💨 Abstract
On Monday, the Japanese yen and Swiss franc strengthened against the dollar due to lingering concerns over tariffs, a potential U.S. economic slowdown, and reduced faith in the U.S. economy. The euro continued its gains after a strong week, with investors awaiting details on European spending. The Bank of Japan is expected to maintain interest rates, while regular pay in Japan saw its biggest jump since 1992, though real wages fell due to inflation.
Courtesy: theprint.in
Summarized by Einstein Beta 🤖
Suggested
Trump administration launches new 'self-deportation' app
Oil prices sink as tariff uncertainty keeps investors on edge
New York sues Allstate over data breach, alleged security lapses
Top officials brief Parliamentary Committee on foreign policy and trade concerns
Rugby-Ojomoh added to England squad after Lawrence injury
Wall St brokerages start SailPoint coverage with broadly bullish view, but see competition risk
Tanker involved in UK ship collision spilled fuel, says manager Crowley
Zelenskiy arrives in Saudi Arabia, official says
Canada's incoming PM Carney faces Trump, tariffs and looming election
Outflows of Indian aluminium boost share of Russian metal in LME warehouses
Powered by MessengerX.io