Archives June 2025

Here’s Where Traders Expect Broadcom Stock to Go After Earnings



Semiconductor giant Broadcom is scheduled to report fiscal second-quarter results after the closing bell on Thursday, and traders are expecting a modest post-earnings stock move. 

Options pricing suggests investors expect Broadcom (AVGO) stock to move about 6.5% in either direction the day after its earnings report. A move of that magnitude would either lift shares to a record high around $273 or sink them to $240, about where they were a week ago. 

Broadcom shares were rising Wednesday, building on a six-day winning streak that put the stock at an all-time closing high on Tuesday. Shares have gained more than 30% in the past month, buoyed by an AI trade revived by Nvidia’s (NVDA) strong results last week.

Broadcom stock has registered an average post-earnings move of 13.9% over the past four quarters, and rose in three of those instances. A 6.5% gain or loss on Friday would represent the stock’s smallest post-earnings move since December 2023. 

Shares jumped more than 8% in March after reporting record first-quarter revenue amid continued strength in its AI semiconductor and infrastructure software businesses. The stock surged nearly 25% on its strong December earnings report, which propelled Broadcom into the small group of $1 trillion companies

Analysts are bullish on Broadcom’s long-term outlook but see limited upside heading into Thursday’s earnings. Of the 14 Broadcom analysts tracked by Visible Alpha, 13 rate the stock a “buy” and one is neutral. The average price target of $251.70 is about 2% below the stock’s closing price on Tuesday.



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Paul Brody, EY: How Blockchain Is Transforming Global Commerce


Paul Brody is global blockchain leader at professional services firm EY and co-author of a 2023 book, Ethereum for Business: A Plain-English Guide to the Use Cases that Generate Returns from Asset Management to Payments to Supply Chains. He speaks with Global Finance about blockchain technology’s impact on everything from routine payments to cross-border remittances to the future of banking and the CFO and treasurer roles.

Global Finance: If we look at what people are transacting on blockchains today, it’s not primarily bitcoin but stablecoin, a type of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a stable value over time. Does this surprise you?

Paul Brody: The ability of people to pay each other in dollars is hugely valuable. And to give you a sense of how big stable- coin dollars have become, last month the ethereum blockchain ecosystem did $2 trillion in stablecoin payments, over 99% of which were in US dollars.

GF: Who is actually using them?

Brody: By far the most popular initial use case for stablecoin is in emerging markets. Countries without independent central banks often experience high inflation or even hyperinflation, and so demand for US dollars is really high among the local population.

GF: And they’re being used for cross-border remittances too?

Brody: A lot of traditional cross-border systems take days to execute, and they cost a fair amount of money. If both participants have smartphones and cryptocurrency accounts, you can send dollars across borders in a matter of seconds for almost nothing.

GF: Lately, the US Treasury Department seems to be saying that the US doesn’t need a central bank digital currency [CBDC], i.e., a digital dollar. It can use stablecoin. Is that your read too?

Brody: What we need is well-regulated stablecoin. We need some regulatory safeguards to make sure that if you say there’s a dollar on-chain, there’s also a dollar in the bank account to back that up, or its equivalent in assets.

CBDCs have been flopping, mostly because central banks don’t really know why they’re doing them. I’ve talked to many central bankers, and they generally have no idea why they’re doing this other than Facebook wanted one.

GF: How will blockchain technology change things for corporate CFOs and treasurers?

Brody: CFOs and treasurers have some questions to ask themselves: Am I plugged into the crypto and blockchain system? Can I make stablecoin payments? Should I include bitcoin in my corporate treasury alongside US dollar-denominated bonds? Going further, can I automate my business contracts? My procurement? How can I run my business operations more efficiently? And if a customer wants to pay me in stablecoin, can they do so? The answer for most companies today is, no, they can’t.

GF: If you’re a stablecoin issuer, how do you make a profit on that business?

Brody: You make money with transaction fees and, potentially, your float on the interest rate. But that depends on interest rates. If rates go down really low, it’s going to be a painful business. Fees are pretty small because it’s such a competitive environment.

GF: What does all this mean for banks generally going forward? Is it going to lessen their importance?

Brody: It’s going to change banks’ role, and may diminish it. It depends on how a bank makes its money.

Banks that make their money processing credit card transac- tions are the most at risk because blockchains represent a new, more efficient way to process transactions. You swipe your credit card in a store, and you don’t see the cost of the payment, but it’s real and it’s substantial, like 3% to 4%. International wire trans- fers are usually a fixed fee, as much as $50. Stablecoin transfers cost almost nothing by comparison.

But if you’re a regional bank that does a lot of corporate finance, blockchain probably doesn’t change your business that much.

GF: What about major custody banks, such as BNY Mellon, JPMorgan, etc.? Is their business at risk?

Brody: Major custody banks are in an interesting place. They have a ton of assets, and if you’ve got assets and you control and custody those assets, you’re then in a position to help people tokenize them.

So, this new technology is certainly a threat, but it’s also potentially a substantial opportunity. At the end of the day, if you’re custodying assets and you’re now helping people tokenize them or manage them in different ecosystems, that represents the additive potential to your business.

GF: In your book Ethereum for Business, you highlight the importance of blockchain-based smart contracts. With these, one can define not only dollars but all sorts of things, even coffee mugs. Why aren’t more corporations using smart contracts?

Brody: The answer is that blockchains don’t yet have privacy built into them, and this is a huge problem. But it’s being fixed. It’s like the early days of the internet, when we didn’t have encryption. Most companies don’t feel comfortable doing business without privacy.

It’s why private blockchains have never worked. If companies had a private blockchain, they thought it ensured privacy. What they didn’t realize is that inside that walled garden there’s still no privacy. If you’re a big company and you have all your suppliers in your private blockchain, you still can’t run your procurement process there, because supplier A can see how much you’re paying supplier B, and also how much you’re ordering from them.

GF: How deep are banks going to go in providing blockchain services?

Brody: Every single bank is going to offer some kind of DLT [distributed ledger technology] service. You have stocks, you have bonds [to offer clients], and now you may add crypto. Other institutions may send cash to an ethereum address for you, instead of setting up a wire transfer to a bank address. There will be new versions of money transfer and payments, and some of them are going to be quite sophisticated.

GF: Skeptics are asking when they will see blockchain’s “killer app”: meaning an application that’s universally used, along the lines of what email did for the internet?

Brody: Stablecoins are the killer app, the one that gets everybody on-chain. The stablecoin market is about to get crazy competitive, and yield-bearing stablecoins will be widely available soon.


“CFOs and treasurers have to ask themselves: If a customer wants to pay me in stablecoin, can they do so?”


GF: All in all, is blockchain a niche innovation—useful but not earth-shattering—or is it something that can fundamentally change global finance?

Brody: It’s not only going to change global finance, but it will transform all global commerce.

Blockchain is going to become the plumbing by which all B2B transactions are done.

And the reason it’s so transformational is that historically, money, contracts, and “stuff” [i.e., goods] all were in different systems. Companies still spend huge amounts on reconciling money, stuff, and contracts. For example, it costs the average large company about $100 to pay a bill. And the reason is, somebody in procurement has to say, I’ve got this bill. Does it match the purchase order that I sent out? Do the terms on the bill and the purchase order match the terms of the contract? And so on. Imagine a future where the money, the stuff, and the terms of the contract are all in the same digital system and they all reconcile with each other. It’s done instantly. In 10, 15 years, the whole process will be universal and invisible. Back-end plumbing, right?



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Best Mortgage Refinance Companies



Investopedia’s pick for the best mortgage refinance company is Rate (formerly known as Guaranteed Rate). It performed well in nearly every area we measured, including average interest rate for refinance loans originated in 2024. If you’re looking for a lender that offers credits at closing, consider Bank of America. For a lender that frequently works with borrowers with weaker credit profiles, try Citizens Bank.

To evaluate the best mortgage refinance companies, we collected hundreds of data points from 16 top mortgage refinance lenders. We also analyzed details from tens of thousands of refinance loans originated in 2024 from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) database. We used those details to generate average interest rates, average origination fees (and lender credits), and much more. 



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Romania: New President Promises Moderate Course


A collective sigh of relief rippled through EU capitals on May 18 when former Bucharest Mayor Nicuşor Dan secured an unexpectedly strong mandate in round two
of Romania’s presidential elections, besting far-right opponent George Simion with 53.6% of the vote against 46.4%.

Dan, a 55-year-old mathematician with a sober, low-key demeanor and a reputation for competence, had underper- formed in round one; but his commitment to the EU, NATO, and supporting Ukraine convinced doubters. Voters were also put off by Simion’s pro-Russian views—Romania has a history of antagonism with Russia—and his endorsement by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who argues that Transylvania, incorporated into Romania by the 1920 Treaty of Trianon, should revert to Budapest.

Dan will have little time to relish his victory. Strong support for the nationalist right will remain a concern as the new government tackles major economic problems including the EU’s highest bud- get deficit at around 9% of GDP and falling living standards.

Political instability in recent months has damaged Romania’s profile in international capital markets—Fitch Ratings assigns it a BBB- with a negative outlook—and fiscal reform will be tougher given Dan’s commitment to eventually raise defense spending to 3.5% of GDP.

In his inauguration speech on May 26, Dan spoke of the need for change, arguing that the state was spending too much, and that inequalities within Romania—Southeast Europe’s largest economy with some 19 million people—needed to be tackled and institutions reformed. The new president said he wants to look to the future rather than the past and restore faith in democracy.

“It is in the national interest to send a message of stability to financial markets,” he emphasized. “It is in the national interest to send a signal of openness and predictability to the investment environment.”

Dan’s first priority will be to assemble a government out of Romania’s deeply fractured political scene. “The most likely outcome is a moderate coalition … with the potential addition of the Save Romania Union,” says Orsolya Ráczová, associate fellow for the Center for Global Europe at GLOBSEC. “This would provide fresh impetus to implement reforms agreed with the EU.”



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Dollar Tree Tops Q1 Estimates But Expects Profit to Dip Due to Tariffs



Dollar Tree (DLTR) shares fell sharply Wednesday morning to lead S&P 500 decliners after the discount retailer warned of a hit to its current-quarter profit because of tariffs.

The company posted first-quarter adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $1.26 on net sales that increased 11% year-over-year to $4.64 billion. Analysts surveyed by Visible Alpha were expecting $1.17 and $4.53 billion, respectively.

Comparable store sales rose by 5.4%, better than the 3.78% jump analysts had forecast.

The retailer held its full-year sales outlook steady but increased its adjusted EPS forecast to $5.15 to $5.65 from the prior $5.00 to $5.50 range, reflecting the more than $500 million in stock buybacks the company has undertaken year-to-date.

Tariffs Expected to Hit Q2 Profit

For the second quarter, Dollar Tree expects comparable net sales growth “towards the higher end” of its 3% to 5% full-year forecast. However, adjusted EPS is seen down possibly 45% to 50% year-over-year as Dollar Tree works to mitigate and absorb the cost of tariffs. The company said it expects “some earnings volatility” before adjusted EPS rises in the third and fourth quarters.

Last quarter, Dollar Tree announced plans to sell its Family Dollar brand to a pair of private-equity firms for $1 billion. Dollar Tree said Wednesday the Family Dollar sale is still expected to close in the second quarter.

Dollar Tree shares were down 9% shortly after the opening bell. They entered the day up 29% since the start of the year, including a 6% rise Tuesday after discount store rival Dollar General (DG) lifted its full-year guidance following strong first-quarter results.

UPDATE—This article has been updated with the latest share price information.



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Asana Stock Slumps as Software Maker Warns of Retention Headwinds



Key Takeaways

  • Asana shares dropped 12% in premarket trading Wednesday, a day after the company said its net retention rate “will remain a headwind” in the near term.
  • The software maker’s first-quarter results topped estimates after the bell Tuesday.
  • Executives said the company is “beginning to see some increased buyer scrutiny” and longer decision times from its customers.

Shares of Asana (ASAN) dropped 12% in premarket trading Wednesday, a day after the work management software maker warned that its net retention rate could take a hit in the second quarter.

After the bell Tuesday, the company reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.05 on revenue that increased 9% year-over-year to $187.3 million, both just above Visible Alpha consensus.

Asana’s Q1 net retention rate (NRR) was 95%, while analysts were looking for 96%.

In Tuesday’s earnings call, CFO Sonalee Parekh said the company expects Q2 NRR to be “pressured,” because of a “combination of continued downgrade pressure, particularly in our enterprise and middle-market segments and the technology vertical.”

CFO Says NRR ‘Will Remain a Headwind’ in Near Term

Parekh said that Asana is confident it will improve its NRR in the long run, but noted that in the near term the metric “will remain a headwind, which results in strong new business momentum and scaling contribution from add-ons and the channel being less prominently reflected in our overall revenue growth.”

COO Anne Raimondi said the company is “beginning to see some increased buyer scrutiny and elongation in decisions related to broader consolidation or software stack transformation efforts.”

The quarter was Asana’s first posting a positive adjusted operating margin, leading the company to lift its full-year forecast for the metric to 5.5%, up from 5% previously.

Asana shares entered the day down about 6% on the year, having mostly recovered from the drop that followed last quarter’s report, when the company announced co-founder CEO Dustin Moskovitz would be stepping down as soon as a new chief executive was named. Asana said then that Moskovitz would continue as board chair and planned to retain his shares.



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Bank of Canada meeting in focus today – United States


Written by the Market Insights Team

BoC to hold

Kevin Ford – FX & Macro Strategist

Why won’t the Bank of Canada (BoC) cut rates today? Ironically, policymakers likely recognize that a rate cut is imminent, yet lingering concerns about inflation rebounding will keep the Bank of Canada on hold, for now.

Despite weak domestic data, particularly business and consumer surveys and employment figures, the BoC is holding off on rate cuts. Stubborn core inflation and a stronger-than-expected Q1 2025 GDP have left Governor Tiff Macklem in a difficult position, limiting the central bank’s flexibility. Adding to the uncertainty, U.S. tariffs remain a key risk, with the BoC acknowledging the challenge of fully assessing their impact. However, the bank notes they are already exerting pressure on the Canadian economy. As a result, the odds of a June rate cut have plunged from 58% in May to just 25% ahead of the meeting.

Chart BoC rate cut odds next meetings

The focus today will be on the Bank of Canada’s policy announcement and press conference, with investors eager to hear from Governor Tiff Macklem for signals that the BoC may be nearing the end of its easing cycle. Meanwhile, with the Canadian dollar showing less sensitivity to the U.S. dollar compared to other G10 currencies, market watchers are laser-focused on tomorrow’s domestic monetary policy decision.

Chart FX Beta

Dollar’s modest rebound before crucial data

George Vessey – Lead FX & Macro Strategist

The US dollar staged a modest rebound on Tuesday as investors processed a mixed set of US economic data, offering fresh insights into the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) rate path. While the rebound lifted the dollar off its 6-week low, lingering growth concerns and uncertainty over trade negotiations continued to limit further upside as President Trump doubles steel and aluminium tariffs from 25% to 50%.

On the labour front, JOLTs job openings unexpectedly rose to 7.39 million in April, above estimates and March’s revised 7.2 million, reinforcing labour market resilience. However, factory orders fell sharply by 3.7%, signalling manufacturing weakness and raising questions about broader economic momentum. Today, the ADP employment report and ISM services PMI will be crucial  ahead of Friday’s non-farm payrolls report, all of which will help determine the Fed’s policy outlook and dollar’s direction.

Short-term dollar drivers remain tied to evolving Fed policy expectations, with officials signalling a preference for holding rates steady despite mounting pressure for cuts. Escalating trade tensions further complicate the outlook, with the OECD lowering its US growth forecast to 1.6% in 2025 and 1.5% in 2026, citing global uncertainty.

Beyond short-term fluctuations, a bigger concern for long-term dollar positioning is the growing unease around de-dollarization. Trump’s proposed “revenge tax”—Section 899 of his bill—introduces yet another disincentive for foreign investors, further eroding confidence in Treasury bonds and US assets.

Already, erratic trade policies and the nation’s deteriorating fiscal accounts have put pressure on dollar-denominated holdings, prompting global institutions to reassess exposure. If foreign investors perceive heightened risks, capital flow dynamics may shift further away from the dollar, reinforcing the long-term challenges facing the currency.

Chart of US job openings

Eurozone inflation below target ahead of ECB meeting

George Vessey – Lead FX & Macro Strategist

The euro faced selling pressure on Tuesday, weighed down by softer-than-expected inflation data and stronger US economic releases, reinforcing short-term headwinds for the currency. A downgraded global growth outlook from the OECD and heightened political uncertainty in the Netherlands added to investor caution. Trade policy concerns also remained in focus, with the US pushing for final offers in negotiations by Wednesday, just days after renewed tariff threats.

Ahead of the European Central bank’s (ECB) meeting this Thursday we had some interesting inflation data out of Europe supporting the case for interest rates to be lowered further. Services inflation fell to 3.2% from 4%. A sharp decline in core inflation to 2.3% and headline inflation to 1.9% in May all signal that price pressures may undershoot the ECB’s target, cementing the view that the deposit rate will be cut by 25bps to 2% on Thursday. This was one factor weighing the euro but one that could be short-lived. Trade-related uncertainties have so far had a muted impact on Eurozone growth, with global commodity price declines and euro strength against the dollar helping to cushion inflationary pressures. As price concerns ease, the ECB’s focus is shifting toward economic growth, reinforcing a supportive backdrop for the euro in the medium term.

Moreover, if we do see more of a pick-up in FX volatility, the euro is expected to benefit, as it has over the past few months, as an attractive alternative to the dollar. In the very short term, holding above $1.1285 will be key if we want to see a retest of the $1.16 handle this summer. But traders are looking beyond short-term noise and positioning for long-term euro gains as the skew trades in favour of the euro across tenors, with $1.20 a potential target by year-end.

Chart of EZ inflation

Sheinbaum to fight remittances bill

Kevin Ford – FX & Macro Strategist

Remittances sent to Mexico fell by 12% in April compared to the same month a year earlier, marking the steepest annual decline in over a decade. This drop reflects mounting challenges in the U.S. labor market, where job losses and economic uncertainty have reduced the ability of immigrants to send money back home. Additionally, growing fears of deportation among immigrant communities have likely contributed to the downturn in transfers.

Given that remittances accounted for approximately 3.5% of Mexico’s GDP in 2024, this sharp decline could have significant economic consequences. These financial inflows have long been a vital driver of domestic consumption and economic growth, particularly in households reliant on funds from relatives abroad.

Adding to the uncertainty, U.S. lawmakers are weighing a 5% levy on remittances sent by non-citizens, a proposal that Mexico’s government has strongly opposed, labeling it as double taxation. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has emphasized that all Mexicans living in the U.S. pay taxes, regardless of their legal status. She also pointed out that some states already tax remittances, calling the proposal unjust and discriminatory.

The evolving U.S. labor market conditions and shifting immigration policies may further disrupt the flow of remittances to Mexico in the months ahead, creating additional economic pressures.

Chart Mexico: oil and remittances as share of GDP

On trade-related matters, Mexico’s Minister of the Economy Marcelo Ebrard announced that the official negotiations for the early review of the USMCA will begin in late September, rather than the beginning of June, as previously expected. Ebrard clarified that the evaluation phase had already begun months ago, during which his negotiating team, alongside Mexican business leaders, has been meeting weekly with their U.S. counterparts. Both teams are conducting a deep assessment of what has worked and what needs to be changed since the USMCA was implemented, paving the way for formal negotiations.

US Dollar sustains modest rebound

Table: 7-day currency trends and trading ranges

Table Rates

Key global risk events

Calendar: June 2-6

Table Key weekly events

All times are in ET

Have a question? [email protected]

*The FX rates published are provided by Convera’s Market Insights team for research purposes only. The rates have a unique source and may not align to any live exchange rates quoted on other sites. They are not an indication of actual buy/sell rates, or a financial offer.



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5 Things to Know Before the Stock Market Opens



U.S. stock futures are edging higher as investors digest remarks by President Donald Trump on difficulties negotiating with Chinese President Xi Jinping; CrowdStrike (CRWD) shares are diving after the cybersecurity firm’s revenue outlook came in below expectations; Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) stock is surging after the company reported better-than-expected results; and Dollar Tree (DLTR) shares are slipping after the discount retailer warned that tariffs could undercut its current-quarter profit. Here’s what investors need to know today.

1. US Stock Futures Point Slightly Higher

U.S. stock futures are pointing slightly higher as investors looked past trade tensions between the U.S. and China. Nasdaq futures are 0.1% higher after the tech-focused index gained 0.8% in the prior session to move into positive territory for 2025 for the first time since February. S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average futures are showing similar gains after moving 0.6% and 0.5% higher, respectively, on Tuesday. Bitcoin (BTCUSD) is trading 1% lower at a little above $105,000. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note and oil futures are little changed. Gold futures are slightly lower.

2. Trump Says China’s Xi ‘Extremely Hard to Make a Deal With’

President Donald Trump wrote in a social media post that China’s President Xi Jinping was “extremely hard to make a deal with,” raising more questions about progress on a trade deal between the countries. The comment comes after the two sides accused each other of violating the temporary trade truce they struck in Geneva last month. That surprise deal saw the two dramatically roll back tariffs on each other’s imports for a 90-day period to give the two sides time to negotiate. Trump had set a 145% tariff on Chinese imports before dialing it back to 30% for the interim period.

3. CrowdStrike Stock Dives on Soft Revenue Outlook

CrowdStrike Holdings (CRWD) shares are dropping 7% in premarket trading after the cybersecurity firm delivered a current-quarter revenue outlook that was lower than analysts’ projections. For the first quarter, CrowdStrike reported adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $0.73, above Visible Alpha consensus, on revenue that increased 20% year-over-year to $1.1 billion, roughly in line with expectations. However, its Q2 revenue projection of $1.14 billion to $1.15 billion was a tick below estimates. The stock had closed at an all-time high Tuesday before the results.

4. HP Enterprise Stock Surges on Strong Quarterly Results

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) shares are surging 6% in premarket trading after the firm’s fiscal second-quarter results topped estimates. The server maker reported adjusted EPS of $0.38 on revenue that rose 6% to $7.63 billion, both above Visible Alpha consensus. The company’s current-quarter revenue forecast also topped projections. The results come after Bloomberg reported in April that activist investor Elliott Investment Management had built a more than $1.5 billion stake in the company.

5. Dollar Tree Stock Slips as Profit Outlook Outweighs Strong Q1 Results

Dollar Tree (DLTR) shares are falling 2% in premarket trading after the discount retailer warned that tariffs could take a bite out of its current-quarter profit. Dollar Tree forecasted that Q2 adjusted EPS could be down 45% to 50% as the retailer works to mitigate and absorb the cost of tariffs. The company’s first-quarter adjusted EPS, net sales, and comparable store sales all topped analysts’ estimates. Dollar Tree shares entered the day up 29% this year.



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Trump Says ‘Extremely Hard’ to Strike Trade Deal With China’s Xi



KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that China’s President Xi Jinping was “extremely hard to make a deal with,” the latest comment from officials expressing frustration with striking a trade agreement.
  • Trump’s comments come after the two sides accused the other of violating the temporary trade truce they struck in Geneva last month.
  • The Wall Street Journal reported that “automakers are racing to find workarounds” to the rare-earth export curbs imposed in April by China, which controls around 90% of the world’s supply of key elements like dysprosium and terbium.

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that China’s President Xi Jinping was “extremely hard to make a deal with,” the latest comment from officials expressing frustration with striking a trade agreement.

“I like President XI of China, always have, and always will, but he is VERY TOUGH, AND EXTREMELY HARD TO MAKE A DEAL WITH!!!,” Trump wrote in a post on his Truth Social media platform. 

Trump’s comment comes after the two sides accused each other of violating the temporary trade truce they struck in Geneva last month. That surprise deal saw the two dramatically roll back tariffs on each other’s imports for a 90-day period.

“Since Geneva, however, Beijing has continued to slow-walk approvals for export licenses for rare earths and other elements needed to make cars, chips and other products,” frustrating the U.S., The Wall Street Journal reported last Friday. On Tuesday, the Journal reported that “automakers are racing to find workarounds” to the export curbs imposed in April by China, which controls around 90% of the world’s supply of key elements like dysprosium and terbium.

Beijing, meanwhile, said this week that Washington had introduced “discriminatory restrictive measures against China,” including AI chip export restrictions and canceling visas for Chinese students in the U.S.



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The Fed’s Word Of The Day: “Uncertainty”



Key Takeaways

  • Fed officials on Tuesday once again emphasized their intention to wait and see how President Donald Trump’s unpredictable tariff campaign affects the economy before making any monetary policy moves.
  • Three Fed policymakers emphasized uncertainty in separate public remarks.
  • The Fed is widely expected to hold off on cutting the key fed funds rate until at least September.

In recent speeches and appearances of policymakers at the Federal Reserve, one word has been a central theme: “uncertainty.”

Two months after President Donald Trump announced his “Liberation Day” tariffs, Fed officials seem no closer to piercing the fog of the trade war that has kept them from moving the central bank’s benchmark interest rate.

Three Fed officials who spoke separately on Tuesday emphasized the need for more clarity on trade policy and how the economy will react to the tariffs before making any moves.

The officials repeated concerns they’ve voiced repeatedly in recent months: that the sweeping and frequently changing tariffs could raise prices for consumers and slow the economy.

Why Does Tariff Uncertainty Matter to the Fed?

The Fed, which sets the nation’s monetary policy, is tasked with keeping inflation under control and employment high, mainly by adjusting its influential fed funds rate, which influences borrowing costs on all kinds of loans.

The Fed’s dilemma is whether to cut the Fed funds rate from its current high level to boost the economy and stave off unemployment or keep it higher for longer to quell inflation that’s still running above the Fed’s goal of a 2% annual rate.

The answer to the impasse, so far, has been to do nothing and see what happens. And so far, neither a resurgence of inflation nor a spike in unemployment has materialized.

“There is a great deal of uncertainty out there, making it quite difficult to forecast the economy with confidence,” Raphael Bostic, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, wrote Tuesday in an essay posted online. “Given that, I continue to believe the best approach for monetary policy is patience. As the economy remains broadly healthy, we have space to wait and see how the heightened uncertainty affects employment and prices.”

Lisa D. Cook, a governor of the Federal Reserve, made similar comments Tuesday in a speech at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.

“I see the U.S. economy as still being in a solid position, but heightened uncertainty poses risks to both price stability and unemployment,” Cook said in prepared remarks. “I will continue to monitor developments closely as I consider monetary policy decisions.”

Will The Fed Cut Its Influential Interest Rate?

Austan Goolsbee, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, said before Trump launched his tariff campaign, the economy was headed in the right direction. If those conditions returned, lower interest rates would be in order, he said in a Q&A in Davenport, Iowa.

“Where we were coming into April 2 was stable, full employment, with prices coming down to the 2% target, and therefore rates would be a fair bit below where they are today,” Goolsbee said.

“But with the uncertainty, I can’t express that with too much confidence, because who knows if we wake up tomorrow and the tariffs are going back to 50% on the world,” he continued. “There’s a lot of domestic production that’s going to suffer, and we have to figure out how to deal with that.”

The Fed’s strategy has provoked fiery criticism from Trump, who has demanded lower rates. For their part, Fed officials, including Fed Chair Jerome Powell, have insisted they make policy decisions based on economic and not political considerations. They have kept interest rates the same throughout Trump’s presidency so far.

Financial markets have translated the Fed’s noncommittal message into an expectation that the central bank will hold off on rate cuts during the summer. On Tuesday, investors were pricing in a nearly 70% chance that the central bank would at least make one rate cut by September, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool, which forecasts rate movements based on fed funds futures trading data.



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