Most cryptocurrencies lost ground on Tuesday as the risk appetite weakened while markets analyze the Senate’s vote in favor of Trump’s big tax bill.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the bank would’ve cut interest rates if it weren’t for President Trump’s tariff plans.
In response to a question at the European Central Bank Forum in Portugal, he said the Fed paused its moves on interest rates when it saw the size of the tariffs, with inflation forecasts rising after their announcement.
The Fed has maintained interest rates unchanged below 4.5% despite mounting pressures from the White House.
The Fed expects two interest rate cuts by the end of 2025, with Powell even opening the door for a July rate cut based on the data.
The markets expect a 76% chance of no changes in interest rates in July.
Trump has continued to attack Powell heavily due to his stance on interest rates, and publicly announcing plans to replace him soon.
Powell’s Fed Chair term ends in 2026, while his term as member of the Fed ends in 2028.
Otherwise, earlier US data showed the ISM manufacturing PMI up to 49 in June from 48.5 in May.
Official data showed US job openings rose to 7.8 million in May from 7.4 million in the previous reading.
Ripple
On trading, ripple fell 6.7% as of 20:59 GMT on Coinmarketcap to $2.16.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the bank would’ve cut interest rates if it weren’t for President Trump’s tariff plans.
In response to a question at the European Central Bank Forum in Portugal, he said the Fed paused its moves on interest rates when it saw the size of the tariffs, with inflation forecasts rising after their announcement.
The Fed has maintained interest rates unchanged below 4.5% despite mounting pressures from the White House.
The Fed expects two interest rate cuts by the end of 2025, with Powell even opening the door for a July rate cut based on the data.
The markets expect a 76% chance of no changes in interest rates in July.
Trump has continued to attack Powell heavily due to his stance on interest rates, and publicly announcing plans to replace him soon.
Powell’s Fed Chair term ends in 2026, while his term as member of the Fed ends in 2028.
Trump’s recent attacks on Powell raised concerns worldwide about US monetary independence, while his erratic tariff policies continue to cause jitters in global markets.
Even as the S&P 500 regained its losses and reached record highs, investors remained on edge about the future of global trade and growth due to tariff concerns.
US stock indices were mixed on Tuesday, the first session of the third quarter, as markets analyze Trump’s big tax bill.
Now investors are poring over Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s speech at the European Central Bank Form in Portugal to gauge the future of monetary policies.
On trading, Dow Jones rose 0.7% as of 16:06 GMT, or 317 points to 44410 points, while S&P 500 shed 0.2%, or 12 points to 6192 points, as NASDAQ dipped 0.8% to 20204 points.
Copper prices rallied to a three-month high on Tuesday on increasing optimism about demand in China following strong manufacturing data, while the dollar weakened.
Copper prices at the London Metals Exchange rose 0.7% to $9935 a ton, after scaling March 27 highs at $9984.
A recent survey showed China’s factory activities grew in June, boosted by increasing orders after a month of contraction.
Also a weaker dollar boosted the greenback-denominated copper futures as they became cheaper to global traders.
Lower inventories also helped, with copper stocks falling at the London Exchange by 66% since mid February to 91,250 tons.
At the Shanghai Exchange, inventories fell 66% as well from early March levels to 81,550 tons.
The price premium between spot prices and three-month futures stood at $319 a ton last week, the highest since October 22, below falling to $120 on expectations of extensive deliveries.
The Trump Factor
Continuous threats by US President Trump to impose tariffs on copper imports also served to boost prices at the COMEX exchange, boosting the US premium over London prices.
As for other industrial metals:
Aluminum rose 0.4% to $2608 a ton
Zinc fell 0.9% to $2727
Lead was unchanged at $2044
Tin rose 0.4% to $33850
Nickel fell 0.2% to $15,185
Otherwise, the dollar index fell 0.2% as of 15:24 GMT to 96.7, with a session-high at 96.8, and a low at 96.3.
Copper September futures rose 1.9% in American trade as of 15:20 GMT to $5.18 a pound.