural and man-made disasters across Asia. To new leaders breaking glass ceilings and old leaders whisked off to The International Criminal Court, or even sentenced to death in absentia. Missiles fired across borders. Terrorist attacks in South Asia and the Pacific. Enduring corruption challenges and real estate woes. And people scammed and enslaved.
          As 2025 comes to a close, we look back and see who had it bad and who had it good.

          Worst year: Asia’s cyber scam victims

          The year saw a growing tsunami of cybercrime sweeping across the globe, emanating from Southeast Asia. Criminal gangs largely operating out of Myanmar, Laos, and Cambodia defrauded billions of dollars from victims worldwide.
          The “perpetrators” are also the victims. Hundreds of thousands of individuals enticed with fake employment offers to these nations, many transiting via Thailand, then held against their will, enslaved to work in these scam centers.
          The kidnapping of Chinese actor Wang Xing, who was lured by a fraudulent acting gig, then forced to work in one operation in January 2025, brought heightened attention to this growing crisis. Even the Trump administration took notice. “The scam centers are creating a generational wealth transfer from Main Street America into the pockets of Chinese organized crime,” said U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro.
          Weak governments and corruption allow these multi-billion-dollar criminal enterprises to function, despite high-profile efforts to free captives and close compounds that have operated with near impunity in Southeast Asia.
          Unless stopped, these operations will only grow more sophisticated as they begin to use AI and deepfakes to perpetrate their crimes. Asia’s enslaved cyber scam victims earn the distinction of having the worst year in Asia, with sadly far too little hope for escape and rescue in sight.

          Bad year: casualties of earth, wind, water and fire

          The death count across large swaths of Asia seemed to accelerate by the year’s end. Throughout all of 2025, too many people fell victim to natural disasters such as earthquakes, typhoons and floods, seemingly made worse by human corruption or ineptness.
          A March 28 earthquake in Myanmar killed more than 3,600, displaced some 200,000 and even brought down a skyscraper under construction across the border in distant Bangkok, killing dozens more. From Sri Lanka to Thailand to Indonesia to Vietnam to Malaysia and the Philippines, floods, mudslides and typhoons combined to impact millions and kill more than 1,600.
          Add fire to the mix. The year closed with the horrific Wang Fuk Court apartment complex fire in Tai Po, Hong Kong. Televised scenes of towering infernos were seen worldwide. Inoperable fire alarms and below-grade construction materials reportedly contributed to the heartbreaking tragedy, with at least 160 people dead — making it one of the deadliest fires in the city’s history.

          Mixed Year: Gen Z uprisings

          Armed with memes, hashtags and reels and some waving the Jolly Roger Flag popularized by the Japanese anime and manga series “One Piece,” Gen Zers hungering for change had a mixed year in 2025.
          Many in this cohort of young people born between 1997 and 2012 took to the streets, including in Nepal, Indonesia, Philippines, the Maldives and even in the new ASEAN member state Timor-Leste, to protest corruption, nepotism and economic inequality. The results were decidedly mixed though their frustrations seemed all too common in Asia.
          These “digital natives” succeeded in bringing down Nepal’s government. Last year, this generation had played a key role in toppling the government of Bangladesh. In other countries, small concessions were achieved in 2025. Yet, at year-end, the question remains whether Gen Z — the first generation to fully grow up in the internet era — is able to maintain momentum and turn these uprisings into a viable movement for constructive change.
          The shared hope remains for a political force that can reform entrenched and corrupt systems, alleviate the youth’s deep frustration with the status quo and bring about more economic opportunities. To quote Monkey D. Luffy from “One Piece,” “If you don’t take risks, you can’t create a future.”

          Good Year: Asia’s ‘Bamboo Economic Tactics’

          Resilience was in full display across Asia’s slowing but still growing economies at year-end. Leaders across the region adopted flexible strategies — akin to bamboo bending in high winds — to navigate Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs.
          Indeed, it proved a good year for “bamboo economic tactics” as the region’s reputation for pragmatism held and countries were able to manage the new global economic reality. This approach led to reduced U.S. tariffs — down from duties proposed initially — and revamped trade configurations and new economic strategies.
          One example is the India, Canada and Australia cooperation agreement on technology and innovation, underscoring Asian nations’ own “Art of the Deal.”
          Recalibrating economic approach allowed developing Asia to achieve growth hovering around 5% for the year, according to the Asian Development Bank. This also kept Asia on track overall as the world’s fastest-growing region in the world.

          Best Year: Chinese Soft Power

          If tech and creative content are the new soft power, this past year showed that “Made In China” could be a contender, with Beijing joining the ranks of the United States and Korea as a soft-power giant.
          The year began with the January surprise: the launch of DeepSeek’a low-cost AI model in a world once-enamored by ChatGPT and American tech prowess. By year-end, the “ugly-cute” Pop Mart collectible, Labubu, had taken the world by a storm, even appearing in New York City’s iconic Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Labubu is part of a larger group of characters called “The Monsters,” created by Hong Kong artist and author Kasing Lung.
          From BYD electric vehicles to the biggest animated film in the world ever — Ne Zha 2 that reportedly grossed more than $2 billion — to Li-Ning sneakers appearing on NBA courts and Luckin Coffee shops opening at a rapid pace throughout Asia and the United States, Chinese soft power was clearly on the rise in 2025, and so receives the distinction for having the best year in Asia.
          Here’s to a better, safer and more peaceful year for all in 2026.

          Source: cnbc

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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