Slotly News

Daily Briefing — May 25, 2026 | Hormuz Talks Cool Oil, AI Hype Lifts Semis, and SpaceX Eyes the Nasdaq 100

25 min · 25. mai 2026
episode Daily Briefing — May 25, 2026 | Hormuz Talks Cool Oil, AI Hype Lifts Semis, and SpaceX Eyes the Nasdaq 100 cover

Beskrivelse

Today’s Slotly News daily briefing walks through a busy Monday shaped by cautious optimism around ceasefire talks near the Strait of Hormuz, a pullback in oil prices, and continued strength in global equities. We examine how reports of progress between the U.S. and Iran are feeding into crude markets, what that means for headline inflation, and how central banks are responding, with the Fed and ECB both keeping rates on hold as they wait for clearer disinflation trends. The episode reviews the latest U.S. growth and inflation data, Treasury and bond‑market pricing, and currency moves, including a softer dollar. We cover record‑high equity levels in parts of Asia and Europe, the extraordinary surge in semiconductor stocks, and Nvidia’s huge fiscal‑year revenue jump on the back of AI demand. The briefing also looks at Meta’s workforce reshuffle toward AI, DeepSeek’s aggressive API pricing, and the implications of SpaceX’s planned IPO, including Nasdaq’s fast‑entry rule for the Nasdaq‑100. On the commodity side, we discuss oil, natural gas, gold, and the impact of a deadly coal mine blast in China on coking‑coal futures. All of this is framed with an eye on liquidity conditions during the U.S. Memorial Day and U.K. bank holidays.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Slotly News sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

297 Episoder

episode Daily Briefing — June 30, 2026 | Tech Volatility, Central Bank Caution, and a Weak Yen cover

Daily Briefing — June 30, 2026 | Tech Volatility, Central Bank Caution, and a Weak Yen

Today’s Slotly News briefing for June 30, 2026 examines a day when markets feel steadier on the surface, but the underlying currents are active. We start with the Federal Reserve’s recent decision to hold rates at 3.5 to 3.75 percent, the backdrop of strong U.S. jobs data, and what current Treasury yields reveal about investor expectations for the policy path. We then look at the European Central Bank’s latest rate hike, revised inflation projections, and survey data showing sentiment improving even as hiring intentions soften. The episode covers the Bank of England’s steady stance, Japan’s combination of record equity highs and a forty‑year low for the yen, and the tension in Chinese and Hong Kong markets as tech stocks flirt with bear‑market territory. We discuss June’s tech volatility in the U.S., including the semiconductor selloff and subsequent rebound, alongside major corporate moves such as Comcast’s planned split and the proposed NextEra–Dominion merger. Energy and commodity markets feature with Brent around 74 dollars, calmer natural gas prices, and the impact of fuel costs in emerging markets. Finally, we touch on the Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential power, the EU’s AI Act, and upcoming U.S. AI regulation, tying policy and law back to capital allocation and risk sentiment.

I går30 min
episode Daily Briefing — June 29, 2026 | Tech Rebound, SpaceX Index Debut, and Gulf Peace Talks cover

Daily Briefing — June 29, 2026 | Tech Rebound, SpaceX Index Debut, and Gulf Peace Talks

Today’s Slotly News daily briefing examines a cautious rebound in US technology stocks after last week’s AI‑driven selloff, with Nasdaq futures leading gains and mega‑cap names such as Microsoft helping to stabilise sentiment. We discuss SpaceX’s formal inclusion in the Russell US indexes and its upcoming entry into the Nasdaq‑100, unpacking what forced passive inflows mean for price dynamics and index governance. The episode also covers Comcast’s decision to spin off NBCUniversal and Sky into a separate publicly traded entity, reflecting strategic pressure in media and streaming. On the macro side, we look at the tentative halt in US‑Iran hostilities and the planned 60‑day negotiation window, and how oil markets are interpreting reduced near‑term risk around the Strait of Hormuz. We review the latest signals from the UK economy and Bank of England policy, explore why European equities have outperformed US peers in constant‑currency terms, and assess the Bank of Japan’s gradual shift away from strict yield‑curve control. The briefing also touches on Asian trading, Korea’s AI ambitions, commodity pricing in metals, and the importance of Thursday’s US nonfarm payrolls report for the Fed’s rate path.

29. juni 202631 min
episode Daily Briefing — June 28, 2026 | Memory Prices, Central Banks, and Tech Volatility cover

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

This Slotly News daily briefing for June 28, 2026 walks through a week in which memory chips and hardware prices moved from a niche concern to a central market theme. We examine Apple’s sweeping price increases across Macs, iPads, home devices and the Vision Pro, and explain how Micron’s blowout guidance and a tightening memory supply are pulling in both consumers and data center operators. The episode covers US equity dynamics, including sector rotation between semiconductors, big-cap tech and industrials, as well as the impact of solid personal income and payroll data. We also review policy decisions from the Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan, and link them to recent inflation readings and bond yield moves in the US, Germany and Japan. The briefing explores European and Asian equity swings, from record highs in the Nikkei and Stoxx 600 to sharp tech-led pullbacks in Korea and regional indices. Finally, we touch on OPEC+ supply decisions, energy and metals prices, global M&A trends, China’s industrial profit surge and OpenAI’s potential IPO delay, placing each in the wider context of slowing global growth and persistent inflation pressures.

28. juni 202625 min
episode Daily Briefing — June 27, 2026 | Tech Reprices, Central Banks Hold the Line cover

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.

27. juni 202629 min
episode Daily Briefing — June 26, 2026 | A Market Caught Between Waiting and Acting cover

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

In this edition of the Slotly News daily briefing, we examine a quiet summer Friday where the most important market forces are the ones building beneath the surface. We look at the growing divergence inside the Federal Reserve, where officials are split between the risk of a softening labour market and the risk of cutting rates too soon, and we connect that to a US yield curve being pulled in two directions by rate expectations and Treasury supply. From there, we turn to the European Central Bank's challenge of setting one policy for economies moving at different speeds, the Bank of England's persistent inflation problem, and the Bank of Japan's careful attempt at normalisation and what it means for the yen and the dollar. We also cover the state of US equities, where AI infrastructure spending continues to drive a narrow market while questions about return on that capital begin to surface, alongside early signs of sector rotation. The briefing takes in European equities and the luxury sector's exposure to Chinese demand, China's measured approach to stimulus amid its property downturn, and the mixed signals across oil, natural gas, and industrial metals. We close with a look at renewed dealmaking in technology and energy, and a reasonable but unspectacular earnings backdrop.

26. juni 202612 min