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SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SPX
S&P 500 Index
6827.42
6827.42
6827.42
6899.86
6801.80
-73.58
-1.07%
--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
48458.04
48458.04
48458.04
48886.86
48334.10
-245.98
-0.51%
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
23195.16
23195.16
23195.16
23554.89
23094.51
-398.69
-1.69%
--
USDX
US Dollar Index
97.980
98.060
97.980
98.070
97.920
+0.030
+ 0.03%
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.17305
1.17312
1.17305
1.17447
1.17283
-0.00089
-0.08%
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.33574
1.33583
1.33574
1.33740
1.33546
-0.00133
-0.10%
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4339.96
4340.37
4339.96
4345.46
4294.68
+40.57
+ 0.94%
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
57.467
57.504
57.467
57.601
57.194
+0.234
+ 0.41%
--

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Share

India's November Soyoil Imports At 370661 Tonnes Versus 454619 Tonnes In October

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India's November Sunflower Oil Imports At 142953 Tonnes Versus 260548 Tonnes In October

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India's November Palm Oil Imports At 632341 Tonnes Versus 602381 Tonnes In October

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India's November Vegetable Oil Imports At 1183,832 Tonnes Versus 1332,173 Million Tonnes In October

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Reuters Poll - Bank Indonesia To Keep 7-Day Reverse Repo Rate Unchanged At 4.75% On December 17, Say 18 Of 31 Economists

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Statistics Finland - Finland Nov CPI -0.1% Year-On-Year

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Saudi Nov CPI 0.1% Month-On-Month

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Saudi Nov CPI 1.9% Year-On-Year

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South Korea Petrochemical Exports To Fall 6.1% In 2026 - Kcci

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U.S. Stock Futures Rose Slightly, With S&P 500 Futures And Dow Jones Futures Up 0.3% And NASDAQ 100 Futures Up Nearly 0.3%

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Spot Gold Rose $9 To $4,338.5 Per Ounce In The Short Term; New York Gold Futures Rose 1.00% On The Day, Currently Trading At $4,371.60 Per Ounce

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Dollar/Yen Extends Fall, Down 0.47% To 155.10

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Bank Of Japan: Two Branches Expect Higher Pay Rises In Fiscal Year 2026, While Two Other Branches Expect Wage Growth To Slow

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Bloomberg News: Bank Of Japan To Start Selling ETF Holdings As Early As January

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Malaysia Says Special ASEAN Foreign Ministers Meeting Scheduled For Dec 16 Delayed To Dec 22 At Thailand's Request

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Bank Of Japan: Wages Of Part-Time Employees Are Being Raised Reflecting Relatively High Minimum Wage Growth In Fiscal 2025

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Bank Of Japan: Firms' Wage Growth Outlook Due To Need For Retaining Staff Amid Persistent, Severe Labour Shortages

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Bank Of Japan - While Large And Medium-Sized Firms Were Likely To Be Able To Raise As Much Wages In FY 2026 As They Did In FY 2025, It Would Be Difficult For Small Firms To Raise As Much Wages In FY 2026 As In FY 2025

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Bank Of Japan: Most Companies Seem To Believe That Wage Increases In Fiscal Year 2026 Should Be The Same As Or Similar To Those In Fiscal Year 2025

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Bank Of Japan: Number Of Firms Expecting A Clear Improvement In Their Profits Is Not Large

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          Joe Lubin Forecasts Ethereum Treasury Strategies Will Reshape Wall Street Perception

          Manuel

          Cryptocurrency

          Summary:

          Joe Lubin said companies adopting ETH treasury strategies will play a critical role in communicating the second-largest digital asset’s value to Wall Street.

          Ethereum and Consensys co-founder Joe Lubin said companies adopting ETH treasury strategies will play a critical role in communicating the second-largest digital asset’s value to Wall Street, as major financial institutions ramp up blockchain use and process around 24 million transactions daily.
          Lubin made the statement during an interview with CNBC on July 8 in response to queries about the rising trend of Ethereum treasury adoption.
          According to Lubin: “It’s about telling the Ethereum story. What does Wall Street pay attention to? It pays attention to being able to make money.”
          He contrasted Bitcoin’s strong narrative with Ethereum’s future-focused positioning, explaining that while Bitcoin has a value proposition people “can understand and get behind,” Ethereum has spent the last decade building scalable infrastructure in anticipation that internet activity will shift to Web3.
          Lubin described Web3 as the natural decentralization of the web and said that Ethereum is now scalable, affordable, and legally usable in the US.
          However, he added that regulatory hurdles under former SEC Chair Gary Gensler made it unattractive for projects to build and issue tokens, delaying broader consumer and enterprise adoption.

          ‘The biggest splash’

          Lubin said that treasury strategies are emerging as a solution to address Ethereum’s current supply-demand imbalance. He added that holding ETH in treasuries is a strong business model and will be critical to stabilizing market conditions as more applications are built on Ethereum.
          He pointed to SharpLink Gaming as an example, describing it as the largest ETH treasury company so far, with holdings exceeding 200,000 ETH. While other firms like Bitmain have also adopted similar strategies, Lubin said SharpLink has made “the biggest splash.”
          According to Lubin: “Because decentralization is the direction of travel for the world. We believe that we’re going to see Ether and Bitcoin continue to rise over the next years and decades as we paradigm shift to more and more decentralization.”
          He added that his team is acquiring tens of millions of dollars in Ethereum daily through multiple channels and plans to “stay the course.”
          Lubin concluded that these treasury strategies will play a key role in cementing Ethereum’s relevance in traditional finance as the blockchain shifts from infrastructure building to mass application deployment.

          Source: Cryptoslate

          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
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          Trump Says BRICS Nations to get 10% Tariff 'Pretty Soon'

          Manuel

          Political

          Economic

          U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday the U.S. would "pretty soon" charge a 10% tariff on imports from BRICS countries, drawing another complaint from Brazil President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who just hosted the bloc's annual summit.
          Trump, who raised the tariff threat on Sunday, said in a Tuesday cabinet meeting at the White House that the duty was on the way: "Anybody that's in BRICS is getting a 10% charge pretty soon ... If they're a member of BRICS, they're going to have to pay a 10% tariff ... and they won't be a member long."
          The BRICS group expanded last year beyond Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa to include members such as Iran and Indonesia. Leaders at the summit in Rio de Janeiro voiced indirect criticism of U.S. military and trade policies.
          Asked about Trump's tariff threat, Lula told journalists at the BRICS summit on Monday that the world does not want an emperor. After a state visit from Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Lula on Tuesday expressed further disagreement.
          "We will not accept any complaints about the BRICS summit. We do not agree with the U.S. president insinuating he's going to put tariffs on BRICS countries," he told journalists in Brasilia.
          Trump gave no specific date for the BRICS tariff to kick in. On Monday, a source familiar with the matter said the Trump administration would charge the tariff only if countries adopted anti-American policies, differentiating actions from statements like the one adopted by the BRICS leaders on Sunday.
          Trump claimed without evidence on Tuesday that the group was set up to hurt the United States and he U.S. dollar's role as the world's reserve currency. He said he would not allow that to happen.
          "BRICS was set up to degenerate our dollar and take our dollar ... take it off as the standard," he said. "And that's okay if they want to play that game, but I can play that game too."
          Trump said losing the dollar's role as the world's reserve currency would be like "losing a war, a major world war. We would not be the same country any longer."
          Brazil in February nixed plans for a common currency agenda during its presidency year.

          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
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          Trump's Previous Tariff Push Terrified the World Economy, He's Betting this Time is Different

          Manuel

          Political

          Economic

          When President Donald Trump last rolled out tariffs this high, financial markets quaked, consumer confidence crashed and his popularity plunged.
          Only three months later, he’s betting this time is different.
          In his new round of tariffs being announced this week, Trump is essentially tethering the entire world economy to his instinctual belief that import taxes will deliver factory jobs and stronger growth in the U.S., rather than the inflation and slowdown predicted by many economists.
          On Tuesday, he told his Cabinet that past presidents who hadn't aggressively deployed tariffs were “stupid.” Ever the salesman, Trump added that it was “too time-consuming” to try to negotiate trade deals with the rest of the world, so it was just easier to send them letters, as he's doing this week, that list the tariff rates on their goods.
          The letters marked a change from his self-proclaimed April 2 “Liberation Day” event at the White House, where he had posterboards with the rates displayed, a choice that led to a brief market meltdown and the 90-day negotiating period with baseline 10% tariffs that will end Wednesday. Trump, instead, chose to send form letters with random capitalizations and punctuation and other formatting issues.
          “It’s a better way,” Trump said of his letters. "It’s a more powerful way. And we send them a letter. You read the letter. I think it was well crafted. And, mostly it’s just a little number in there: You’ll pay 25%, 35%. We have some of at 60, 70."
          When Trump said those words, he had yet to issue a letter with a tariff rate higher than 40%, which he levied Monday on Laos and Myanmar. He plans to put 25% tariffs on Japan and South Korea, two major trading partners and allies deemed crucial for curbing China's economic influence. Leaders of the 14 countries tariffed so far hope to negotiate over the next three weeks before the higher rates are charged on imports.
          “I would say that every case I’m treating them better than they treated us over the years,” Trump said.

          Three possible outcomes

          His approach is at odds with how major trade agreements have been produced over the last half-century, detailed sessions that could sometimes take years to solve complex differences between nations.
          There are three possible outcomes to this political and economic wager, each of which could drastically reshape international affairs and Trump's legacy.
          Trump could prove most economic experts wrong and the tariffs could deliver growth as promised. Or he could retreat again on tariffs before their Aug. 1 start in a repeat of the “Trump Always Chickens Out” phenomenon, also known as TACO. Or he could damage the economy in ways that could boomerang against the communities that helped return him to the White House last year, as well as hurt countries that are put at a financial disadvantage by the tariffs.
          Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said Trump's letters had “extended his tariff purgatory for another month,” essentially freezing in place the U.S. economy as CEOs, foreign leaders and consumers are unclear of Trump's actual strategy on foreign trade.
          “The TACO negotiating tactic pioneered by Trump is making his threats less and less credible and reducing our trading partners’ willingness to even meet us halfway,” Wyden said. “There’s no sign that he’s any closer to striking durable trade deals that would actually help American workers and businesses.”
          So far, the stock and bond markets are relatively calm, with the S&P 500 stock index essentially flat Tuesday after a Monday decline. Trump is coming off a legislative win with his multitrillion-dollar income tax cuts. And he's confidently levying tariffs at levels that previously rocked global markets, buoyed by the fact that inflation has eased so far instead of accelerating as many economists and Democratic rivals had warned.
          “By floating tariffs as high as 40% to even 100%, the administration has ‘normalized’ the 25% tariff hikes — yet this is still one of the most aggressive and disruptive tariff moves in modern history," said Wendong Zhang, an economist at Cornell University. "This gradual unveiling, paradoxically, risks normalizing what would otherwise be considered exceptionally large tariff hikes."
          Others simply see Trump as a source of nonstop chaos, with the letters and their somewhat random tariff rates showing the absence of a genuine policy process inside his administration.
          “It’s really just a validation that this policy is all over the place, that they’re running this by the seat of their pants, that there is no real strategy," said Desmond Lachman, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a right-leaning think tank.

          Questions about how much money tariffs will generate

          With Trump's 90-day tariff negotiation period ending, he has so far sent letters to 14 countries that place taxes on imported goods ranging from 25% to 40%. He said he would sign an order Tuesday to place 50% tariffs on copper and said at the Cabinet meeting that at some point pharmaceutical drugs could face tariffs of as much as 200%. All of that is on top of his existing 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum, 25% tariffs on autos and his separate import taxes on Canada, Mexico and China.
          “The obvious inference is that markets for now are somewhat skeptical that Trump will go through with it, or alternatively they think compromises will be reached,” said Ben May, a director of global economic research at the consultancy Oxford Economics. “That’s probably the key element.”
          May said the tariffs are likely to reduce the growth in U.S. household incomes, but not cause those incomes to shrink outright.
          Trump has said his tariffs would close U.S. trade imbalances, though it's unclear why he would target nations such as Tunisia that do relatively little trade with America. Administration officials say trillions of dollars in tariff revenues over the next decade would help offset the revenue losses from the continuation and expansion of his 2017 tax cuts that were signed into law Friday.
          The federal government has collected $98.2 billion in tariff revenues so far this year, more than double what it collected last year, according to the Bipartisan Policy Center.
          At Tuesday's Cabinet meeting, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the tariff revenues could be “well over $300 billion by the end of the year.” Bessent added that “we don’t agree” with the Congressional Budget Office estimate that tariffs would bring in $2.8 trillion over 10 years, “which we think is probably low.”
          The governments of Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia and South Africa have each said they hope for further negotiations on tariffs with Trump, though it's unclear how that's possible as Trump has said it would be too “complicated” to hold all those meetings.
          Instead on Tuesday, Trump posted on social media that the tariffs would be charged as scheduled starting Aug. 1.
          "There has been no change to this date, and there will be no change," Trump said on Truth Social. “No extensions will be granted. Thank you for your attention to this matter!”.

          Source: Yahoo Finance

          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

          Tether Holds $8 Billion Worth of Gold in Swiss Vault, Matching UBS Exposure

          Manuel

          Cryptocurrency

          Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino revealed that the firm holds roughly $8 billion in gold in a Swiss vault during an interview with Bloomberg News on July 7.
          Ardoino called the site “the most secure vault in the world” and said the company owns almost the entire 80-ton stockpile outright, placing the El Salvador-based issuer among the largest private gold holders globally.
          According to a March attestation, gold now represents nearly 5% of Tether’s $112 billion reserve portfolio. The stash’s dollar value matches the precious metals book at UBS Group AG, one of the few bullion-dealing banks that break out those holdings.
          Tether’s USDT reached a market capitalization of $159 billion last month, following nearly $5 billion in monthly growth.
          Ardoino argued that Tether can scale a gold program without proportionally higher fees by self-custodying bullion instead of using commercial vault operators, which charge about 50 basis points.

          Regulatory headwinds in key markets

          Lawmakers on both sides of the Atlantic are moving in the opposite direction. Draft US bills such as the GENIUS Act and Europe’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework allow only cash or near-cash instruments to collateralize fiat-referenced stablecoins, excluding commodities like gold.
          If those rules take effect and Tether seeks licenses in those jurisdictions, it would have to liquidate the bullion that backs USDT, although the company could retain metal tied to its gold-backed token, XAUT.
          Notably, MiCA granted licenses to 53 crypto firms in the first six months of regulation but excluded Tether.
          XAUT circulates against 7.7 tons of gold, worth approximately $819 million, which is well below the 950-ton giant among exchange-traded gold funds but large enough to make redemptions viable at vault doors in Switzerland.
          Ardoino said demand could accelerate if investors lose confidence in US fiscal sustainability and seek alternatives that avoid bank-deposit risk while remaining on-chain.

          Market context and outlook for bullion-linked tokens

          Spot gold has advanced by roughly 25% in 2025 as traders hedge tariff-driven trade friction and wider geopolitical tension.
          Ardoino said: “Every single central bank in the BRICS countries is buying gold, so that is why the price went up in our opinion.”
          Tether must still convince regulators that a metal-heavy reserve would not impede USDT’s liquidity under stress.
          For now, the firm holds the metal, earns yield on Treasurys, and keeps a separate token directly convertible into vaulted bars, combining traditional bullion economics with blockchain settlement.
          Source: CryptoSlate
          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

          Perth Mint sees strong gold and silver sales in FY2025

          Adam

          Commodity

          The pullback in gold prices last month was a boon to bullion sales, with demand for Australian gold and silver products as well as ETP holdings increasing in June, according to the latest sales data from the Perth Mint.
          The Perth Mint announced in its June 2025 Sales Update on Monday that it sold minted products containing 32,901 troy ounces of gold and 464,197 oz of silver in June, the final month of its fiscal year.
          “Opening the month around USD 3,300, gold rose to a mid-month high of just under USD 3,450, supported by ongoing uncertainty surrounding US-China trade negotiations and its impact on the health of the global economy,” they wrote in the update. “Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East further buoyed the price as investors flocked to safe-haven assets. Gold remained at elevated levels while those geopolitical issues persisted, but as stability returned, the price retreated to just under USD 3,300 to record a modest loss for the month.”
          Over the course of the Mint’s full 2024-2025 financial year, gold delivered a gain of 41% in USD terms.
          “In Australian dollar terms, the gold price tracked international sentiment but faced headwinds from the US dollar weakening against most currencies,” they noted. “The price dropped by more than 2% in June to end the month trading around AUD 5,020. However, the full financial year performance was robust with gold returning a gain of 43%.”
          Silver prices experienced a strong rally in June, rising to a 13-year high of more than $37. “This was supported by perceived value buying as well as strong industrial demand and ongoing supply constraints,” the update stated. “Silver ended the month around USD 36 for a near 9% gain the month. For the financial year, silver returned around 23%.”
          The June silver price was also higher in AUD terms, though the stronger AUD/USD exchange rate tempered some of the gains. Silver returned around 25% AUD over the full financial year. Meanwhile, the gold:silver ratio hovered near 91.50 at the end of June, with silver’s outperformance helping to lower the ratio further from the April high.
          The Perth Mint shared a table and chart showing how June’s sales numbers stack up against those of May, three months ago, and June of 2024.
          Perth Mint sees strong gold and silver sales in FY2025_1
          Neil Vance, the Perth Mint’s General Manager Minted Products, said investor appetite for their products remained strong. “Sales of our newly released gold and silver dragon rectangular bullion coins have been very pleasing, as have our silver kangaroos which remain very popular with the German market,” he said.
          The newest bullion coins released by the Perth Mint in June were the 2025 Dragon 1oz Gold Bullion Rectangular Coin and the 2025 Dragon 1oz Silver Bullion Rectangular Coin.
          The Perth Mint Gold Structured Product – a low-cost exchange traded product (ETP) that allows investors to trade in gold via a stock broking account as they would shares on the ASX – also saw significant inflows in June as prices dipped.
          “Total holdings in Perth Mint Gold Structured Product (ASX:PMGOLD) increased during June with holdings up by 4,796 oz (1.55%),” the report noted. “This brings total holdings in PMGOLD to 313,695 ounces (9.76 tonnes).”
          Perth Mint sees strong gold and silver sales in FY2025_2

          Source: kitco

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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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          Trump Says he Will Impose 50% Tariff on Copper Imports

          Manuel

          Commodity

          Political

          President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he will announce a 50% tariff on copper later in the day, aiming to boost U.S. production of a metal critical to electric vehicles, military hardware, the power grid and many consumer goods.
          Trump's decision to impose copper tariffs surprised markets - coming earlier and at a higher rate than the industry had expected.
          U.S. Comex copper futures jumped more than 12% after the announcement to a record high.
          Trump told reporters at a White House cabinet meeting that he planned to make the copper tariff announcement later in the day but he did not say when the tariff would take effect.
          "I believe the tariff on copper, we're going to make 50%," Trump said.
          U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in an interview on CNBC on Tuesday that the copper tariffs would likely be put in place by the end of July or August 1.
          The Trump administration announced a so-called Section 232 investigation into U.S. imports of the red metal in February. The deadline for the investigation to conclude was November and it was unclear whether the fresh tariffs meant the investigation had concluded.
          The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
          The National Mining Association declined to comment, saying it preferred to wait until details were released. The American Critical Minerals Association did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
          Copper is used in construction, transportation, electronics and many other industries. The United States imports roughly half of its copper needs each year.
          Major copper projects across the United States have faced strong opposition in recent years due to a variety of reasons, including Rio Tinto (RIO.AX), (RIO.L) and BHP's (BHP.AX) Resolution Copper project in Arizona and Northern Dynasty Minerals's (NDM.TO) Pebble Mine project in Alaska.
          Shares of the world's largest copper producer, Phoenix-based Freeport-McMoRan (FCX.N), shot up nearly 5% in Tuesday afternoon trading. The company, which produced 1.26 billion of copper in the United States last year, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
          Freeport - which would benefit from U.S. copper tariffs but worries that the duties would hurt the global economy - has advised Trump to focus on boosting U.S. copper production.
          Countries set to be most affected by any new U.S. copper tariff would be Chile, Canada and Mexico, which were the top suppliers to the United States of refined copper, copper alloys and copper products in 2024, according to U.S. Census Bureau data.
          Chile, Canada and Peru - three of the largest copper suppliers to the United States - have told the Trump administration that imports from their countries do not threaten U.S. interests and should not face tariffs. All three have free trade deals with the United States.
          Mexico's Economy Ministry, Chile's Foreign Ministry and Canada's Finance Ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Chile's Mining Ministry and Codelco copper miner declined to comment.
          A 50% tariff on copper imports would be a hit to U.S. companies that use the metal because the country is years away from meeting its needs, said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.
          "The U.S. has imported a whole year of demand over the past six months, so the local storage levels are ample," Hansen said. "I see a correction in copper prices following the initial jump."

          Source: Reuters

          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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          Wall St stalls as investors grapple with Trump's latest tariff jolt

          Adam

          Stocks

          The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq struggled for direction on Tuesday, as anxiety over President Donald Trump's latest tariff salvo overshadowed investor hopes that fresh talks with U.S. trading partners might avert a full-blown global trade war.
          At 11:49 a.m. the Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI), fell 58.27 points, or 0.13%, to 44,348.09, the S&P 500 (.SPX), gained 1.04 points, or 0.02%, to 6,231.02 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC), gained 5.06 points, or 0.03%, to 20,417.57.
          Trump warned on Monday that sweeping new U.S. tariffs would hit countries from Japan and South Korea to smaller trading partners starting Aug. 1—though he hinted at possible reprieves if fresh proposals emerged.
          The threat sent all major indexes sharply lower at Monday's close, but they pared some losses earlier in the session on expectations that the economies would possibly work out favorable trade terms through negotiations before Aug. 1.
          Japan's top trade negotiator, Ryosei Akazawa, held a 40-minute phone call with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on Tuesday, where the two sides agreed to "actively" continue negotiations.
          While investors stayed on the sidelines, the Russell 2000 small-cap index (.RUT), managed to eke out gains of nearly 1%.
          The energy index (.SPNY), jumped 2.2%, while Utilities (.SPLRCU), often traded as bond-proxies, dropped 1.1%.
          In mega-cap stocks, shares of Tesla (TSLA.O), gained 2.5% after the stock recorded its steepest single-day fall in nearly a month on Monday.
          "The pick up in volatility is a reminder of the degree of uncertainty surrounding trade policy," said Jordan Rizzuto, chief investment officer of GammaRoad Capital Partners.
          Rizzuto also noted that the real risk was not knowing when these tariffs will hit consumers.
          The subdued mood stands in sharp contrast to the market turmoil that was unleashed by the "Liberation Day" tariff announcements three months ago, which pushed the Nasdaq into bear territory and dragged the Dow and the S&P 500 into correction.
          Since then, Wall Street has rebounded, with the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 powering to record highs last week, buoyed by a resilient labor market that has helped ease fears of a looming recession.
          BofA Global Research and Goldman Sachs raised their year-end targets for the S&P 500 index (.SPX), broadly driven by reduced policy uncertainty, resilient corporate earnings and potential interest rate cuts.
          Minutes of the Fed's June rate-setting meeting are scheduled for release on Wednesday, which will offer investors more clarity on when the central bank might resume its policy easing cycle.
          Shares of solar stocks fell after Trump on Monday directed federal agencies to strengthen provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that repeal or modify tax credits for solar and wind energy projects.
          SunRun (RUN.O), dropped 12%, Enphase Energy (ENPH.O), lost 3.2% and SolarEdge Technologies (SEDG.O), declined 3.8%.
          Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 1.71-to-1 ratio on the NYSE, and by a 1.81-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.
          The S&P 500 posted 17 new 52-week highs and three new lows, while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 67 new highs and 30 new lows.

          Source: Reuters

          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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