Tag Archives: Hawkish

Dow Jones Futures: Market Sells Off On Hawkish Fed; These Leaders Hit – Investor’s Business Daily

  1. Dow Jones Futures: Market Sells Off On Hawkish Fed; These Leaders Hit Investor’s Business Daily
  2. Stocks slide as Fed signals it’s not done hiking rates, Nasdaq falls 1.5%: Live updates CNBC
  3. S&P 500 Gains and Losses Today: Index Falls as Fed Signals Another Rate Hike This Year Investopedia
  4. Bulls Ailing But Still Fighting As Fed Decision Looms; ELF Beauty, Duolingo, Uber In Focus – Video – IBD Investor’s Business Daily
  5. US Stocks Resume Declines As Treasury Yields Kick Higher, Chipmakers Extend Downside: What’s Driving Mark Benzinga
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The Fed will remain hawkish until inflation really does come down, says Barclays’ Michael Pond – CNBC Television

  1. The Fed will remain hawkish until inflation really does come down, says Barclays’ Michael Pond CNBC Television
  2. Fed, ECB to Raise Rates Further as Inflation Worries Trump Growth Risks, Says Exness — Interview The Wall Street Journal
  3. Inflation on a ‘glide path lower’ following JOLTs data and other signs, says Fundstrat’s Tom Lee Forex Factory
  4. Fed has hiked interest rates ‘too much,’ strategist explains Yahoo Finance
  5. Kevin Hassett: We’re going to see another inflation wave stimulated by high growth and energy prices CNBC Television
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Gold remains a strategic asset to hold as the Federal Reserve maintains its hawkish stance – World Gold Council’s Cavatoni – Kitco NEWS

  1. Gold remains a strategic asset to hold as the Federal Reserve maintains its hawkish stance – World Gold Council’s Cavatoni Kitco NEWS
  2. Gold futures end higher, but signs of more rate hikes to come limit gains msnNOW
  3. Gold rebounds as dollar, yields slip after U.S. data CNBC
  4. Gold prices struggling as Federal Reserve leaves interest rates unchanged but maintains a hawkish bias; sees potentially two more rate hikes Kitco NEWS
  5. Gold Price Forecast: XAU/USD could well rally on any data showing inflation pressures are easing – TDS FXStreet
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S&P 500, Nasdaq, Dow Erase Session Gains After Hawkish Fed Remarks: Investors Now Almost Fully Discount 25bp Hike In May – Invesco QQQ Trust, Series 1 (NASDAQ:QQQ), SPDR S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY) – Benzinga

  1. S&P 500, Nasdaq, Dow Erase Session Gains After Hawkish Fed Remarks: Investors Now Almost Fully Discount 25bp Hike In May – Invesco QQQ Trust, Series 1 (NASDAQ:QQQ), SPDR S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY) Benzinga
  2. S&P 500 ends Tuesday little changed as earnings season picks up steam: Live updates CNBC
  3. Stocks Close Slightly Higher Despite Bank Stock Weakness and Hawkish Fed Comments Barchart
  4. S&P 500 Settles Higher Ahead Of Big Bank Earnings, Market Volatility Decreases – Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), Goldman Sachs Gr (NYSE:GS) Benzinga
  5. The S&P 500 Rebounds As Reasons For Continuing Rate Hikes Lose Steam Seeking Alpha
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The Fed Needs To Send An Extremely Hawkish Message To Markets

Kevin Dietsch

It appears that the Federal Reserve is losing control of the market. Financial conditions have eased to levels not seen since the spring of 2022. This easing has led to increases in commodity prices, drops in mortgage rates, a weakening of

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Wall St stumbles after weak data, hawkish Fed comments

  • Fed’s Bullard, Mester back rate increases
  • U.S. retail sales drop in December
  • Indexes down: Dow 1.28%, S&P 1.07%, Nasdaq 0.78%

Jan 18 (Reuters) – Wall Street’s main indexes fell on Wednesday after weak economic data and hawkish comments from Federal Reserve officials sparked worries that the central bank may not pause interest rate hikes any time soon.

Before the market opened, U.S. economic data showed retail sales and producer prices declined more than expected in December. Also production at U.S. factories fell more than expected in December and output in the prior month was weaker than previously thought.

With Wall Street’s major averages showing gains so far for 2023, Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA research, said some investors saw the week data as an opportunity to take profits while others worried about the prospects for a recession.

“The market was overbought. Today’s economic data served as a trigger to initiate a profit taking spell and the groups with most profits to take have been the ones that have done best last year,” said Stovall.

By 2:14PM ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) fell 434.27 points, or 1.28%, to 33,476.58, the S&P 500 (.SPX) lost 42.57 points, or 1.07%, to 3,948.4 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) dropped 87.02 points, or 0.78%, to 11,008.10.

The weakest sectors on the day are the defensive consumer staples (.SPLRCD), down more than 2%, and utilities (.SPLRCU), which was last down 1.8%.

The benchmark S&P and the blue-chip Dow were both on track for their second straight day of losses, while the Nasdaq, if it ends lower, would snap a seven-day winning streak.

U.S. stocks had started 2023 on a strong footing, with the S&P having closed up almost 4% year-to-date on Tuesday, on hopes that a moderation in inflationary pressures could give the Fed cover to dial down the size of its interest rate hikes.

Roughly halfway through January, the S&P was up 2.7% for the month so far while the Nasdaq was up more than 5% and the Dow, the best performer of the three for 2022, was up 0.9%.

Earlier, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard and Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester stressed on the need to raise rates beyond 5% to bring inflation to heel.

The Fed commentary also highlighted the disparity between the U.S. central bank’s estimate of its terminal rate and market expectations, which were of the rate peaking at 4.88% by June. Traders are now betting on a 25-basis point rate hike in February.

“This market is very hopeful that we’re going to get a soft landing and every time you have hawkish comments from the Fed, it feels you’re not going to get that,” Dennis Dick, trader at Triple D Trading.

Investors are also focused on the fourth-quarter earnings season as a window into how corporate America is doing against the backdrop of higher interest rates.

Analysts now expect year-over-year earnings from S&P 500 companies to decline 2.6% for the quarter, according to Refinitiv data, compared with a 1.6% decline in the beginning of the year.

IBM Corp (IBM.N) was down 2.6% after Morgan Stanley downgraded the company’s shares to “equal weight” from “overweight”.

Early gainers Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) and Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) erased gains by late afternoon trading with Microsoft down 1.2% and Tesla off 2.7%.

Moderna Inc (MRNA.O) rose 3.6% after reporting data which demonstrated the effectiveness of its respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine.

PNC Financial Services Group Inc (PNC.N) was down 5.4% after the company missed estimates for fourth-quarter profit.

Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 1.38-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.66-to-1 ratio favored decliners.

The S&P 500 posted 9 new 52-week highs and 2 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 71 new highs and 14 new lows.

Reporting by Sinéad Carew in New York, Shreyashi Sanyal and Amruta Khandekar in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Shubham Batra; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta and David Gregorio

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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S&P 500 slips as hawkish rate view, labor data weigh

  • Fed’s Bullard backs more rate hikes
  • Cisco rises after co raises full-year outlook
  • Macy’s jumps on profit forecast raise
  • Indexes: Dow up 0.07%, S&P down 0.23%, Nasdaq down 0.09%

Nov 17 (Reuters) – The S&P 500 fell modestly on Thursday as hawkish comments from a U.S. Federal Reserve official and data showing the labor market remained tight led some investors to worry about more aggressive interest rate hikes.

Equities fell sharply early in the session and then rebounded, with the Dow last edging higher, supported by an upbeat earnings outlook from Cisco Systems (CSCO.O).

Stocks have retreated in recent days after a strong month-long rally after softer-than-expected inflation reports raised hopes the Fed would temper its rate hikes.

“Hope springs eternal in the equity market, and the markets have been fighting the Fed,” said Sameer Samana, senior global market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute in St. Louis.

“You have had these reversals, you have had these spectacular rallies. But yet, when you look back at the full year 2022, you have had lower highs and lower lows and there’s nothing to suggest that we have broken that pattern.”

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) rose 22.8 points, or 0.07%, to 33,576.63, the S&P 500 (.SPX) lost 9.27 points, or 0.23%, to 3,949.52 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) dropped 9.73 points, or 0.09%, to 11,173.93.

St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said the central bank needs to keep raising rates given that its tightening so far “had only limited effects on observed inflation.”

Data showed the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits fell last week, suggesting the labor market remained tight, after a report on Wednesday detailed strong retail sales growth last month that indicated the economy has weathered rate hikes.

Bets from traders of a 75 basis point hike at the Fed’s next meeting climbed to 19% from about 15% a day earlier, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool, with the remaining odds placed on a smaller 50 basis point increase.

Cisco shares rose over 4% after the company raised its full-year revenue and profit forecast with supply chain hurdles easing. The stock helped drive a 0.3% increase in the heavyweight S&P 500 information technology sector (.SPLRCT).

Most S&P 500 sectors were lower, however, with utilities (.SPLRCU) and materials (.SPLRCM) both dropping about 1.4%.

In other company news, shares of Macy’s (M.N) surged over 14% after the department store chain raised its annual profit forecast on resilient demand for high-end clothes and beauty products.

Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 2.54-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.83-to-1 ratio favored decliners.

The S&P 500 posted no new 52-week highs and 1 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 28 new highs and 144 new lows.

Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf in New York, Bansari Mayur Kamdar, Ankika Biswas and Amruta Khandekar in Bengaluru; Editing by Vinay Dwivedi, Arun Koyyur and David Gregorio

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Nasdaq leads Wall Street lower after hawkish Fed comments By Reuters

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Raindrops hang on a sign for Wall Street outside the New York Stock Exchange in Manhattan in New York City, New York, U.S., October 26, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo

By Shubham Batra and Ankika Biswas

(Reuters) – Wall Street’s main indexes slipped on Monday, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq down about 1%, as hawkish comments from a U.S. Federal Reserve official tempered hopes of the central bank toning down its aggressive monetary policy approach.

Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller, a voting member of the rate-setting committee this year, said on Sunday that markets should now pay attention to the “endpoint” of rate increases, not the pace of each move, and that the endpoint was likely “a ways off”.

The comments follow a softer-than-expected inflation report last week, which had buoyed hopes that the Fed could scale back its hefty interest rate hikes and helped drive a euphoric market rally.

The in the previous session logged its biggest weekly percentage gain in about five months, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq notched its best week since March.

In the week ahead, focus will be on a slew of economic data including retail sales numbers on Wednesday as well as speeches by several Fed officials for further clues on the outlook for interest rates.

“The market is expecting the Fed to continue its hawkish rhetoric on rates. That could all change once we get more confirmation on inflation in December,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities.

Traders now expect the Fed to hike interest rates in December by a half point, and expect terminal rate in the range of 4.75%-5.0% next year.

At 9:42 a.m. ET, the S&P 500 was down 17.25 points, or 0.43%, at 3,975.68, and the was down 115.13 points, or 1.02%, at 11,208.20.

The was down 7.84 points, or 0.02%, at 33,740.02. Gains in drugmakers including Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:) and Amgen (NASDAQ:) limited declines on the blue-chip index.

As U.S. Treasury yields edged up, technology and growth names such as Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:), Apple Inc (NASDAQ:) and Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:) slipped between 1% and 3%. [US/]

The S&P 500 information technology sector was down 1.2% and among the leading sectoral decliners on the benchmark index.

Tesla (NASDAQ:) Inc fell 3.4% as Chief Executive Elon Musk said “I have too much work on my plate” when asked about his recent acquisition of Twitter and his leadership of the electric-vehicle maker.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden met on Monday for long-awaited talks that come as relations between their countries are at their lowest in decades, marred by disagreements over a host of issues from Taiwan to trade.

Among other stocks, Biogen Inc (NASDAQ:) and Eli Lilly (NYSE:) gained 3.4% and 1.4%, respectively, after the failure of Swiss rival Roche’s Alzheimer’s disease drug candidate.

Theater operator AMC Entertainment (NYSE:) jumped 6.5% as Marvel’s latest film “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” grossed $330 million globally in its opening weekend, while Hasbro Inc (NASDAQ:) fell 7.4% after BofA Global Research downgraded the toymaker’s stock.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers for a 2.08-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and a 1.65-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.

The S&P index recorded four new 52-week highs and no new low, while the Nasdaq recorded 23 new highs and 21 new lows.

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Liam Dann: Are the central banks being too hawkish?

Hawks support higher interest rates and a more aggressive inflation-fighting stance. Photo / 123RF

OPINION:

Central banks are in danger of causing an unnecessarily hard landing by hiking rates too far and too fast.

They seem to be reacting to intense pressure from an older generation that is fearful
of a return to the inflationary days of their youth.

But if central banks overdo it, the economy will crash and younger generations will suffer.

Right now we are in the most precarious part of the post-pandemic recovery.

Financial markets are manic. Commodity markets aren’t much better.

Tiny bits of news that don’t tell us anything new – like a US Federal Reserve official reiterating that inflation is bad – are having outsized impacts on sentiment.

One day Wall Street is up 2 per cent and the next it’s down 2 per cent. That’s not healthy market behaviour.

The volatility highlights risks that the US Federal Reserve could overplay its hand and spark a financial market meltdown and global recession.

Economic narratives have a habit of taking hold and spiralling until they are no longer well grounded.

There’s a good case to be made that this happened in the initial wake of Covid.

The worldwide pandemic was unprecedented in living memory, assumptions were made about what it would do to economic demand.

A fearful narrative took hold, resulting in what – with hindsight – was too much stimulus for too long.

While the rapid end of monetary stimulus and steep rise in rates was clearly needed, the momentum now is so hawkish that we risk over-correcting.

Central bankers are engineering an economic downturn to bring supply and demand back into balance.

It is a complex piece of economic surgery which, as usual, they have to do with a hammer.

We need to see inflation peak and ease.

But a financial crash, or deep recession, would be a disaster in a world where pandemic stress has already stretched society into dangerously fragmented territory.

You can see the script unfolding with ominous predictability.

The US Fed is raising rates in 75 basis-point hikes and last week the RBNZ revealed it considered doing the same.

Interest rates have already been hiked at an unprecedented pace in the past 12 months.

In New Zealand, we’ve seen eight hikes in a row – five of them by 50 basis points.

Another 50-point hike is almost certain in November, which will take the cash rate to 4 per cent – the highest it has been since the global financial crisis.

But, because most people are on fixed mortgage rates of one or two years, we are only just starting to see the impact of these hikes on the economy.

According to the latest Reserve Bank figures the average fixed rate mortgage was still just 3.68 per cent as of August.

That suggests almost all the real interest rate pain is still ahead of us.

First, the higher rates have to hit people in the pocket, which dampens economic demand and then flows through to inflation.

While we await hard data on inflation later this month, economists are digging into more nuanced information for clues.

There have been some signs that the current inflationary cycle is peaking.

The ANZ Business Outlook, NZIER Quarterly Survey of Business Opinion (QSBO) and the SEEK NZ Employment report all indicate that capacity pressures in the labour market are starting to ease – albeit slightly and from record high levels.

As a topline comment on the QSBO, NZEIR principal Christina Leung noted that “business is starting to see some light at the end of the tunnel.

A reader called Ian wrote to me.

“Hi, I worked in the rail for 40 years and we were always worried that the light at the end of a tunnel could be a train coming the other way.”

That succinctly sums up the risk here and around the world.

The economy right now is actually a good one for young people who don’t yet have mortgages.

They have jobs and job mobility. They are using that mobility to advance themselves and their earning power.

Wage growth is running ahead of inflation, at 8.7 per cent.

That’s not because companies are offering up 8 per cent annual pay reviews – but because young people are able to move jobs and get promotions.

Clearly, this isn’t such a good economy for us older folk, who don’t have the same levels of job mobility and capacity to boost our incomes.

What worries me is that older people dominate the political and economic narrative.

Calls for ever more hawkish central bank policy show a lack of appreciation for the value of high employment and the long-term benefit it brings to the next generation of New Zealanders.

As a quick reminder, the whole hawks and doves thing is borrowed from the language of foreign policy – as it relates to an appetite for aggression and war.

Hawks of war, doves of peace.

In economics, it’s all about monetary supply and attitudes to inflation.

Hawks support higher interest rates and a more aggressive inflation-fighting stance, doves are more relaxed about inflation and generally argue for leaving rates lower.

Philip Lowe, Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia. Photo / File

I am suspicious of anyone who sees them self-steadfastly in one camp or the other, as I am with the most tribally minded on the left and the right of the political spectrum.

I have been feeling increasingly hawkish for about 18 months.

But it feels like the time is approaching for the hawks to breathe through their nose for a bit (or their beaks).

Across the Tasman, we saw the Reserve Bank of Australia do just that last week, surprising the market with a softer than expected, 25 basis-point hike.

Perhaps RBA Governor Philip Lowe is also suspicious about that light at that end of the tunnel.

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Stock Traders Hit Sell Button on Hawkish Fed Bets: Markets Wrap

(Bloomberg) — Wall Street got a reality check, with data showing a hot labor market that will likely keep the Federal Reserve on its aggressive hiking trail. Those bets sent stocks tumbling and drove 10-year US yields to their longest weekly up streak since 1984.

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To David Donabedian at CIBC Private Wealth US, the report puts an “an exclamation point” on the idea that the market-bottoming process is going to be “a long one”. In this “bizarro world” of big hikes, traders may see the solid data as a reason to brace for turmoil, says Callie Cox of eToro. The conclusion for Brown Brothers Harriman’s Win Thin is that a 75-basis-point Fed boost in November is a “done deal,” with another increase of that size in December becoming a “real possibility.”

Almost 95% of the companies in the S&P 500 fell. The slide came just a few days after the gauge notched its biggest back-to-back rally since the onset of the pandemic amid a debate on whether the Fed would be closer to “peak hawkishness.” Those gains gave the measure its best week in a month even with the post-jobs plunge. The Nasdaq 100 sank nearly 4% Friday.

Ten-year yields approached 3.9% amid their 10th consecutive weekly rise. The dollar advanced. The swap contract for the November Fed meeting priced in nearly 75 basis points of tightening. Market-implied expectations for where the rate will peak also increased, with the derivative contract for the March gathering trading around 4.66%. The current range for the benchmark rate stands between 3% and 3.25%.

Resolutely Hawkish

Fed Bank of New York President John Williams said rates need to rise to around 4.5% over time, but the pace and ultimate peak of the tightening campaign will hinge on how the economy performs. Several officials, in separate remarks this week, delivered a resolutely hawkish message that price pressures remain elevated and they won’t be deterred from raising rates by volatility in financial markets.

Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers said it’s important for the Fed to deliver on the further monetary tightening it has signaled, even in the face of financial risks stemming from its actions.

All eyes will now be on next week’s US inflation data after a hotter-than-expected reading in August tempered hopes of a nascent slowdown. Separately, minutes from the Fed’s September meeting will give clues into the central bank’s tolerance for economic pain.

Amid fears of a looming recession, investors poured the most money into cash since April 2020, but stocks could see further declines as they don’t fully reflect that risk, according to Bank of America Corp. strategists. Their report cited EPFR Global data showing cash funds received nearly $89 billion in the week through Oct. 5 — while investors withdrew $3.3 billion from global stock funds.

Wall Street is “rebelling against” policy tightening, the strategists led by Michael Hartnett wrote before the labor-market report.

From a technical perspective, the fact that the S&P 500 remains oversold enough alongside bearish sentiment may warrant “more rally efforts” that could materialize as early as next week, according to Dan Wantrobski at Janney Montgomery Scott.

“The data being reported alongside our proprietary cycle work to date gives us confidence that we are on the right track in anticipating more of a ‘U’-shaped market bottom and recovery in the months ahead (into 2023),” he added. “We believe the floor will be established at some point in the weeks/months ahead — but for now, investors should continue to expect a very choppy glide path due to significant macro overhang.”

More comments on jobs:

Jeffrey Roach, chief economist at LPL Financial:

“In a word: ‘frustrating.’ As long as job gains are strong, the markets should expect aggressive rate hikes by the Federal Reserve.”

Michael Shaoul, chief executive officer at Marketfield Asset Management:

“This report should keep expectations of any ‘dovish pivot’ at bay, and underlines our concerns that any shift in policy is much more likely to be provoked by much worse financial market conditions than a soft landing in the underlying US economy.”

Shawn Cruz, head trading strategist at TD Ameritrade:

“The market has been in a ‘bad-news-is-good-news’ mentality and there’s really no bad news in this report. It’s a solid jobs report, but it’s not what the market wants to see because it doesn’t give the Fed a reason to pause or shift away from its hawkish intentions.”

Ronald Temple, managing director at Lazard Asset Management:

“While job growth is slowing, the US economy remains far too hot for the Fed to achieve its inflation target. The path to a soft landing keeps getting more challenging. If there are any doves left on the FOMC, today’s report might have further thinned their ranks.”

Seema Shah, strategist at Principal Global Investors:

“Today’s job number is a hawkish reading. With the Fed’s dot plot pointing to policy rates closer to 5% than 4% next year, we have a market that is wishing for the economy to slow quickly. That’s when you know there is only one path ahead: risk assets have further to fall.”

Ian Lyngen, head of US rate strategy at BMO Capital Markets:

“On net, it was a strong enough read to keep a 75 bp Nov hike as the path of least resistance, but the deceleration in wage growth YoY adds to the case for a slowed hiking pace to 50 bp in December, and we still expect the final 25 bp hike in February to reach terminal.”

Some of the main moves in markets:

Stocks

  • The S&P 500 fell 2.8% as of 4 p.m. New York time

  • The Nasdaq 100 fell 3.9%

  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 2.1%

  • The MSCI World index fell 2.4%

Currencies

  • The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.4%

  • The euro fell 0.5% to $0.9739

  • The British pound fell 0.7% to $1.1080

  • The Japanese yen fell 0.2% to 145.36 per dollar

Cryptocurrencies

  • Bitcoin fell 2.9% to $19,461.43

  • Ether fell 2.7% to $1,327.55

Bonds

  • The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced six basis points to 3.89%

  • Germany’s 10-year yield advanced 11 basis points to 2.19%

  • Britain’s 10-year yield advanced seven basis points to 4.24%

Commodities

  • West Texas Intermediate crude rose 4.6% to $92.48 a barrel

  • Gold futures fell 1% to $1,703 an ounce

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