Even negative opinions can be framed positively and diplomatically.
Only post material that’s relevant to the topic being discussed.īe respectful. However, in order to maintain the high level of discourse we’ve all come to value and expect, please keep the following criteria in mind: We encourage you to use comments to engage with other users, share your perspective and ask questions of authors and each other. The ‘crypto winter’ might be over, and that is what is needed to allow flows back into space. Bitcoinīitcoin is finishing the week near the highs, just shy of the $24,000 level, as the crypto verse breathes a sigh of relief. Next week will be key for bullion, and the focus will fall on Fed speak. Gold might have a date with the $1800 level soon, but it might take a fresh catalyst for that to happen. Strong economic data will support maybe tilt the expectations to price in slightly larger rate increases, but fears of the Fed over aggressively hiking are long gone. The peak in yields is in place, and that will do wonders for non-interest-bearing gold. ETF data might not suggest investors are turning bullish on the precious metal, but the bond market is providing some promising signs. WTI was unable to hold onto the $100 level as profit-taking kicked in. US oil rig counts posted a gain of six, bringing the total to 605 rigs, but that should do little to think this market will find balance anytime soon. With no major signs of fuel demand destruction, oil seems like it will soon find a home above the $100 a barrel mark. The oil market will remain tight going forward as OPEC+ underproduction levels stood at 320%. Oil prices rallied after both Exxon (NYSE: XOM) and Chevron (NYSE: CVX) were optimistic about the crude demand outlook and on expectations that OPEC+ would not raise production in September. A couple more inflation and employment reports will dictate how the data-dependant Fed will behave after the summer. The Fed has a clear path to continue with aggressive hikes, but many still think they’ll be inclined to go at only a half point in September. The closely watched Fed’s favorite wage gauge came in a little hotter-than-expected, and personal income & spending data remained strong. A lot of data reminded us that the economy should prepare for an aggressive Fed. Inflation is still running hot, which should delay the Fed in delivering the dovish pivot that so many on Wall Street expect. Apple refrained from giving guidance but said they believe year-over-year revenue growth will accelerate in the next quarter. ĬEO Cook acknowledged that supply constraints came in slightly less than the low end of the range that they gave during the last call. The numbers out of China were surprisingly good, too, despite major COVID restrictions. The iPhone and services numbers were solid and will lead many to believe the consumer is still fine. The standout miss was Mac revenue, which was the first decline of the pandemic due to supply constraints and FX headwinds. Investors embraced Apple's (NASDAQ: AAPL) slight earnings beat with both the top and bottom line. Stocks rallied after robust mega-cap tech earnings, hoping that the Fed will pivot soon, and economic data that suggests the consumer is doing just fine.