The legend in the InstaSpot team!
Legend! You think that's bombastic rhetoric? But how should we call a man, who became the first Asian to win the junior world chess championship at 18 and who became the first Indian Grandmaster at 19? That was the start of a hard path to the World Champion title for Viswanathan Anand, the man who became a part of history of chess forever. Now one more legend in the InstaSpot team!
Borussia is one of the most titled football clubs in Germany, which has repeatedly proved to fans: the spirit of competition and leadership will certainly lead to success. Trade in the same way that sports professionals play the game: confidently and actively. Keep a "pass" from Borussia FC and be in the lead with InstaSpot!
It's impossible to inject capital into an economy destabilized by politics. Capital continues to flow out of the United States, and Donald Trump's attacks on the Federal Reserve only accelerate this process. At the same time, China isn't raising a white flag over the trade war and halting U.S. LNG imports. Investors doubt that Washington's negotiations with other countries will have a quick effect and continue to sell off the S&P 500.
Plenty of time has passed since "America's Liberation Day," as the White House dubbed the day mutual tariffs were imposed, and conclusions can already be drawn. The biggest beneficiaries of the largest U.S. import tariffs since the early 20th century have been safe-haven assets led by gold. The losers? U.S. assets. The rise in Treasury yields and the falling dollar confirm they are no longer seen as safe harbors.
April may become the worst second month of spring for the Dow Jones Index since 1932. The S&P 500 has shown the weakest performance since the inauguration of any U.S. president, going back to 1928. And no matter how much Donald Trump brushes off the decline in stock indices, he continues to watch them closely. The president needs a scapegoat to explain what's happening, and he's found one in the Fed Chair. "Big loser" and "Mister Always Late" are the nicknames the Republican has used for Jerome Powell while demanding an immediate cut to the federal funds rate.
A similar story played out during Trump's first term, but the S&P 500 was rising back then, and investors dismissed his rants as eccentricity. This time, it's different. The broad stock index is sinking, and Trump's only apparent solution seems to be monetary easing. The opposite is happening: investors are fleeing, volatility is rising, and liquidity is drying up.
In April, trading volumes fell to 13.5 billion shares—well below the average of 20 billion. The market is eerily quiet, which is surprising given that April is shaping up to be one of the most volatile months. Comparable fluctuations occurred in October 2008 and March 2020—both during recessions. Today, the economic downturn seems to be more in investors' minds than on paper.
After every storm comes calm, investors await news on trade negotiations while dissecting the drama of Trump's criticism of Powell.
Technically, on the daily chart of the S&P 500, the bears are trying to reestablish a downtrend. A key condition is maintaining prices below 5190. As long as that holds, it makes sense to retain short positions opened from the 5400 level and build them up as the broad stock index continues moving south.
*এখানে পোস্ট করা মার্কেট বিশ্লেষণ আপনার সচেতনতা বৃদ্ধির জন্য প্রদান করা হয়, ট্রেড করার নির্দেশনা প্রদানের জন্য প্রদান করা হয় না।
ইন্সটাফরেক্স বিশ্লেষণমূলক পর্যালোচনাগুলো আপনাকে মার্কেট প্রবণতা সম্পর্কে পুরোপুরি সচেতন করবে! ইন্সটাফরেক্সের একজন গ্রাহক হওয়ায়, দক্ষ ট্রেডিং এর জন্য আপনাকে অনেক সেবা বিনামূল্যে প্রদান করা হয়।