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Oil prices are trading almost flat this morning, with the market focused on Friday’s Trump-Putin meeting. OPEC’s expectations of increasing output to ease a supply shortfall next year further weighed on prices, ING’s commodity experts Ewa Manthey and Warren Patterson note.
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The path of least resistance is not always the right one – Commerzbank
Following the US President’s announcement on Monday night of a de-escalation in the tariff conflict with China, it was no surprise that the USD was able to recoup its losses from Friday. For weeks, we have been discussing when EUR-USD will finally break through the 1.18 level on a sustained basis. -
EUR: French headaches remain – ING
Unless major USD-negative news comes from the US (macro or tariffs), we doubt the euro will stage any idiosyncratic rebound before getting any clarity on French politics, ING’s FX analyst Francesco Pesole notes. -
Gold steadies above $4,1,00 as safe-haven demand offsets risk-on mood, USD uptick
Gold (XAU/USD) reverses an intraday slide to levels below the $4,100 mark and trades with positive bias during the first half of the European session, though it remains below the all-time peak touched earlier this Tuesday amid mixed fundamental cues. -
WTI Oil drops to the $58.00 area as global trade fears resurface
The US benchmark West Texas Intermediate Oil has lost nearly $1 per barrel on Tuesday, retreating to levels near $58.00, right above the five-month lows of $57.90 hit last week, hammered by growing trade tensions between the US and China.The world’s two major economies have opened a new front in the -
Yen Correction Extends Amid Mixed Signals
The USD/JPY pair is being influenced by conflicting forces. The US dollar finds support from expectations that the Federal Reserve will maintain its hawkish hold on interest rates, coupled with diminished demand for traditional safe-haven assets. Conversely, the market remains cautious of potential currency intervention by the Bank of Japan as the exchange rate nears […]
The post Yen Correction Extends Amid Mixed Signals appeared first on Action Forex.
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Yen Correction Extends Amid Mixed Signals
The USD/JPY pair is being influenced by conflicting forces. The US dollar finds support from expectations that the Federal Reserve will maintain its hawkish hold on interest rates, coupled with diminished demand for traditional safe-haven assets. Conversely, the market remains cautious of potential currency intervention by the Bank of Japan as the exchange rate nears […]
The post Yen Correction Extends Amid Mixed Signals appeared first on Action Forex.
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Dow Jones futures lose ground due to renewed US-China trade concerns
Dow Jones futures fall 0.48% to trade below 46,100 during European hours on Tuesday, ahead of the opening of the United States (US) regular session. The S&P 500 futures slip 0.72% to move below 6,650, while Nasdaq 100 futures decline 0.91% to trade around 24,700 at the time of writing. -
USDJPY Technical Analysis: The focus remains on US-China headlines
Fundamental Overview
The USD came under some
pressure on Friday as the risk-off sentiment caused by Trump’s threat of
substantially increasing tariffs on China weighed on Treasury yields. Over the
weekend, we had more soothing comments from Trump and other US officials which
triggered a recovery in risk sentiment.The positive mood weighed a
bit on the greenback but eventually the risk mood deteriorated again as US
Treasury Secretary Bessent poured some cold water on the weekend hype and the
Chinese imposed special port fees on US related vessels as countermeasures
against the US previous port fees.Domestically, nothing has
changed for the US dollar as the US government shutdown continues to delay many
key US economic reports. The dollar “repricing trade” needs strong US data to
keep going, especially on the labour market side, so any hiccup on that front
is likely to keep weighing on the greenback.The market pricing shifted
more dovish after the latest US-China escalation with 48 bps of easing by
year-end and 122 bps cumulatively by the end of 2026. The BLS announced last
week that despite the shutdown, it will release the US CPI report on October 24,
so that’s going to be a key risk event.In case we get hot data, we
will likely see a hawkish repricing in interest rates expectations with the
December cut being priced out. Conversely, a soft report shouldn’t change much
in terms of pricing, but it will likely weigh on the greenback anyway. This
will of course be taken in context of the US-China relations by then.On the JPY side, the
currency strengthened following the risk-off sentiment triggered by the US-China
escalation. Domestically, Takaichi is having some trouble securing enough votes
to become the next Prime Minister after the loss of Komeito support. The voting
is expected to take place next week. On the monetary policy side, nothing has
changed. Traders are assigning just a 18% probability of a rate hike at the
October meeting given the political uncertainty and 33% chance of a rate hike
by year-end.USDJPY
Technical Analysis – Daily TimeframeOn the daily chart, we can
see that USDJPY eventually rejected the top trendline around the 153.00 handle
and pulled back into the support zone around the 151.00 handle. There’s not
much else we can see here but the buyers will likely continue to step in around
the support, while the sellers will look for shorts around the top trendline.USDJPY Technical
Analysis – 4 hour TimeframeOn the 4 hour chart, we can
see more clearly the recent price action with the pullback into the support
zone and the bounce following the positive weekend comments from Trump and
other US officials. Bessent’s comments and the Chinese countermeasures triggered
some risk-off again.USDJPY Technical
Analysis – 1 hour TimeframeOn the 1 hour chart, we can
see that we have a minor resistance zone around the 152.50 level. This is where
we can expect the sellers to step in with a defined risk above the zone to
position for a break below the 151.00 support. The buyers, on the other hand,
will look for upside breakouts to target new highs. The red lines define the average daily range for today.Upcoming
CatalystsToday we have Fed Chair Powell speaking
although he’s unlikely to change his stance given that we haven’t got anything new
on the data front. For now, we know that only the US CPI will be published
despite the shutdown, which is scheduled for Friday October 24.This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.
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Bitcoin vs. Gold: Which Is the Better Hedge Against Inflation?
Inflation is a thief. It sneaks into your pocket at night, light on its feet, and by the time you wake up your money has less bite. Bread costs more. Rent climbs. Gas makes you wince. Everyone knows the feeling. The world keeps turning, but your paycheck seems to shrink. So what do you do? You find something that fights back.
For centuries that answer was gold. People hoarded it, wore it, buried it. Armies marched to steal it. Kings minted it into coins. When paper money failed, gold stood tall. Now there is a new challenger. Bitcoin. Born in the wreckage of the 2008 crash, it has grown from an experiment into a global phenomenon. And now the argument begins. Is gold still the hedge against inflation, or has Bitcoin stolen the crown?
The Allure of Bitcoin in an Inflated World
Pull up the current Bitcoin price on OKX and you will see it trading around 113,000 dollars. That number should stop you in your tracks. From nothing to six figures in a little over a decade. It is proof, to believers at least, that Bitcoin is more than hype. They see a hedge built on hard rules. Twenty one million coins and not one more. Scarcity baked into the code itself. Governments can print dollars until they drown. Bitcoin does not bend.
Gold is scarce too. Mines dig deeper every year to find less and less. But it is still out there, waiting to be pulled from the ground. Bitcoin is different. Its supply is written into math. You can argue about whether that makes it better or worse, but you cannot argue that it is predictable. And that predictability is what draws so many to it in times when money is soft.
Gold, the Old Warrior
Gold needs no introduction. It has survived empire after empire. Pharaohs, conquistadors, bankers, all measured their wealth in its shine. It never rusts. It never disappears. It does not need a battery or a network. It sits heavy in your hand, a lump of metal that has carried value across thousands of years.
But gold has its flaws. It is slow. It does not earn yield unless you lend it. It does not multiply. It stores. That is its purpose. For a hedge, storage can be enough. Yet if you want growth, gold does not deliver the way Bitcoin has. From the 1980s to the early 2000s, gold barely moved while inflation kept climbing. The hedge worked, but only in the sense that it did not collapse.
Bitcoin’s Volatility
Let’s be blunt. Crypto is not steady. It climbs like a rocket and then plunges without warning. In 2018 it lost more than 80 percent of its value. In 2022 it shed over half its peak. That is not the calm haven most people want when inflation hits.
Yet volatility has another side. Every crash so far has been followed by a recovery. And each recovery climbed higher than the last. Over time, the curve has pointed up. Sharp drops for those who panic. Sharp gains for those who wait. If gold is the tortoise, Bitcoin is the hare. Wild, unpredictable, but capable of covering far more ground.
Tradition Against Technology
Gold carries weight you cannot ignore. Nations hold it in vaults. Religions crown it in temples. People wear it for love and status. You cannot sweep away thousands of years of trust. Bitcoin cannot match that cultural memory.
What Bitcoin brings is code. Pure scarcity. No temple, no vault, no politician deciding how much exists. A network of machines that all enforce the same rule. Twenty one million and done. It is the first asset in history with absolute scarcity. And that is something gold, for all its history, cannot claim.
Numbers That Matter
From 1971 to today, gold rose from less than 100 dollars an ounce to more than 3,000. That beats inflation. It proved itself. But look at Bitcoin. From under 1,000 dollars in 2017 to more than 113,000 now. Nothing in modern markets has moved like that. If you measure purely by protection against inflation, Bitcoin’s record so far is staggering.
Of course, those numbers hide pain. Buy at the wrong moment and you could wait years just to get back to even. With gold, that pain is smaller. It may drift, but it rarely collapses in the same way.
The Choice
Which works better? The answer depends on what you want. If you want peace of mind, gold is the safer pick. It will not vanish. It will not lose 80 percent in a year. If you want growth, Bitcoin is unmatched. But you must accept the risk, the swings, the gut punches.
Many people choose both. Gold for weight and history. Bitcoin for scarcity and future. The combination hedges not only against inflation but against the uncertainty of which asset will rule the next century.
Inflation is not going away. Your dollars will keep shrinking. The real question is how you fight back. Do you choose the metal trusted since Pharaohs ruled the Nile? Or do you choose the digital asset rewriting the rules of money in real time? Both answers can work. Both have flaws. The only wrong move is to do nothing and let inflation eat you alive.
This article was written by IL Contributors at investinglive.com.
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