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Browse our complete collection of financial news and analysis
Browse our complete collection of financial news and analysis
Browse our complete collection of financial news and analysis
Gold futures are sliding as Fed rate-hike fears outweigh Middle East geopolitical tensions. With expectations shifting, all eyes are now on Wednesday's CPI data to dictate the next move for the precious metal.
Wall Street opens the week on a fragile footing after Trump rejects Tehran's counterproposal; AI-linked names extend gains overseas while crude jumps and gold pulls back.
Gold breaks $5,000 as shutdown fears and safe-haven demand as traders eye key policy catalysts this week.
Equity contracts edge higher after Tuesday's pullback; oil extends rally on Hormuz risk and UAE's OPEC+ exit, gold slips and dollar softens.
Metals slid as dollar strength, China’s clampdown on high-frequency trading, and hawkish Fed signals pressured prices, offsetting strong industrial demand and keeping markets cautious globally.
Nasdaq futures lead gains on chip strength; crude slides on Hormuz diplomacy while gold pushes past $4,700 and the dollar softens against the euro.
S&P 500 and Dow futures point higher in early trade; oil volatile on Hormuz risk while gold eases and the dollar flat ahead of the 8:30 a.m. retail sales print.
Chip-led rally loses steam, dollar firms against the yen and gold dips below $4,700 with Iran ceasefire on 'life support.'
Gold (XAU/USD) struggles to hold the $4,000 level amid a resurgent US Dollar and aggressive Federal Reserve rate hike expectations, putting the precious metal on track for a significant quarterly decline. Is there a bounce on the way?
Gold sheds 3.5%, smashing through the $4,000 support level amid a hawkish Fed and rising dollar. Investors now look to upcoming PCE data to see if the metal can stabilize or if a deeper correction lies ahead.
Alphabet, and Amazon shares rally following first-quarter earnings, thanks to the ongoing AI momentum, although Meta's capex shock tempered the mood, and crude oil pulled back from a four-year high.
Traders digest Iran-driven energy stress, a record-setting April for stocks and a flood of Tuesday earnings led by AMD.