Morning Bid: Flood the zone


By Anna Szymanski

Everything Mike Dolan and the ROI team are excited to read, watch and listen to over the weekend.

From the Editor

Hello Morning Bid readers!

This week started off with a bang, and the jury is still out on whether it will end with a whimper. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell revealed on Sunday that the Justice Department was threatening to indict him, drawing broad condemnation. But then in a wide-ranging Reuters interview on Wednesday, President ​Donald Trump said he was not planning to fire Powell, while also signalling that he may hold off on intervening in Iran.

Does this mean investors can take a breath until next week? Probably not. By 2026 standards, Monday ‌is a long way away.

For starters, Trump has claimed he is in a “wait and see” mode on Iran – where over 2,000 people have been killed according to a human rights agency – and is still threatening to acquire Greenland.

The United States also seized another Venezuela-linked tanker, just before Trump met with Venezuelan opposition leader Maria ‌Corina Machado, who gave the U.S. leader her recently awarded Nobel Peace Prize.

Washington’s activity in Venezuela may mark the beginning of a broader U.S. attempt to realign Latin America geoeconomically, limiting the ability of Russia and China to use the Western Hemisphere as a pressure point in global commodity markets.

Simultaneous geopolitical flare‑ups in Venezuela, Iran and the Black Sea meant energy markets were once again front and center this week. Brent crude prices spiked 9% in the week through Wednesday to a three‑month high above $66 a barrel, only to plunge below $64 on news of Trump’s backtracking on Tehran. All the while a large supply glut still looms, creating a treacherous environment for crude investors.

Gold prices also slipped after hitting yet another record high of $4,642.72 an ounce on Wednesday. Despite this pullback, gold may have plenty of tailwinds to support further price increases this year, ⁠namely solid central bank appetite and safe-haven demand.

The Japanese yen also experienced a bout of volatility ‌this week. The currency fell on Wednesday to an 18-month low around 160 per dollar, but has since strengthened, partly on comments from Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama about the possibility of joint intervention with the United States to defend the flailing currency.

Is more yen volatility likely? Probably, for the simple reason that Japan’s economy is returning to something resembling normality for the first time in decades – and investors ‍may take a while to get used to this new reality.



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