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JPMorgan says Bitcoin looks cheaper compared to gold
The gold versus Bitcoin (BTC) debate has long divided investors seeking a store of value in uncertain times. Gold, with its millennia-old track record and physical scarcity, is often seen as the ultimate haven: a tangible hedge against inflation and geopolitical risk. Bitcoin, by contrast, represents a digital evolution of that concept: algorithmically scarce, borderless, and easily transferable across the globe. Advocates argue that Bitcoin’s fixed 21 million supply and decentralized nature make it “digital gold” for the modern economy, offering superior portability and transparency. Bitcoin appears ... (full story)
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From federalreserve.gov|Nov 6, 2025|1 commentWith fast growing combined assets exceeding $20 trillion, bank deposits and money market funds (MMFs) play increasingly important roles in monetary policy transmission and in ...
From philadelphiafed.org|Nov 6, 2025Good afternoon, everyone! I am delighted to welcome you to the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s 13th biennial conference on household finance and consumer payments. This year holds special significance because we are celebrating 25 years of the Consumer Finance Institute’s leadership in consumer credit and payments research. I’m going to brag a little bit about the Consumer Finance Institute and talk about why its work is so important. But, before I do that, I need to remind you all that these are my own views and not necessarily those of any of my Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) colleagues or anyone else in the Federal Reserve System. Twenty-five years ago, when what became the Consumer Finance Institute was first established, the norm was to physically go to a bank branch to talk to a teller or to use an ATM. Virtually everyone paid monthly bills using checks and talked to a loan officer if they needed a mortgage. The idea of getting investment advice from social media or using a smartphone to pay for morning coffee was only a glimmer in the eye of the most ardent futurists. At that time, the Philadelphia Fed’s region — Delaware, the eastern two-thirds of Pennsylvania, along with Southern New Jersey — was home to one of the largest PIN debit networks in the country. And Philadelphia Fed staff processed millions of checks from families paying monthly credit card bills. This made the Philly Fed a natural place to launch a center dedicated to advancing research on consumer credit and payments — areas of critical importance to so many facets of the Fed’s work. Over time, the consumer credit and payments landscape has changed a great deal, with technological advances driving new forms of payment and reshaping entire industries. The Consumer Finance Institute has evolved to remain at the forefront of these changes, work that has required more data-intensive strategies, new skills, and increasingly greater computing resources. In that evolution, the breadth of the Consumer Finance Institute expanded from a focus on credit, debit, and prepaid cards to encompass virtually all forms of consumer credit and most forms of payments — old and new. What has stayed the same, however, is the Institute’s goal of better understanding how people earn, save, and invest and what drives their decisions. Understanding this behavior is vital to understanding the economy as a whole. It’s easy to see why. Consumer spending represents two-thirds of all economic activity. And the decisions individuals and families make about how much to spend, how much to borrow, and how much to save reflect many things — including the resources that they have today, how optimistic they are about the future, and potential frictions in consumer credit markets. Understanding consumer behavior helps me to better understand the broader FED'S PAULSON DOES NOT COMMENT ON MONETARY POLICY, ECONOMIC OUTLOOK AT CONSUMER FINANCE CONFERENCE
From youtube.com/skynews|Nov 6, 2025Analysts - and the bank's governor - are now predicting a potential cut in December once the impact of the budget becomes clear. So where do we stand with interest rates, ...
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From @Top_Bloomberg|Nov 6, 2025*FED'S MUSALEM: LABOR MARKET IS AROUND FULL EMPLOYMENT *MUSALEM: THERE ARE SOME DOWNSIDE RISKS TO LABOR MARKET FED'S MUSALEM: THE ECONOMY HAS BEEN RESILIENT IN THE FACE OF UNCERTAINTY JOB MARKET HAS SOFTENED OF LATE BUT HAS BEEN AROUND FULL EMPLOYMENT EXPECTS ECONOMY WILL PICK UP NEXT YEAR AFTER SOFT 4Q EXPECTS ECONOMY 'TO DO WELL' NEXT YEAR TARIFFS ARE DRIVING UP INFLATION BUT… FED'S MUSALEM: UNCERTAINTY AROUND TARIFFS HAVE WEIGHED ON COMPANIES COMPANIES CLOSER TO CONSUMERS HAVE LIMITED TARIFF PASS THROUGH FED'S TWO MANDATES ARE SOMEWHAT IN TENSION LONGER TERM INFLATION EXPECTATIONS HAVE BEEN ANCHORED IS COMMITTED TO KEEPING INFLATION EXPECTATIONS…
From scotiabank.com|Nov 6, 2025The Bank of England went ahead with a third consecutive rate hold at 4.00%, meeting the expectations of nearly all economists and in line with the ~75–80% odds that markets were ...
From think.ing.com|Nov 6, 2025|1 commentIn October, the Fed cut the policy rate for a second consecutive meeting, by 25bp to 3.75-4%, but warned that a third cut at the December meeting is “not a forgone conclusion... ...
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- Nov 6, 2025 4:15pm Posted byFundamental Analysis1454
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