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Daily Briefing — July 6, 2026 | Tech Strength, Cooling Eurozone Inflation, And A Cautious Start To Q3

29 min · I går
episode Daily Briefing — July 6, 2026 | Tech Strength, Cooling Eurozone Inflation, And A Cautious Start To Q3 cover

Description

Today’s Slotly News briefing walks through a holiday-shortened but data-heavy start to the week in global markets. We discuss the firm tone in US equity futures after the Independence Day break, the Dow’s climb from its March levels, and the role of AI and semiconductor momentum in extending the equity rally. The episode looks ahead to key US releases, including PMIs, trade and inventory data, FOMC minutes, jobless claims, and housing figures, and explains how they feed into the Federal Reserve’s rate path debate. We then examine the euro area’s latest inflation and GDP readings, explore Germany’s modest rebound in industrial production and France’s narrower budget deficit, and consider what these mean for the European Central Bank. The UK’s April GDP slip and the FTSE 100’s trading range frame discussion of Bank of England policy and sterling risk. In Asia, we cover the renewed chip trade, Japan’s record FX interventions and their impact on the yen, as well as volatility signals from DAX-linked options. Throughout, we connect commodity moves, especially in oil, to inflation dynamics, and revisit investor concerns around a potential AI sentiment reversal highlighted in recent surveys.

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302 episodes

episode Daily Briefing — July 6, 2026 | Tech Strength, Cooling Eurozone Inflation, And A Cautious Start To Q3 artwork

Daily Briefing — July 6, 2026 | Tech Strength, Cooling Eurozone Inflation, And A Cautious Start To Q3

Today’s Slotly News briefing walks through a holiday-shortened but data-heavy start to the week in global markets. We discuss the firm tone in US equity futures after the Independence Day break, the Dow’s climb from its March levels, and the role of AI and semiconductor momentum in extending the equity rally. The episode looks ahead to key US releases, including PMIs, trade and inventory data, FOMC minutes, jobless claims, and housing figures, and explains how they feed into the Federal Reserve’s rate path debate. We then examine the euro area’s latest inflation and GDP readings, explore Germany’s modest rebound in industrial production and France’s narrower budget deficit, and consider what these mean for the European Central Bank. The UK’s April GDP slip and the FTSE 100’s trading range frame discussion of Bank of England policy and sterling risk. In Asia, we cover the renewed chip trade, Japan’s record FX interventions and their impact on the yen, as well as volatility signals from DAX-linked options. Throughout, we connect commodity moves, especially in oil, to inflation dynamics, and revisit investor concerns around a potential AI sentiment reversal highlighted in recent surveys.

Yesterday29 min
episode Daily Briefing — July 5, 2026 | Jobs Surprise, AI Policy Deals, and Global Market Rotation artwork

Daily Briefing — July 5, 2026 | Jobs Surprise, AI Policy Deals, and Global Market Rotation

In this Slotly News daily briefing for July 5, 2026, we walk through a quieter US trading day that follows a busy week for data, policy, and markets. With US stock exchanges closed for the Independence Day observance, attention turns to Thursday’s moves: a record‑setting Dow, a flat S&P 500, and a weaker Nasdaq as AI and memory‑chip names sold off. We examine the June US jobs report, including the softer‑than‑expected payroll gain, the latest unemployment rate, and what this means for the Federal Reserve’s decision to hold rates steady. The episode covers Europe’s equity rally and inflation trends, the ECB’s energy‑driven projections, Japan’s notable wage gains and gradual policy shift, and China’s contrast between steady official activity data and a deepening housing downturn. We also discuss oil, gas, copper, and gold pricing; US fiscal projections and debt‑limit timing; major M&A such as NextEra’s planned acquisition of Dominion Energy; and the emerging policy architecture around AI, from Trump’s national‑security executive order to OpenAI’s proposed government stake and the EU’s AI Act. Throughout, the focus is on how these threads connect to global growth, inflation, and sector rotation across markets.

5. juli 202632 min
episode Daily Briefing — July 4, 2026 | Global Markets Pause, Policy Debates Continue artwork

Daily Briefing — July 4, 2026 | Global Markets Pause, Policy Debates Continue

In this Slotly News daily briefing for July 4, 2026, we walk through a holiday‑shortened trading week that still managed to pack in important signals for global markets. With US equity exchanges closed for the Independence Day observance, we look back at Thursday’s record close for the Dow, the contrasting performance of the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, and how a weaker‑than‑expected June jobs report is reshaping views on Federal Reserve policy. The episode examines the Fed’s latest decision and communication, the easing but still elevated inflation picture in the US and Europe, and recent rate moves by the ECB alongside a pause at the Bank of England. We cover currency moves including the euro and pound strengthening against the dollar and the yen’s slide to multi‑decade lows, before turning to bond market behaviour. We also discuss European equities reaching new highs, volatility in Korean semiconductor names, stabilising factory activity in China, and what these developments imply for global growth. On the commodities side, we highlight record‑setting gold and silver prices, the copper rally, iron‑ore risks linked to China’s state buying, and evolving LNG and oil dynamics. Throughout, the focus is on how inflation, labour, policy, and earnings interact, offering a calm, connected view of a market that is pausing in the US but far from idle globally.

4. juli 202630 min
episode Daily Briefing — July 3, 2026 | A Holiday Pause, a Soft Jobs Report, and the AI Trade's First Real Gut Check artwork

Daily Briefing — July 3, 2026 | A Holiday Pause, a Soft Jobs Report, and the AI Trade's First Real Gut Check

U.S. markets are closed for the Independence Day holiday, so this episode steps back to make sense of a week that raised more questions than it answered. A weaker-than-expected June jobs report — just 57,000 new positions, with steep downward revisions to April and May — collided with a notably hawkish message from new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh at the ECB's Sintra forum, where he made clear he has no appetite for inflation above target regardless of political pressure. We cover the Dow's record close even as chip stocks sold off sharply, the twin AI stories reshaping sentiment around the sector — OpenAI's reported talks over a government equity stake, and Meta's plan to sell its excess computing capacity through a new cloud business — plus Tesla's surprisingly strong delivery rebound and how it now stacks up against BYD. We also look at falling oil prices amid tentative U.S.-Iran progress, a strong week for European equities, and a mixed picture out of China. No hot takes, no predictions dressed up as certainty — just a clear-eyed look at where things actually stand heading into next week's reopening. This episode is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice.

3. juli 202618 min
episode Daily Briefing — July 2, 2026 | Oil Slips to Pre‑War Levels as AI‑Driven Rally Pauses artwork

Daily Briefing — July 2, 2026 | Oil Slips to Pre‑War Levels as AI‑Driven Rally Pauses

The July 2 Slotly News Daily Briefing examines a Thursday session defined by falling oil prices, cautious central banks, and an equity market catching its breath after a powerful AI‑driven rally. We start with crude, where Brent and WTI have slid back toward pre‑war levels as the U.S.–Iran ceasefire stabilises shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and traders remove much of the conflict premium. We connect that move directly to the inflation outlook and Federal Reserve policy, outlining Kevin Warsh’s latest message on rates and how Treasury yields and the dollar are responding. From there, we cover the European Central Bank’s dilemma, the Bank of England’s stance as U.K. inflation cools, and Japan’s careful exit from its ultra‑easy regime. On equities, we discuss sector rotation after a strong second quarter for U.S. indices, the durability of trillion‑dollar AI capex plans, and why utilities, banks, defence, and European AI adopters are back on investors’ radar. We also touch on Asia’s divergence, with Japan’s rally, Korea’s export‑led gains and pullbacks, and China’s subdued PMI‑driven recovery. The briefing closes by linking energy, AI investment, supply‑chain adjustments, and fiscal constraints into a single view of global growth and market risk as the second half of 2026 gets underway.

2. juli 202619 min