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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
97.950
98.030
97.950
98.500
97.950
-0.370
-0.38%
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.17394
1.17409
1.17394
1.17496
1.17192
+0.00011
+ 0.01%
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.33707
1.33732
1.33707
1.33997
1.33419
-0.00148
-0.11%
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4299.39
4299.39
4299.39
4353.41
4257.10
+20.10
+ 0.47%
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
57.233
57.485
57.233
58.011
56.969
-0.408
-0.71%
--

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The United States And Mexico Have Reached An Agreement On How To Resolve The Water Dispute In The Rio Grande Basin (which Borders Texas). Starting December 15, Mexico Will Supply The U.S. With An Additional 20.2 Acre-feet (a Unit Of Volume For Irrigation). The Agreement Seeks To “strengthen Water Management In The Rio Grande Basin” Within The Framework Of The 1944 Water Treaty

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U.S. Transportation Secretary Duffy: The Engine Of United Airlines Flight 803 That Malfunctioned Caught Fire

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Ukraine President Zelenskiy: He Will Meet US, European Representatives About Peace

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UK Prime Minister Office: Prime Minister Starmer Spoke To The President Of The European Commission Ursula Von Der Leyen This Evening - Downing Street Spokesperson

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Trump: We Will Retaliate Against ISIS

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Trump Says We Mourn The Loss Of Three Great Patriots In Syria In An Ambush

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Syrian Interior Ministry Spokesperson Confirms Attacker Was Member Of Security Forces With Extremist Ideology

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Syrian Interior Ministry Says Attacker Did Not Have Leadership Role In Security Forces, Did Not Say If He Was Junior Member

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Man Who Attacked Syrian, US Military Was Member Of Syrian Security Forces -Three Local Syrian Officials

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US Envoy Coale Says Belarus President Lukashenko Agreed To Do All He Can To Stop Weather Balloons Flying Into Lithuania

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Ukraine Says Russian Drone Attack Hit Civilian Turkish Vessel

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Islamic State Attacker In Syria Was Lone Gunman, Who Was Killed -USA Central Command

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US Envoy John Coale Says Around 1000 Remaining Political Prisoners In Belarus Could Be Released In Coming Months

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US Defense Secretary Hegseth: Attacker Was Killed By Partner Forces

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Pentagon Says Two USA Army Soldiers And One Civilian USA Interpreter Were Killed, And Three Were Wounded In Syria

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Israel Says It Kills Senior Hamas Commander Raed Saed In Gaza

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Ukraine's Navy Says Russian Drone Attack Hit Civilian Turkish Vessel Carrying Sunflower Oil To Egypt On Saturday

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Israeli Military Says It Put Planned Strike On South Lebanon Site On Hold After Lebanese Army Requested Access

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Norwegian Nobel Committee: Calls On The Belarusian Authorities To Release All Political Prisoners

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Norwegian Nobel Committee: His Freedom Is A Deeply Welcome And Long-Awaited Moment

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          US To Start UN Negotiations On Thursday On International Gaza Force Mandate

          Samantha Luan

          Forex

          Economic

          Summary:

          The United Nations Security Council on Thursday will start negotiations on a U.S.-drafted resolution to endorse President Donald Trump'sGazapeace plan, said a senior U.S. government official, and authorize a two-year mandate for a transitional governance body and international stabilization force

          Key points:

          · US says it has regional support for draft UN resolution on Gaza peace plan
          · US official: if the region is with us on the text, the Security Council should be too
          · Draft text would give two-year mandate for international force to stabilize Gaza
          · US official: text gives force authority to disarm Hamas

          The United Nations Security Council on Thursday will start negotiations on a U.S.-drafted resolution to endorse President Donald Trump'sGazapeace plan, said a senior U.S. government official, and authorize a two-year mandate for a transitional governance body and international stabilization force.

          The U.S. formally circulated the draft resolution to the 15 council members late on Wednesday and has said it has regional support from Egypt, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates for the text.

          "The message is: if the region is with us on this and the region is with us on how this resolution is constructed, then we believe that the council should be as well," the senior U.S. government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters.

          A council resolution needs at least nine votes in favor and no vetoes by Russia, China, France, Britain or the United States to be adopted. When asked when the draft text could be put to a vote, the official said: "The sooner that we move, the better. We're looking at weeks, not months."

          "Russia and China will certainly have their inputs, and we'll take those as they come. But at the end of the day, I do not see those countries standing in the way and blocking what is probably the most promising plan for peace in a generation," the official said.

          Trump told reporters later on Thursday that the international force would deploy "very soon." U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio then noted that the countries volunteering to contribute troops "need this U.N. mandate in order to be able to do it."

          INTERNATIONAL FORCE WOULD HAVE AUTHORITY TO DISARM HAMAS

          The draft resolution, seen by Reuters, would authorize a Board of Peace transitional governance administration to establish a temporary International Stabilization Force in Gaza that could "use all necessary measures" - language for force - to carry out its mandate.

          The ISF would be authorized to protect civilians and humanitarian aid operations, work to secure border areas with Israel, Egypt and a "newly trained and vetted Palestinian police force."

          The ISF would stabilize security in Gaza by "ensuring the process of demilitarizing the Gaza Strip, including the destruction and prevention of rebuilding of the military, terror, and offensive infrastructure, as well as the permanent decommissioning of weapons from non-state armed groups."

          The official said the draft U.N. resolution gives the ISF authority to disarm Palestinian militants Hamas, but that the U.S. was still expecting Hamas to "live up to its end of the agreement" and give up its weapons.

          Hamas has not said whether it will agree to disarm and demilitarize Gaza — something the militants have rejected before.

          INTERNATIONAL FORCE LIKELY AROUND 20,000 TROOPS

          The senior U.S. official said the ISF was shaping up to be around 20,000 troops.

          While the Trump administration has ruled out sending U.S. soldiers into the Gaza Strip, it has been speaking to Indonesia, the UAE, Egypt, Qatar, Turkey and Azerbaijan to contribute.

          "We've been in steady contact with the potential troop contributors, and what they need in terms of a mandate, what type of language they need," said the official. "Almost all of the countries are looking to have some type of international mandate. The preferred is U.N."

          The official said he was unaware if Israel had ruled out any specific countries from contributing troops to the ISF, but added: "We're in constant conversations with them." Israel said last month it would not accept Turkish armed forces in Gaza under the U.S. peace plan.

          That 20-point plan is annexed to the draft U.N. Security Council resolution.

          "Time is not on our side here. The ceasefire is holding, but it is fragile, and ... we cannot get bogged down in wordsmithing in the council. I think this is a real test for the United Nations," the senior U.S. official said.

          Source: TradingView

          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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          Why OpenAI might not want to go public

          Adam

          Economic

          OpenAI isn't preparing for a public debut, at least not yet. With complex and seemingly insatiable financial needs, its executives are doubtless content without the obligations, disclosures, and instant quantifiable judgment that come with trading on the open market.
          It is doing something in public, however, and at the very least is vying for broad public support as it pitches itself as a national strategic asset that the US government should cherish and protect. And so far, dealing with the public attention from its pitch has been somewhat of an ordeal.
          Amid the advocacy, we've already seen a few minor PR snafus seemingly cause major stress for CEO Sam Altman and Co. Leave it to your imagination — or ChatGPT — to paint a picture of what the stress of regular reporting and inspection might do to the ambitious, talented, and financially stretched operation.
          On stage at a Wall Street Journal event, OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar said that OpenAI is looking for Washington to provide loan guarantees to the world's largest private company. After a brief backlash, Friar softened her stance in a LinkedIn post, walking back the remarks and clarifying that her use of the word "backstop" muddied the point.
          To drive the point home further, Altman gave another C-suite clarification in a lengthy post on X Thursday, again denying his company is looking for a bailout.
          So, to recap: OpenAI is now clearly stating it isn't seeking a government backstop for its massive financial commitments.
          The reaction to Friar's initial comments and her and Altman's apparent walk-back arrived at a touchy moment for OpenAI. In a podcast released last weekend, Altman was asked by investor Brad Gerstner how his startup could fulfill a pledge to spend more than $1 trillion when it generated roughly $13 billion in revenue this year. Instead of answering, Altman appeared to turn on Gerstner.
          "Brad, if you want to sell your shares, I'll find you a buyer," Altman responded. "Enough."
          The clip, which has been widely shared online and features Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella laughing through the moment, as if to relieve the tension, hasn't reflected well on Altman.
          It's important to note this wasn't an adversarial interview between a working journalist and a tech exec, but a friendly podcast between business leaders with common financial interests. The question, and more basic versions of it, have been bouncing around the AI space for a while. How can AI companies spend so much with so little revenue?
          Gerstner's prompt was an invitation to explain OpenAI's business plans. But Altman seemed to take it as an accusation and an attack. Maybe the difficult or unfortunate answer explains Altman's stress. Regardless, for audiences watching and sharing the video online, his defensiveness came off as petty and unwarranted and, more broadly, as a key moment in the backlash against the perceived gluttony of AI companies.
          "This will be in the documentary," as one observer put it, summarizing the exchange. For a tech movement that feeds off vibes and dreams rather than tangible profits, this stuff matters.
          If OpenAI first got into trouble for taking other people's work, and then taking away people's jobs, the next affront could be taking people's money, leaving the government on the hook if the AI party ends, should the "backstop" question reemerge.
          In the same interview, Altman said one of the rare instances he'd want OpenAI to be a public company is to tell his haters to short the stock so he might prove them wrong. Meanwhile, Friar said this week that OpenAI isn't working on an IPO just yet, focusing instead on growth.
          OpenAI may not want to be a publicly traded company. But it's seeking guarantees that only American taxpayers can provide.

          Source: finance.yahoo

          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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          US Consumer Sentiment Declines To A More Than Three-Year Low

          Daniel Carter

          Economic

          The preliminary November sentiment index dropped to 50.3, the lowest since June 2022, from 53.6 in the prior month, according to the University of Michigan. That was weaker than all but one estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists.
          A measure of current economic conditions slumped 6.3 points to a record low of 52.3 as anxiety mounted about the impact from the government shutdown. The drop in overall sentiment was broad across age, income and political groups, the report showed.
          While spontaneous mentions of high prices increased for a fifth month, inflation expectations eased over the longer term. Consumers saw costs rising at an annual rate of 3.6% over the next five to 10 years, a three-month low. Price expectations for the next year edged up, the data issued Friday showed.
          "Consumers perceive pressure on their personal finances from multiple directions," Joanne Hsu, director of the survey, said in a statement. "Consumers also anticipate that labor markets will continue to weaken in the future and expect to be personally affected.''
          A measure of current personal finances declined to a six-year low, while buying conditions for big-ticket goods were considered the worst since mid-2022.
          Fears about unemployment jumped this month, with 71% of respondents expecting it to rise in the year ahead, more than double the year-ago share.
          "Moreover, consumers' expectations over their own probability of job loss worsened this month, reaching the highest reading since March 2025," Hsu said.
          On Wednesday, ADP Research Institute reported that US private-sector payrolls rose by 42,000 in October, the first increase in three months. The modest pace of hiring, alongside a series of high-profile layoff announcements from major companies, helps explain why consumers remain pessimistic about the labor market.
          The expectations index slid to a six-month low of 49. The longest government shutdown in US history is obscuring the view of the economy as key federal data are delayed. Private-sector sources, including the university's sentiment survey, provide a partial substitute amid the blackout.
          The November survey was conducted from Oct. 21 to Nov. 3.

          Source: Bloomberg Europe

          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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          AI revaluation could trigger volatility shock, but near-term gold liquidations won’t alter strong fundamentals – Saxo Bank’s Hansen

          Adam

          Commodity

          A revaluation of the AI sector could raise volatility and trigger another round of deleveraging – impacting gold and other commodities – but any price distortions will be short-lived and won’t impact gold’s strong fundamentals, according to Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.
          “Over recent weeks, the technology sector—especially AI‑linked names—has begun to show signs of fatigue,” Hansen wrote. “An almost parabolic run pushed forward earnings well above long‑term norms, raising the risk of a reset, and the past week has brought the first meaningful wobble. Despite a modest top‑to‑bottom decline of 4.3% in the Nasdaq 100 future—small against a year‑to‑date gain above 20%—the shift in tone is notable.”
          He said that the combination of “elevated valuations, narrow market breadth, circularity in AI investment flows, and heavy concentration in a handful of mega‑cap names, alongside warnings from major bank CEOs of a potential 10–20% equity drawdown” has added near-term unease, and warned that an otherwise orderly correction “can become disorderly if too many investors try to exit at once, driving volatility higher and forcing leveraged traders to reduce exposure across the board.”
          “Episodes of sharp volatility remain one of the most underestimated transmission channels between equity market stress and commodity price action,” Hansen said. “When a stock-market correction causes volatility to rise abruptly, the knock-on effects can extend far beyond equities. The key reason is mechanical: a large share of institutional portfolios now targets a specific level of volatility or risk. When that volatility jumps, these mandates must cut exposure, and they typically do so across the board, and even positions supported by strong fundamentals are temporarily pulled into the downdraft.”
          He said that under many institutional trading strategies, when volatility rises, the amount of allowable leverage falls. “That reduction must be executed regardless of whether the underlying positions are profitable or loss-making,” he noted. “During stress, investors sell what is liquid and sizeable, not necessarily where the risk originated. As a result, the dash-for-cash leaves no position unscathed with the most liquid ones being treated as sources of immediate cash rather than strategic holdings.”
          “This is why deleveraging tends to hit every corner of the portfolio simultaneously, including commodities.”
          Hansen said that while gold is currently consolidating after its sharp rally, “the market has yet to test levels that would signal a deeper corrective phase or an end to the structural bull trend.” But this doesn’t mean gold can’t see short-term liquidations if volatility spikes.
          He pointed to the volatility shock in early April as a clear recent example. “Following a round of surprise U.S. tariff announcements, the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) almost tripled from around 21% to 60% within three days, while the S&P 500 dropped roughly 15% over the same window,” Hansen noted. “With bond-market volatility also surging, every liquid asset became a candidate for raising cash. Gold fell 6.6% from top to bottom, despite entering the episode with strong bullish momentum. Silver, with its partial dependence on industrial demand, tumbled 17%. Yet both metals recovered rapidly once volatility stabilised. Gold printed fresh highs within a week—an illustration of how quickly fundamentals can reassert themselves once forced flows subside.”
          Hansen believes the current equity environment has the potential to trigger another volatility event. “However, with precious and industrial metals—two of the most popular and therefore most exposed sectors—already having undergone a meaningful correction, the risk of a sudden volatility‑driven liquidation shock has eased somewhat,” he said. “Even so, they remain vulnerable to brief, mechanically driven selling but typically recover quickly once the volatility impulse fades.”
          “In the near term, the key risk to monitor is a decisive revaluation of the AI complex, which could spill over into broader equity benchmarks, lifting volatility and triggering another round of deleveraging,” he warned. “For commodities, the implication is straightforward: even markets supported by solid fundamentals but carrying elevated speculative length may face temporary downsides driven by forced flows rather than any material shift in their underlying outlook."
          “For gold and other investment metals, the core support remain unchanged: fiscal uncertainty, sticky inflation, steady central-bank and investor demand, a gradual drift toward lower real rates, and persistent geopolitical hedging,” Hansen wrote. Meanwhile, industrial metals “continue to benefit from structural demand tied to deglobalisation, electrification, grid expansion and the rapid build-out of data-centre infrastructure spiced with persistent underinvestment in new mine capacity.”
          “The message is simple: volatility events temporarily distort price signals across commodities, but they rarely alter the underlying trajectory of markets that enjoy robust macro and micro foundations.”

          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.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          White House: U.S. Economy To Recover After Government Reopens

          Justin

          Economic

          Government Shutdown Weighs on U.S. Economy

          White House Advisor Kevin Hassett has stated that the U.S. economy recovery will begin as soon as the government reopens. The current government shutdown, which has affected several federal agencies and services, is believed to be dampening economic activity. Hassett emphasized that while the economy remains fundamentally strong, the uncertainty caused by the shutdown is delaying growth and market confidence.

          Economists agree that prolonged shutdowns can disrupt both public and private sector operations. Key government data releases, regulatory approvals, and even payroll processing for federal workers are affected, all of which create ripple effects across the economy.

          Optimism for a Quick Rebound

          Despite the ongoing disruption, Hassett remains optimistic. "As soon as the government reopens, we expect economic indicators to bounce back quickly," he said. This suggests that policymakers believe the current slowdown is temporary and not reflective of deeper structural issues.

          The White House is reportedly focusing on resolving the shutdown swiftly to avoid long-term damage. Financial analysts say that investor sentiment is closely tied to political developments, and a resolution could restore momentum in sectors like tech, transportation, and federal contracting.

          What This Means for Americans

          For everyday Americans, the shutdown means delayed services and economic anxiety. However, if Hassett's forecast holds true, a reopening could lead to increased consumer spending, job activity, and overall confidence in the economy.

          The situation underscores the close link between political stability and economic performance. As talks to reopen the government continue, businesses and citizens alike are watching closely for signs of progress.

          Source: CryptoSlate

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
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          Russia Accuses NATO Of Preparing To Blockade Kaliningrad

          Samantha Luan

          Political

          Economic

          Several senior Russian officials have gone on the record to warn that NATO is preparing for war.

          Russia is accusing NATO of practicing a blockade of the country during recent large-scale exercises in the Baltic Sea, as well as preparing for a conflict with Russia.

          Relations between Russia and NATO have deteriorated to an alarming degree following Moscow's decision to launch a full-scale invasion of Ukraine nearly four years ago.

          Russia Thinks NATO Is Becoming More Aggressive

          Recently, several senior Russian officials have gone on the record to warn that NATO is preparing for war with Russia.

          Russian deputy foreign minister Alexander Grushko accused NATO of preparing to blockade Russia through the Baltic Sea.

          "During the alliance's exercises, scenarios such as blocking the Kaliningrad region are being practiced. The [Baltic] region is undergoing active militarization, with an influx of coalition forces and resources," the senior Russian official stated.

          Kaliningrad is a Russian enclave between Lithuania and Poland. It offers Moscow a second gate to the Baltic Sea. The other point of access is to the north at St. Petersburg.

          But the Russian deputy foreign minister was not the only senior Russian official to accuse NATO of preparing to strike.

          Sergei Naryshkin, the head of SVR, the Russian foreign intelligence service, also accused NATO of preparing for military operations against Russia.

          The chief of the SVR said that NATO is "rapidly mobilizing military resources and shaping public opinion to justify conflict."

          "The task has been set to rapidly equip NATO's designated Allied Response Forces with all necessary resources," Naryshkin added.

          Russia's head spy said that NATO and the European Union have embarked on a "multiple-fold increase in the production of military equipment," and are also conducting active mobilization training.

          Grushko's and Naryshkin's remarks are part of a broader set of accusations directed by Russian officials at NATO.

          NATO and the European Union have indeed increased military spending and have engaged in more and larger military drills. But not without reason.

          Causation

          The Russian officials ignore key cause-and-effect considerations. NATO increased its spending and readiness in response to Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Motivating countries to spend more on their defense is not easy. It is particularly difficult during peacetime and without an evident threat. It is even more difficult during troublesome economic times after a global pandemic like COVID-19. But Russia succeeded in uniting NATO and Europe with the threat of war and prompted them to invest more in their collective defense and military capabilities.

          These senior Russian officials' statements are quite concerning. The Kremlin has a history of preparing the way before engaging in military operations.

          For example, before fully invading Ukraine on February 24, 2022, the Kremlin had repeatedly made its case that Ukraine is nominally part of Russia and that Russian-speaking people in Ukraine were suffering under Kyiv's authoritarian control. It later became apparent that the Kremlin was preparing the ground to justify its "special military operation." It could be doing the same again.

          The Kremlin knows how to conduct psychological operations and how to shape the information environment in a way to justify its actions. Accusing NATO of warmongering could very well be the spark for more intense competition between Russia and the transatlantic military alliance.

          Source: The National Interest

          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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          US Dollar: More Noise Than Signals

          Adam

          Forex

          It has been a mixed week for the US dollar, where early-week strength finally eased a little yesterday on indications of softer US jobs data. Yet with the US government shutdown ongoing, we are still in the dark about the true labour market picture. Expect more $ consolidation and focus on regional stories such as soft China trade data and the Canada jobs release

          USD: Dollar Rally Stalls

          Having been bid for a week, the dollar finally softened yesterday. The catalyst appeared to be some Challenger layoff data and also some alternative data suggesting October’s NFP report, which we were meant to see today, should have fallen by 9k. Short-dated US rates had a sizeable 8bp drop on the day – a development that resonated in FX markets. But on the subject of jobs data, there is no sign of an end to the US government shutdown. It looks like Senators will be meeting over the weekend, however, so let’s see whether there’s any fresh news Monday morning. Betting markets actually attach a 46% probability to the shutdown lasting beyond 16 November.
          Where there is jobs data today is in Canada. Consensus is expecting a 5k drop in October after a big 60k increase the previous month. Any downside miss could firm up pricing of another Bank of Canada rate cut and send USD/CAD to the 1.4150/4200 area, which could prove major medium-term resistance. Commodity currencies like the Canadian dollar may also have a soft undertone today after the Chinese October trade data disappointed overnight. Exports fell 1.1% year-on-year and imports barely grew at 1%. That’s not good news for those dependent on industrial demand in China and also a worrying sign for global trade, in that export-dependent economies might not have been able to shake off US tariffs as much as first hoped.
          Back to the US, today sees the provisional University of Michigan consumer sentiment number for November. Expectations are for a still healthy 53 reading. And expect continued focus on the frothy Nasdaq, where sharp losses yesterday weighed on the yen crosses. December futures are currently calling the Nasdaq a little higher at today’s open. Additionally, we have a couple of Fed speakers, John Williams and Philip Jefferson, who sit at the dovish end of the spectrum. However, hard data rather than Fed speak looks to be the bigger dollar driver in the near term.
          DXY has stalled at the top of the three-month trading range and we expect it to come lower. It’s not clear what will drive lower today, though. And one final point. We had been speculating over the last week whether tightness in US money markets had been contributing to dollar strength. Conditions in money markets seemed to have improved this week, where borrowing at the Fed’s overnight Standing Repo Facility has dropped to zero after the $50bn that was being drawn this time last week. DXY may have topped out near 100.35 on Wednesday. If so, rallies may now stall in the 99.90/100.00 area.
          EUR: China Data Is Unwelcome News
          While we like the idea of a weaker dollar and a stronger EUR/USD, last night’s Chinese trade data is unwelcome news. It suggests China might not have as easily diversified its exports away from the US as first thought – or at least the ex-US demand is insufficient to offset the loss of the US market. That will only add to fears of increasing Chinese pressure in European markets.
          There is a chance that EUR/USD may have established an important low at 1.1470 this week. But for a rally to unfold, we will probably need to get more clarity on the slowing US jobs market. Let’s see whether intra-day support at 1.1500/1510 can now hold.

          GBP: December BoE Rate Cut Looks Underpriced

          Sterling is enjoying a modest recovery after the Bank of England left rates unchanged yesterday. However, it now seems Governor Andrew Bailey is the swing voter and minded for a December cut. That outcome is only priced with a 70% probability right now, meaning that there is scope for lower short-term rates and a weaker pound. Expect EUR/GBP to find good support if it gets anywhere near the 0.8760 area, and we would expect it to be trading above 0.88 heading into the Budget later this month.

          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.
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