Slotly News

Daily Briefing — June 19, 2026 | Tech Leads, Central Banks Pause, and the Iran Deal Reshapes Markets

17 min · 19. kesä 2026
jakson Daily Briefing — June 19, 2026 | Tech Leads, Central Banks Pause, and the Iran Deal Reshapes Markets kansikuva

Kuvaus

US markets closed higher on Thursday, with the S&P 500 crossing 7,500 for the first time — but the rally was narrow, driven almost entirely by a tech surge led by semiconductors. Intel jumped more than 10 percent after President Trump announced the company would manufacture chips for Apple, while SpaceX fell for a second straight day as post-IPO euphoria faded. This episode covers the Federal Reserve's first meeting under new Chair Kevin Warsh, including the unanimous rate hold, the hawkish dot plot, and Warsh's decision to withhold his own projections. The Bank of England held rates at 3.75 percent in a 7-2 vote, while the European Central Bank faces pressure to hike again as soon as July. The Bank of Japan raised rates to a 31-year high and signaled more to come, even as the yen trades near 40-year lows. We break down the US-Iran interim peace deal, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and what it means for oil prices, inflation, and central bank policy. Treasury yields pulled back, the dollar hit a one-year high, and gold headed for a third weekly loss. European and Asian markets were mixed, with Hong Kong falling to a near one-year low.

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jakson Daily Briefing — June 28, 2026 | Memory Prices, Central Banks, and Tech Volatility kansikuva

Daily Briefing — June 28, 2026 | Memory Prices, Central Banks, and Tech Volatility

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Eilen25 min
jakson Daily Briefing — June 27, 2026 | Tech Reprices, Central Banks Hold the Line kansikuva

Daily Briefing — June 27, 2026 | Tech Reprices, Central Banks Hold the Line

Today’s Slotly News briefing takes a detailed look at a week when the AI trade met interest‑rate reality. We examine the sharp rotation out of big tech and semiconductors, the remarkable earnings surge at Micron Technology, and the more cautious tone around hyperscaler AI spending. Apple’s recent price increases for iPads and MacBooks and the resulting share‑price pullback feature prominently, as do the knock‑on effects across Asian equity markets. On the policy side, we cover the Federal Reserve’s latest decision to hold rates steady, the ECB’s June hike and updated inflation projections, and the Bank of England’s split vote to maintain Bank Rate. We also discuss Japan’s largest rate increase in thirty years and the yen’s muted response. The episode links these moves to government bond yields, currency trends, and inflation data in the US and euro area. Beyond markets, we touch on the EU’s AI Act and its regulatory sandboxes, M&A deals such as Berkshire Hathaway’s bid for Taylor Morrison, and the evolving IPO timeline for OpenAI. We also update listeners on oil, gas, and industrial metals, including copper’s strong performance.

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jakson Daily Briefing — June 26, 2026 | A Market Caught Between Waiting and Acting kansikuva

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jakson Daily Briefing — June 24, 2026 | Tech Rethink, Firm Policy, and Higher Gold kansikuva

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Today’s Slotly News briefing walks through a global session dominated by a sharp reassessment of technology stocks and AI-linked names. We start in Asia, where Korean chipmakers sold off heavily, triggering a trading halt and pulling regional indices lower, before following the move into Japan and through to US tech futures and cash trading. We examine how the selloff has hit semiconductors such as Micron and SanDisk, how large AI beneficiaries like Nvidia and Tesla are reacting, and why some mega-cap names such as Microsoft and Amazon are holding up more steadily. From there, we turn to the policy backdrop. The Federal Reserve has held rates steady, the ECB has raised its key benchmarks and updated inflation projections, and the Bank of England continues to emphasise its 2% target. We link those decisions to moves in currencies, particularly dollar–yen, as well as to government bond yields and market expectations for rate cuts. The episode also covers softer US housing data, easing euro area manufacturing momentum, higher crude prices and renewed energy concerns in Europe, and the continued strength in gold and other precious metals. Throughout, the focus is on connecting daily market action to the slower-moving forces shaping growth, inflation, and policy.

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