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Before trading: the market bet that non-farmers were stronger than expected Dow futures rose 0.03%
U. S. stock index futures rose slightly before Friday's trading, and Friday will usher in a major U. S. non-farm payrolls report. After the previous two data were quite different from expectations, it has become extremely difficult to predict non-farmers. As of press time, Dow futures are up 0.03%, S & P 500 futures are up 0.1%, and Nasdaq futures are up 0.4%. The FTSE 100th index in the UK rose 0.2 per cent, Germany's DAX index rose 0.3 per cent and France's CAC-40 index fell 0.02 per cent. The dollar remained strong on Friday, hitting a new three-month high of 92.70 at one point, up nearly 1% so far this week. Gold rose by more than 17.
U.S. oil rebounded to $75, and the market was nervous before the evening OPEC+ meeting
Original title: US oil stepped back at $75. Market nerves were tight before the evening OPEC+ meeting. In the middle of the European market on Friday (July 2), US crude oil futures prices fell slightly back to $75. Earlier, ministers of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies postponed a meeting on production policy because the UAE rejected plans to increase crude oil by 2 million barrels per day in the second half of this year. As of press release, U.S. crude oil futures were reported at $75.16 per barrel, down 0.09%, while Brent crude oil futures were reported at $75.74 per barrel, down 0.13%. The source said that the UAE did not agree to the proposal to increase production, the country said
Us Treasuries outperform the global bond market because the market has a different view of the Fed turning eagle.
The hawk of monetary policy outlook is usually bad for bonds, but US Treasuries gave a very different picture in June. Since the federal reserve advanced its interest rate hike forecast on June 16, the Barclays treasury total return index has risen 0.5%, ranking first among the top 30 comparable bond indices in the world. The Fed's shift to hawks has cast doubt on its commitment to tolerate rising inflation and fears that raising interest rates faster than expected could put pressure on the economy. Shorter-term Treasuries suffered a sell-off-the yield on US two-year Treasuries rose from 0.14 per cent to 0.25 per cent, the biggest increase in more than a year, but inflation expectations fell.
Atlanta Fed President: it will take some time for the United States to meet its employment target
Raphael Bostic, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, said that although the United States has "actually fully recovered" from the epidemic in terms of gross domestic product, employment "will take some time to get back" and is now about 9 million to 10 million jobs lower than the pre-epidemic trend. He says children can begin to receive clearer signals when they return to school decision-making levels in September. He said inflation was not out of control, "but we need to pay attention" and that companies' long-term expectations for inflation "have not changed."
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