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The US Dollar Index (USDX) edged lower in early Monday trade, pressured by a firmly dovish tone surrounding the Federal Reserve’s September policy outlook. With money markets now assigning nearly a 93% probability of a 25 bps rate cut, the Greenback continues to struggle for momentum. Softer US data, including a sharp drop in the Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index to 58.6 and moderating retail sales growth, have reinforced expectations that the Fed may need to ease policy to support slowing demand. This has capped any sustained rebound in the dollar, despite temporary safe-haven flows.
Political developments added further headwinds for the USD after President Trump expanded tariffs on steel, aluminum, and semiconductors, stoking renewed trade tensions. Moreover, his remarks suggesting that Ukraine should seek a deal with Russia stirred geopolitical uncertainty, which may weigh on broader risk sentiment but has yet to provide meaningful support to the dollar.
Asian equities advanced on Monday, with sentiment buoyed by signs of potential progress in U.S.–Russia talks over a Ukraine ceasefire and growing confidence in a September Fed rate cut. Japan led the region as the Nikkei 225 and Japan 100 both climbed to fresh record highs, underpinned by strong Q2 GDP data, a weaker yen, and reassurances from Tokyo that U.S. officials were not pressuring the Bank of Japan into rate hikes. Chinese and Indian markets also outperformed as hopes of a peace deal raised expectations that Washington may ease scrutiny over their Russian oil purchases. Elsewhere, performance was mixed: Hong Kong 50 rose a modest 0.6% as of 06:00 AM GMT on the iFOREX platform, as property and tech names lagged, while Korea 200 dropped 1.48% on post-holiday catch-up selling in chip stocks.
U.S. stock futures edged higher on Sunday evening, extending last week’s gains as investors looked ahead to the Jackson Hole Symposium for fresh monetary policy cues. On Friday, the US 500 slipped 0.3% and the US Tech 100 lost 0.36%, while the US 30 slipped 0.25%, capping a week where all three benchmarks rose. Focus now shifts to retail earnings, with Walmart, Target, Home Depot, Lowe’s, and TJX among the key names set to report. Their results will offer deeper insight into consumer spending resilience at a time when new tariffs from President Trump are seen as potential headwinds. Beyond retail, investors will also monitor updates from Workday, Alibaba, Baidu, Palo Alto Networks, and Analog Devices, rounding off what has so far been a stronger-than-expected earnings season, with 81% of S&P 500 firms beating estimates.
Bitcoin eased at the start of the week, hovering near $116,000 after retreating from record highs. The token reached a new all-time high on Thursday but failed to sustain its momentum, sliding 4% on the same day before stabilizing around $117,300 over the weekend. On Monday, BTC traded slightly lower, reflecting weaker risk appetite as investors recalibrated expectations for Federal Reserve easing following hotter-than-expected U.S. producer inflation. PPI data showed a 0.9% monthly gain in July, the largest increase since mid-2022, prompting money markets to scale back bets on a 50 bps September cut and instead price in nearly a 90% chance of a 25 bps move. The dollar’s recovery weighed further on digital assets, with Ether also steady after briefly testing record highs.
Broader industry headlines kept crypto markets in focus. American Bitcoin—a miner backed by Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump—was reported by the Financial Times to be targeting acquisitions in Japan and Hong Kong to build bitcoin reserves, mirroring strategies seen from institutional players. The combination of heightened macro sensitivity and fresh institutional activity underscores the current volatility but also the deepening structural support for the digital asset sector.
Looking ahead, traders will closely monitor the upcoming S&P Global PMI data later this week for further clarity on the US growth outlook.
The euro gained ground against the dollar on Friday, with EUR/USD ending the session 0.43% higher as traders largely shrugged off robust U.S. retail sales data and focused instead on monetary policy expectations and geopolitical developments.
The pair’s advance comes despite July U.S. retail sales matching forecasts with a 0.5% month-on-month increase, while June’s reading was revised upward to 0.9%. On a yearly basis, sales slowed to 3.9% from 4.4%. Industrial production, however, disappointed, contracting 0.1% in July after June’s 0.4% rise. Meanwhile, the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index dropped to 58.6 in August from 61.7, well below expectations of 62.0, as inflation fears weighed on household confidence. Attention also turned to Anchorage, Alaska, where U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin are holding a summit.
In Europe, investors are awaiting this week’s flash PMIs and inflation data from both the eurozone and Germany. Stronger readings could reinforce expectations that the European Central Bank will pause its easing cycle, a scenario that would likely bolster the common currency further.
Gold prices rebounded sharply early on Monday, recovering from a two-week low, as expectations of a September Federal Reserve rate cut pressured U.S. Treasury yields and lent support to the non-yielding metal.
Markets are increasingly convinced that the Fed will resume its easing cycle next month, with the CME FedWatch Tool pointing to the likelihood of at least two 25-basis-point cuts by year-end. The drop in bond yields has underpinned demand for bullion, though gains remain capped by a modest uptick in the U.S. dollar and a generally positive risk tone.
Attention is also turning to geopolitics. U.S. President Donald Trump is set to meet Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday, followed by talks with European leaders on a possible peace agreement with Russia. The discussions could add volatility to safe-haven flows, with gold positioned to benefit if tensions persist.
On the data front, U.S. producer prices rose in July at the fastest pace since 2022, cooling expectations for a larger 50 bps Fed cut.
Looking ahead, investors will closely watch Wednesday’s release of the FOMC minutes and Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s speech at Jackson Hole for clarity on the central bank’s policy outlook. Gold is likely to remain sensitive to both monetary policy signals and geopolitical headlines in the coming days.
Oil prices were little changed in early Asian trading on Monday, stabilizing after a week of losses as concerns over Russian supply faded following last week’s U.S.–Russia summit.
Both benchmarks WTI Oil and Brent Oil fell nearly 1.5% on Friday, extending sharp weekly declines ahead of the Trump–Putin meeting.
At the summit in Alaska, U.S. President Donald Trump signaled a softer stance, expressing support for pursuing a full peace agreement in Ukraine rather than insisting on an immediate ceasefire. The shift reduced expectations of harsher sanctions on Moscow and eased fears of disruptions to Russian crude exports.
Trump also suggested he was in no rush to impose tariffs on nations such as China for continuing purchases of Russian oil, though he warned action could follow within weeks if peace talks stall. Meanwhile, the U.S. confirmed a 25% duty on Indian imports, effective August 27, in response to India’s ongoing Russian crude purchases.
Looking ahead, Trump is scheduled to meet Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and senior European leaders in Washington on Monday to advance discussions on a potential peace deal. While Trump promised “Big Progress on Russia” in a weekend post, analysts remain cautious, highlighting that Moscow continues to demand territorial concessions that Kyiv is unlikely to accept without firm Western security guarantees.
With the immediate threat of energy sanctions receding, analysts suggest that bearish fundamentals—such as slowing demand growth and ample supply—may once again dominate oil price direction in the near term.
The US 500 recorded its second consecutive weekly gain, even as it slipped on Friday under pressure from weaker consumer sentiment and rising inflation expectations.
The University of Michigan’s preliminary Consumer Sentiment survey for August showed a decline to 58.6 from 61.7 in July, missing expectations of 62, as households grappled with concerns over tariff-driven inflation. Inflation expectations rose, with the one-year outlook climbing to 4.9% and the five-year projection reaching 3.9%, slightly reducing the likelihood of a September Federal Reserve rate cut. Meanwhile, U.S. import prices rebounded 0.4% in July after a revised 0.1% decline in June, indicating that tariffs continue to push up consumer costs. Retail sales remained solid, rising 0.5% in July following an upwardly revised 0.9% gain in June, highlighting resilient household spending despite tariff pressures, although a softer labor market and higher goods prices could temper consumer demand in the third quarter.
U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin held face-to-face talks in Alaska, marking their first meeting since Trump returned to the White House. Trump emphasized that he would not negotiate on behalf of Ukraine, leaving decisions on territorial swaps to Kyiv while aiming to bring both sides to the negotiation table.
Earnings season continues to support equities, with FactSet data showing that over 80% of S&P 500 companies have reported positive earnings-per-share (EPS) surprises, alongside strong revenue results.
UnitedHealth Group jumped after Berkshire Hathaway, led by Warren Buffett, disclosed a new investment in the healthcare insurer. Berkshire also trimmed stakes in Apple and Bank of America while increasing exposure to homebuilders, including DR Horton and Lennar.
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