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Posted

Does not make much sense of sp500 10% up:

 

1) Tariffs on China increased to 125%

2) 10% tariffs on whole world

3) retaliatory tariffs pause only for 90 days

4) bond yields are up

5) steel and aluminum tariffs exist

6) auto tariffs exist

7) more tariffs on Pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and lumber coming

 

 

  • Upvote 1
Posted

Trump paused tariffs probably looking at bond yields rising. Also may be to get support to pass budget bill

  • Upvote 1
Posted
3 minutes ago, Hitman said:

Today's bigger story in the morning was the bond yields(which determine mortgages and actual lending rates, not the fed rates) , they moved sharply up, meaning bonds are getting dumped. US needs to sell lot of them in coming months. He eluded to this in press conference as well. everyone thought it was China but it was ally Japan and that spooked the admin to back off. Bond yields are still a worry by the way. (Lifted from others) 

President is trying to avoid upcoming Armageddon situation @~`

What is the Future direction for stock market bro?

Posted
21 minutes ago, human1234 said:

What is the Future direction for stock market bro?

Just One person One tweet making huge difference. No one knows at this point. 

  • Upvote 1
Posted
42 minutes ago, human1234 said:

What is the Future direction for stock market bro?

this is not good, low trust for now. Seasoned investors will not play this game, even crypto is not this volatile. Long term effects untayi pakka

  • Upvote 1
Posted

andaru ee Musk gadi meda unna negativity marchipoyaru, DOGE emayindo kuda pattinchukovadam ledu

Posted

Pity millions of low income worker  families all over the world affected by tariff lose sleep worrying about future, while con man plays on off games.

$1 per day worker in Vietnam never heard word tariff but loses livelihood 

  • Upvote 2
Posted
1 hour ago, human1234 said:

Does not make much sense of sp500 10% up:

 

1) Tariffs on China increased to 125%

2) 10% tariffs on whole world

3) retaliatory tariffs pause only for 90 days

4) bond yields are up

5) steel and aluminum tariffs exist

6) auto tariffs exist

7) more tariffs on Pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and lumber coming

 

 

This is just a game more bleeding next week anukuntuna

Posted
27 minutes ago, Pahelwan4 said:

This is just a game more bleeding next week anukuntuna

No more. @Sucker language లో చెప్పలి అంటే కుx చెక్కేసారు ఈరొజు మనోడికి వాడి team కి . No more games. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Hitman said:

Today's bigger story in the morning was the bond yields(which determine mortgages and actual lending rates, not the fed rates) , they moved sharply up, meaning bonds are getting dumped. US needs to sell lot of them in coming months. He eluded to this in press conference as well. everyone thought it was China but it was ally Japan and that spooked the admin to back off. Bond yields are still a worry by the way. (Lifted from others) 

President is trying to avoid upcoming Armageddon situation @~`

Trump folded on tariffs ‘under market pressure’ from bonds, Capital Economics says

President Trump folded on his tariff policy Wednesday “under market pressure” and the bond market in particular, according to Capital Economics chief North America economist Paul Ashworth.

Trump resisted the stock market decline, but “once the bond market began to weaken too, it was only a matter of time before he folded on his eye-wateringly high tariffs,” the Toronto-based economist wrote to clients Wednesday.

“Our working assumption now will be that, cowed by the market response, Trump will repeatedly extend the ‘pause,’ meaning that this will end up looking a lot like the 10% universal tariff that he campaigned on,” the note said. Neither the U.S. nor China are likely to back down in coming days, and a full rollback to the level of tariffs before Inauguration Day is unlikely, although talks between the two nations will happen. Ashworth, who began at the London-based researcher in 2001, thinks the effective tariff rate on China is likely to settle at about 60%.

Partly as a result, and even allowing for deflation effect from lower oil prices, “we assume U.S. inflation will now peak at 4% or so,” Capital Economics wrote, or double the Federal Reserve’s 2% target. “U.S. GDP growth should be 1.0% to 1.5% annualized over the next 4 quarters.”

— Scott Schnipper

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