As you might have noticed, oil prices got a bump over the past 8 days from two things: 1) war, and 2) a headline out of Saudi Arabia that suggested Riyadh backs the extension of production cuts. Of course we also got the weekly API
Weakness seems to be setting in once again with miners & precious metals about the only exception. That said, we may well rip higher Monday. Dips have been bought, but the world is in a tumultuous place going into this long
Consumers are happy with falling prices but the Fed sure isn’t (assuming, of course, prices are really falling). The Econoday consensus estimate was the CPI would be flat, instead, the BLS reports a decline of 0.3%. This is the first month-over-month CPI
:54 The rate cut wasn’t on the table yesterday as economic data in Canada has improved. The slightly hawkish stance of BOC’s chief Poloc reflected on the USD/CAD, sending the dollar down straight to W L5 support. At this point,
This week, the price of gold reached five-month highs.|What does it mean for the gold market? It has been a good week for the gold market. The London price of yellow metal reached $1,284 on Thursday, the highest since November
Talking Points: Commodities digest as Good Friday holiday drains liquidity Gold prices may edge higher if US CPI falls short of forecasts Crude oil prices stuck as futures markets shutter for the week Commodities marked time as trading activity fizzled ahead of
The price of gold entered 2017’s Easter long weekend on a five-month high in response to a cascade of geopolitical events and mid-week comments by United States President Donald J. Trump. With the precious metal inching toward the psychological barrier of $1,300
Written by Brett Owens (ContrarianOutlook.com) Most dividend stock prices are on the high side, but, believe it or not, there are a few quality dividend growers that are still pretty cheap…There aren’t many firms growing their payout meaningfully every year
As a market built on Trump rally optimism meets a legislative reality that might not be able to get much done, including any meaningful tax reform, where does one invest in a market environment which Goldman Sachs now categorizes as “Gridlock”