Abstract:Risk-aversion runs at full steam during early Monday as weekend headlines add Russia and China to the prevailing Fed-impressed flight to safety.
Increased investor risk aversion, which could increase vulnerability for banking systems with substantial net external debt. Risk-aversion runs at full steam during early Monday as weekend headlines add Russia and China to the prevailing Fed-impressed flight to safety.
The rush for risk-safety propelled the US dollar towards a fresh 20-year high, which in turn drowned prices of commodities and Antipodeans.
Gold prints the biggest daily loss in a week while Brent oil snaps a three-day uptrend. NZDUSD loses heavily among the G10 currency pairs while equities in the Asia-Pacific region, as well as during the early European session, see the red.
When it comes to Cryptocurrencies also remain unsaved from the overall pessimism and broke the short-term key supports.
Following is the list of major assets latest performances:
• Brent oil snaps a three-day uptrend to drop back towards $111.00, down 1.8%.
• Gold extends the previous weeks losses around $1,870.
• USD Index stays firmer above 104.00 after refreshing two-decade high.
• FTSE 100 drops 0.64% but DAX remains indecisive even as EUROSTOXX50 print 0.70% intraday losses.
• Dow Jones and S&P 500 declined 0.30% and 0.57% respectively while Nasdaq shed over 1.40% on Friday.
• BTCUSD and ETHUSD both remain pressured around the lowest levels since January and February respectively, close to $33,500 and $2,450 in that order by the press time.
Thirteen Chinese fugitives linked to POGO scams arrested in Pasay, Philippines. PAOCC reveals their crimes, raising concerns over illegal entry despite the ban.
Canada is striking back! If U.S. tariffs persist, Canada will impose retaliatory duties, escalating tensions in North American trade.
Recently, the yen exchange rate has once again broken through the 150 yen per U.S. dollar mark, sparking heated discussions about its appreciation.
Recently, the stability of the Naira exchange rate has become a key focus in the market. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has implemented a series of monetary policy interventions, reducing the exchange rate gap between the official market and the parallel market to below 1%.