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- Submitted 37 hr ago|From financefeeds.com

Morgan Stanley’s E*TRADE platform has launched spot cryptocurrency trading, giving eligible clients the ability to buy, sell, and hold Bitcoin, Ether, and Solana through a partnership with crypto infrastructure provider Zero Hash. The rollout moves ...
- Submitted 37 hr ago|From scotiabank.com

The Mexican economy ended 2025 stronger than analysts had expected, with annual growth of 0.5% and a particularly resilient final quarter, when it expanded 1.6% year over year. However, this momentum did not carry over into the beginning of 2026. ...
- Submitted 37 hr ago|From haver.com

The Current Activity Diffusion Index from the latest Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey (MBOS) conducted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia jumped to 41.4 in July, its highest reading since November 2021, from 10.3 in June. The survey ...
- Submitted 37 hr ago|From mufgresearch.com

The ECB is set to leave rates unchanged at its July meeting with markets pricing only a few basis points of tightening next week. Despite the re-escalation in the Middle East and the subsequent rise in crude oil prices, even the hawks have stopped ...
- Submitted 38 hr ago|From @CENTCOM|17 comments

At 2 p.m. ET today, U.S. forces began conducting a new wave of strikes against Iran for the fifth consecutive night to further degrade Iranian military capabilities.
- Submitted 38 hr ago|From abcnews.com|12 comments

When President Donald Trump approached the podium to deliver his State of the Union address in February, one of the few people who knew what he was about to say was allegedly setting himself up to profit from the president's words. Trump's longtime ...
- Submitted 38 hr ago|From @financialjuice|15 comments

WH Press Sec. Leavitt: Iran continues to talk to the US and wants to make a deal; recent strikes are due to Iran violating the MOU.
- Submitted 39 hr ago|From @financialjuice

Fed's Schmid: Inflation is too hot and above target for too long.
The Federal Reserve, Economic Outlook and Monetary Policy It is an honor to join you today. It is great to be back in Nebraska, my home state, and I look forward to our discussion. Just two weeks ago we marked our 250th birthday as a nation. And while we, as a country, might feel young in comparison to some other nations, the truth is that throughout history there are not many institutions or governments that have endured for as long. What is it that has made the United States so successful? One important element is the federated structure of the United States. Distributed power and decision-making across federal, state, and local governments connects Americans more closely within their communities and their government. It allows for a diversity of views and experimentation in how society should be governed. America has always had a healthy skepticism towards centralization and the concentration of power that has served us well over time.
- Submitted 39 hr ago|From dallasfed.org

Good morning. Thank you, Daron [Peschel], for that kind introduction. And welcome, everyone, to the Dallas Fed’s Houston branch. I’m looking forward to my conversation with Dr. Margaret Ford Fisher, chancellor of Houston City College, in just a few minutes. As I travel through the Dallas Fed’s district, I talk extensively with workers, bankers, business executives and community leaders, just as we’re doing here today. These dialogues matter for two reasons. First, they provide nuanced, up-to-date information. I’m grateful to everyone who takes time to talk. Your perspectives help me learn how people are experiencing the economy. You teach me how national policy decisions reverberate here in Texas. And you show me what trends are on the horizon. Aggregate macroeconomic statistics can be highly informative, but there’s no substitute for on-the-ground insight. Second, public dialogue lets you hold me accountable for serving you well. The Fed is an independent central bank. Independence means monetary policy decisions focus on the long term. We are still accountable to the American people. The Fed reports regularly to Congress. Community leaders on the board of directors at each Federal Reserve Bank select and evaluate its management. And in conversations like this one, you get to tell us how we’re doing. Through all those engagements, we expect and need the public to hold us to account for fulfilling the important mission you’ve trusted us with. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) sets monetary policy to achieve two goals: maximum employment and stable prices. Congress assigned us those goals. We pursue both with vigor and focus. Everyone who wants to find work should be able to do so. Households and businesses should be able to count on low inflation so they can make ends meet today and plan for a prosperous future. In the long run, the FOMC’s two goals are complementary. They work in concert to support a strong and growing American economy. Today, I’d like to tell you why I currently believe modestly higher interest rates would better balance the outlook and risks for the FOMC’s dual mandate goals. These are my views and, let me emphasize, not necessarily those of my FOMC colleagues. The FOMC targets a 2 percent inflation rate as measured by the price inde Fed's Logan: Modestly higher interest rates would better balance outlook, risks. Fed's Logan: One month of lower CPI inflation is not enough. Fed's Logan: Downside risks to employment have faded, inflation risks are mainly to the upside.
- Submitted 39 hr ago|From economics.bmo.com

Sturdy retail sales in the second quarter suggest consumers largely shrugged off higher fuel costs. Sales rose an expected 0.2% in June following an upwardly revised increase of 1.0% in May. Sales were mixed across outlets, with autos driving the ...
- Submitted 40 hr ago|From forex.com

While USD bulls came back to life from mid-April through last month, GBP/USD has held up relatively well. The pair did test a fresh low in late-June but support held at a key Fibonacci level of 1.3143, and that’s where the music stopped for sellers ...
- Submitted 40 hr ago|From fxstreet.com

Cryptocurrencies are broadly consolidating on Thursday, while Bitcoin (BTC) retreats toward support at $64,000. Ethereum (ETH) hovers below $1,800, with its upside seemingly limited, following a macro-driven rally. Meanwhile, Ripple (XRP) sits on ...
- Submitted 40 hr ago|From robinjbrooks.substack.com

In the 3D game of chess we call the world, China is winning right now. I’m a China “hawk” for a number of reasons. For one thing, China has consistently played the role of global destabilizer since Russia’s Ukraine invasion in 2022. It’s only thanks ...
- Submitted 40 hr ago|From aljazeera.com|12 comments

The US and Iran are locked in an escalating cycle of attacks, after the fifth consecutive day of US strikes and Iranian retaliation against Gulf nations and Jordan. Both sides have declared that the memorandum of understanding they signed in June, ...
- Submitted 40 hr ago|From etftrends.com

This weekly update tracks some of the largest cryptocurrencies by market share: Bitcoin and Ether. While both are considered high-risk assets, they possess foundational differences that investors should understand. We have also included XRP, as it ...
- Submitted 40 hr ago|From oilprice.com

The global critical minerals market remains highly concentrated, and new threats to supply security have emerged in recent months as China has curbed exports of some rare earth elements, the International Energy Agency said on Thursday. The Chinese ...
- Submitted 41 hr ago|From brecorder.com

Gold fell 2% on Thursday, as escalating Middle East tensions pushed oil prices and U.S. Treasury yields higher, heightening inflation concerns and reinforcing expectations of elevated U.S. interest rates. Spot gold was down 1.5% at $4,001.17 per ...
- Submitted 41 hr ago|From decrypt.co

Federal agents have arrested a Florida man they say helped run a scheme that smuggled crypto-stealing malware into video games, infecting thousands of devices and draining hundreds of thousands of dollars from victims' wallets. Zyaire Dontaevious ...
- Submitted 41 hr ago|From think.ing.com

Just weeks ago, the 23 July ECB meeting looked like a formality — the last stop before summer break, the one meeting no one would have missed had it been cancelled at the last minute. However, the new escalation in the Middle East and the renewed ...
- Submitted 41 hr ago|From @zerohedge|6 comments

*US STRUCK AREAS NEAR IRAN'S QESHM ISLAND: MEHR