J.P. Morgan sees a falling dollar very differently than most investors.
Foreign investors are likely to increase hedging against currency risk on their dollar-denominated holdings, adding to pressures weighing on the greenback, according to JPMorgan strategists.
By Chuck Mikolajczak NEW YORK, Feb 18 (Reuters) - The euro stumbled on Wednesday after a report that European Central Bank ...
Gold fell on Thursday, while silver slid nearly 14%, as a stronger dollar and a broad market rout prompted investors to ...
Lawyer Alan Dershowitz and comedian Bassem Youssef entered into a screaming match on Piers Morgan Uncensored, with the former ...
The year is already so jarring that many in markets barely have time to digest one seismic news event from Washington before another one hits. But a dollar risk premium appears to be rebuilding ...
Gold buyers are making a renewed push to reclaim the $5,000 level this Wednesday, following a recovery from weekly lows near ...
Selling in the Nasdaq is slightly worse than the S&P 500 this morning as AI disruption fears continue its impact on tech ...
Traders are braced for this week’s inflation reading to be higher than previously expected—triggering warnings of ...
Government Senator Marlon Morgan has accused People’s National Party (PNP) President Mark Golding over what he described as a prolonged failure to remove Dennis Gordon from Parliament’s Public ...
The rally in South African bonds is set to gain further impetus when Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana unveils his budget later this month, according to analysts at Morgan Stanley.
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