President Trump has unveiled a new proposal for a strategic crypto reserve, shifting his focus from a Bitcoin-only reserve to a more diversified approach. His plan involves a reserve comprising Bitcoin — often dubbed “digital gold” for its inflation-hedging properties — alongside Ether, XRP, Solana, and Cardano.
The tariff move by U.S. President Donald trump fueled investor worries about the impact on the economy, and also weakened the dollar as investors moved into safe haven Treasuries, pushing yields lower. The Dow Jones Industrial Average unofficially closed down 1.63%, the S&P 500 down 1.3% and the Nasdaq Composite, down 0.34%.
Parts of the U.S. Treasury yield curve are reflecting increasing concerns that the Federal Reserve will wait too long before resuming interest rate cuts as economic growth slows. The spread between yields of two-year and five-year notes is trading at around 3 basis points after very briefly turning negative last week for the first time since mid-December. This part of the curve is worth watching because durable inversions have preceded major economic contractions and stock market declines for the past 35 to 40 years, said Tom Fitzpatrick, head of global market insights at R.J. O'Brien.
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John Williams said Tuesday he expects Trump administration tariffs to drive up inflation to some degree, while reckoning that for now, central bank interest rate policy is in the right place and does not need to be changed. “My view is, based on what we know today, given all the uncertainties around that, I do factor in some effects from tariffs now on inflation, on prices, because I think we will see some of those effects later this year,” Williams said at an event held by Bloomberg in New York. The official noted that tariffs that hit consumer goods could flow though quickly to inflation while other parts of the economy might see a slower moving impact.
(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump’s trade war at least temporarily dashed individual investors’ optimism about the US stock market, setting-off a record setting stampede for the exits just after Tuesday’s opening bell. Most Read from BloombergHow Upzoning in Cambridge Broke the YIMBY MoldRemembering the Landscape Architect Who Embraced the CityHong Kong Joins Global Stadium Race With New $4 Billion Sports ParkUS Tent Facility is Holding Migrant Families Longer Than RecommendedNYC’s Finances
(Bloomberg) -- As President Donald Trump unleashes a salvo of tariffs on nations around the globe, the trading desk at JPMorgan Chase & Co. is bracing for US equities to extend losses as levies weigh on growth at home and overseas.Most Read from BloombergHow Upzoning in Cambridge Broke the YIMBY MoldRemembering the Landscape Architect Who Embraced the CityHong Kong Joins Global Stadium Race With New $4 Billion Sports ParkUS Tent Facility is Holding Migrant Families Longer Than RecommendedNYC’s F
A U.S. economy praised for its surprising resilience to a pandemic, high inflation, and rapid interest rate hikes faces a new challenge from President Donald Trump's self-declared trade war, seen by economists as a recipe for fewer jobs, slower growth, and higher prices. The fallout, assuming Trump does not backtrack in the face of falling stock markets and cracks to consumer and business sentiment, is expected to be broad, deep and time-consuming as the world's largest economy adjusts to the overnight shock of a 25% tariff on most goods coming from Mexico and Canada, both close trading partners and geographic neighbors, and an additional 10% duty on imports from China. Canada and China have announced retaliatory tariffs on U.S. imports, while Mexico is expected to do so this coming weekend.