اب سے ہم Elev8 ہیں

ہم صرف ایک بروکر نہیں ہیں۔ ہم ایک جامع ٹریڈنگ ایکوسسٹم ہیں—ہر چیز جو آپ کو تجزیے، ٹریڈ اور  ترقی کے لیے درکار ہو، ایک  ہی جگہ پر  ہے۔ کیا آپ اپنی ٹریڈنگ کو بلند کرنے کے لیے تیار ہیں؟

Fed’s Daly: Looking to see if productivity gains continue

President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Mary Daly spoke in an interview with Bloomberg Television on Monday regarding inflation and monetary policy. She mentioned that inflation has remained relatively stable in terms of goods prices. Additionally, she noted that the recent rate cuts have had a positive impact on the labor market, helping to maintain downward pressure on inflation.

Key takeaways

Inflation has been pretty contained in goods prices.

Rate cut so far has supported labor market, keeps downward pressure on inflation.

Policy in a good place.

Can't take eyes off inflation.

Looking to see if productivity gains continue.

If unpack inflation data, don't see inflation rising in services, housing, or inflation expectation.

Don't want to make mistake of holding on to rates too long.

Slowing wage growth shows it's a negative demand shock in labor market.

Asset valuations reflect higher productivity expectations, whether AI ends up to be transformative or not.

Don't see evidence that monetary policy doesn't transmit to economy. “


USD/CNH: Likely to trade in a range between 7.1200 and 7.1300 – UOB Group

Momentum indicators are mostly flat; US Dollar (USD) is likely to trade in a range between 7.1200 and 7.1300. In the longer run, USD has likely entered a range-trading phase between 7.1120 and 7.1330, UOB Group's FX analysts Quek Ser Leang and Peter Chia note.
مزید پڑھیں Previous

NZD/USD recovers from seven-month low on Chinese inflation, US budget deal

NZD/USD strengthens on Monday, up 0.15% to around 0.5640 at the time of writing. The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) finds support after falling last week to a seven-month low at 0.5605, helped by a rebound in China’s consumer prices and easing US-China trade tensions.
مزید پڑھیں Next