No Data
No Data
Is the U.S. Treasury auction triggering a disaster of 'triple kill' in stocks, bonds, and currencies? Wall Street is afraid of much more than just this!
① For Wall Street, this Wednesday undoubtedly faced another "triple kill" trading day of stocks, bonds, and currencies; ② and amid the cries of significant losses, U.S. Treasuries undoubtedly became the "eye of the storm" in the entire financial market...
The initial claims for unemployment benefits unexpectedly dropped to a four-week low, showing some resilience in the U.S. labor market under the shadow of tariffs.
The number of initial unemployment claims in the United States has decreased to its lowest level in four weeks, further demonstrating that although the uncertainty brought by trade policies is increasing, the job market remains healthy.
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon sharply criticized the "Beautiful Act": it can bring some stability, but at a cost.
Diamond urged that fiscal spending should be more "responsible", asserting that only efficient budgeting and investment can create a virtuous cycle of growth and deficit reduction, but then ironically remarked, "Unfortunately, these cannot be seen in Trump's 'beautiful plan'."
The strategies of two Wall Street giants converge: UBS Group and Goldman Sachs jointly promote consumer stocks and short interest-sensitive assets.
UBS Group and Goldman Sachs' trading departments on Wall Street recommend buying consumer Stocks and betting on interest rate-sensitive market sectors such as Real Estate.
By a narrow margin, the Trump tax cut bill barely passed in the House of Representatives.
After an all-night effort by Republicans to push the bill through, it was finally passed with a vote of 215 in favor and 214 against.
Trump is expanding the deficit, and the pressure on the dollar is greater than that on US bonds.
Deutsche Bank pointed out that under the risk of U.S. Treasury, U.S. bonds can hold up, but the dollar cannot. The reason is that overseas funds are flowing out of U.S. bonds, which, along with rising U.S. bond yields, can attract domestic Institutions to take over, providing some support for U.S. bonds. However, the dollar still faces the risk of devaluation because domestic Institutions lack sufficient overseas Assets to offset the demand gap for dollars caused by foreign capital withdrawal.