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CNBC’s Jim Cramer explains what the Fed’s rate cuts means for stocks.
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GBP/USD rebounds following Fed’s third straight rate trim
GBP/USD punched a fresh hole into seven-week highs on Wednesday, rising back into the 1.3400 neighborhood after the Federal Reserve (Fed) delivered a widely expected third straight interest rate cut. -
RBC forecasts gold to average $4,600 in 2026 and hit $5,100 in 2027
The precious metals analysts at RBC Capital Markets are out with a massive call, forecasting more upside for gold over the next two years.
Despite gold already ripping 60% higher year-to-date in 2025, RBC believes the rally has continued legs. They argue that central bank buying and investment demand have fundamentally reinforced gold’s value as a non-sovereign asset.
The new price deck:
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2026 Average: $4,600/oz
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2026 Year-End: $4,800/oz
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2027 Average: $5,100/oz
The 4 Key Drivers
RBC outlines four themes underpinning this bullish view:- Geopolitics: “Hostile global policy” is dividing economies and reshaping growth outlooks.
- AI Impact: Technological change is adding to uncertainties regarding inflation and growth.
- Monetary Policy: Softer policy is on the horizon, even with inflation sticking above target.
- The Debt Trap: High government indebtedness and budget deficits remain an “enduring headwind.”
Perhaps the most interesting note for equity traders is RBC’s take on miner behavior. Historically, producers act pro-cyclically—spending recklessly on M&A and capex when prices rise, which destroys returns.
RBC says this time is different.
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Producers are focused on deleveraging and dividends.
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Sector net debt to EBITDA is sitting at zero (that’s right 0.0x)
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2026 margins are forecast at an impressive $1,470/oz (that’s 7x higher than 2023).
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Reserves are being calculated conservatively at <$2,000/oz (less than 50% of current spot prices).
Stock Moves: Royalty plays get the nod
With the new commodity deck, analyst Josh Wolfson is shuffling the ratings. He views royalty companies as trading at attractive valuations and better insulated from cost risks than the producers.Upgrades:
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Franco Nevada (FNV): Upgraded to Outperform (Target raised to $250 from $225).
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Why? Valuation is supportive. The Cobre Panama mine restart discussions in early 2026 are a key catalyst, though uncertainty remains. Even without it, the base case is stable.
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Wheaton Precious Metals (WPM): Upgraded to Outperform (Target raised to $130 from $115).
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Why? Growth is about to kick in. RBC sees ramp-ups culminating in high growth from 2027-2031. They forecast WPM to deliver >45% growth by 2030.
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Downgrades:
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Agnico Eagle (AEM): Downgraded to Sector Perform (Target $205).
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Why? “Growth also comes at a price.” While the pipeline is high-quality, RBC warns that consensus estimates aren’t factoring in the heavy capex (RBC @ $2.9b vs street $2.1b) needed to deliver it.
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This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
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USD/JPY slumps to near 156.00 after Fed cuts rates
The USD/JPY pair tumbles to near 156.00 during the early Asian session on Thursday. The US Dollar (USD) weakens against the Japanese Yen (JPY) after the Federal Reserve (Fed) lowered interest rates in a widely expected move. The US weekly Initial Jobless Claims data are due later on Thursday. -
Shares of Oracle fall 10% the questions about AI spending continue
he numbers are out for Oracle’s Q2 fiscal 2026, and the market reaction is ugly. Shares are down more than 10% in after-hours trading and still struggling to find a base as $200 gave way.
Here is the data:
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EPS: $2.26 vs $1.64 expected
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Revenue: $16.06bn vs $16.19bn expected
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Cloud Infrastructure Revenue: +68% y/y
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Software License Revenue: -21% y/y
This is a classic case of “the bottom line doesn’t matter if the growth story has holes.” The big turnabout in sentiment is the huge AI spending commitments and the wisdom of them.
That thinking briefly led founder Larry Ellison to be the world’s richest man in September but that’s clearly marked the top and shares are down 43% since, including the after-hours drop.
On the surface, a 62-cent beat on EPS looks fantastic. In reality, it was due to a one-time $2.7 billion gain on the sale of chip designer Ampere to SoftBank for $6.5 in March. Given the performance of chip makers, that sale may have been unwise and it cuts off a potential major win for Oracle.
Investors have grown concerned about the amount of debt the company is taking on to fund a $300 billion commitment for OpenAI and other generative AI investments. Oracle is forecasting $50 billion in full-year capital expenditures, from $35 billion in September. That’s sure to rise further next year.
The legacy business also isn’t exactly healthy with software license revenue down 21%. That is a massive drag. It tells you that while the cloud business is booming (up 68%), it’s cannibalizing the old cash-cow business quickly.
Total software revenue was actually down 3%. That is not what you want to see when you are trying to pitch yourself as a high-growth AI play.
The Price Action
ORCL was already heavy coming into this print, down about 25% from the highs over the last month. The bulls were praying for a blowout to reverse the trend. They didn’t get it.
The stock is trading down below the $200.00 handle and that will be the level to watch when the market re-opens.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
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Canadian Dollar makes fresh headway following another Fed rate cut
The Canadian Dollar (CAD) found fresh 11-week highs against the US Dollar (USD) on Wednesday. The Bank of Canada (BoC) held interest rates steady, while the Federal Reserve (Fed) delivered its third straight interest rate cut, propping up the Loonie and sending the Greenback lower. -
Canadian Dollar makes fresh headway following another Fed rate cut
The Canadian Dollar (CAD) found fresh 11-week highs against the US Dollar (USD) on Wednesday. The Bank of Canada (BoC) held interest rates steady, while the Federal Reserve (Fed) delivered its third straight interest rate cut, propping up the Loonie and sending the Greenback lower. -
Coca-Cola taps COO Henrique Braun to replace James Quincey as CEO in 2026
Quincey has led Coca-Cola since 2017, seeing the company through the Covid pandemic and a focus on healthier beverages. -
EUR/USD hits 8-week high near 1.1700 propelled by Fed’s dovish cut
EUR/USD surged over 0.59% on Wednesday as the Federal Reserve cut rates as expected, in a perceived “dovish hold” which prompted traders to ditch the Dollar and buy the shared currency. At the time of writing, the pair trades near daily highs of 1.1695, after bouncing off daily lows of 1.1620. -
What’s priced in for the Federal Reserve after today’s rate cut
As expected, the FOMC pulled the trigger on a 25 basis point cut today, bringing the Fed Funds target range down to 3.50% – 3.75%.
Looking ahead, the market sees a pause in January followed by a slow grind lower.
Here is the clean breakdown of the implied probabilities:
January 28 meeting
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Pricing: -5.5 bps
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Implied Probability: 22% chance of a cut.
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Powell clearly indicated that the plan is to wait before moving again but the market saw how he said the same thing and folded in December. If the jobs numbers come in weak and CPI slips, they will cut again.
April 29 meeting, the next cut arrives
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Pricing: -21.3 bps
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Implied Probability: 85% chance of a 25 bps cut.
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The dots point to a cut in 2026 and April is when the odds rise significantly. The base case is for a cut here or in June.
July 29: Moving Toward 3.25%
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Pricing: -39.8 bps
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Implied Probability: 100% chance of 1 cut + 59% chance of a 2nd cut (cumulative from today).
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H2 is where it starts to get tricky as the Fed funds curve always prices in some tail risks but there is a clear bias towards a second cut that’s full priced late in the year
October 28 – December 09: The Destination
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Pricing: -53.3 bps (Oct) / -52.2 bps (Dec)
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Implied Probability: 100% chance of 2 full cuts and a 25% chance of a third.
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Part of the dovish prices we see further out is based on who will be the next Fed chair. Betting markets have Hassett at about 75% right now and Trump is interviewing candidates this week. The bigger question is how much would a dovish chair be able to sway policy.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
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