Equity futures point to a modestly higher opening after stocks rallied yesterday. Headlines of a peace agreement between the U.S. and Iran sent oil prices sharply lower. Oil continues to move lower this morning.
Read more in the Morning Brew. https://t.co/AZ2tqoM5ha
Drew O'Neil discusses what to expect with Kevin Warsh's arrival in the Federal Reserve along with his leadership style and influence around policy direction. https://t.co/6MDk3u1FAB
Equity futures point to a higher opening this morning after President Trump announced on Sunday that a peace deal between the U.S. and Iran has been reached.
The U.S. and Iran are set to sign the agreement this Friday.
Read more in the Morning Brew. https://t.co/sk6fojMdDk
Consumer sentiment improved in June, but confidence remains well below levels seen earlier this year. Looking ahead, corporate earnings reports will shed light on consumer spending. CIO Larry Adam breaks down today's market headlines in Up & Adam. https://t.co/1DBephBVzX
Kevin Warsh's first Federal Open Market Committee meeting as Fed chair comes at a complex moment for monetary policy. Raymond James Chief Investment Officer Larry Adam shares what June's meeting could signal for markets and the Fed's path forward: https://t.co/I7n9O8nuAo
In the latest Weekly Economics, Raymond James Chief Economist Eugenio Alemán explores recent inflation data and the growing disconnect between market sentiment and consumer experience: https://t.co/a3s5NWYdXT
Oil continues to move lower to the $85 per barrel mark on reports that the two sides could agree to a deal which would include reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and a commitment to not enrich uranium for a period of years.
Read more in the Morning Brew. https://t.co/6FgSwFoVtm
Equity futures point to a higher opening this morning as stocks look to bounce back from their worst session of the week. Yesterday's action was defined by another intraday sell-off in tech names.
Read more in the Morning Brew. https://t.co/s35ONpDCH3
Higher energy costs pushed headline inflation higher in May, but core inflation showed more modest increases. CIO Larry Adam shares insight in today's Up & Adam. https://t.co/QeoYwaBGTj
The one-dimensional market since the March lows is finally taking a breather: U.S. equities are digesting recent gains following a strong run, the S&P 500 up roughly 20% and semiconductors also in just a few months.
Read more in the Weekly Market Guide. https://t.co/P5VHEZslNJ
Despite a recent pullback in technology stocks, broader market participation remains encouraging, with most S&P 500 sectors advancing. Combined with resilient consumer spending trends, the backdrop continues to support a positive long term view. https://t.co/GcWAyjmL6R
Stocks are coming off a choppy session that saw the major averages finish mostly lower following a sharp selloff across tech names. Solid rotation into the broader market helped limit losses at the index level.
Read more in the Morning Brew. https://t.co/Aqrr5huyR9
Equity futures point to a higher opening as semiconductor stocks look to extend Monday's rebound.
The group led the major averages to a higher finish yesterday, though broader market strength steadily deteriorated.
Read more in the Morning Brew. https://t.co/ntSF4QxE7W
Doug Drabik reviews current market conditions and states that the broader takeaway is straightforward: favorable markets should be used as an opportunity to plan, not as a reason to relax discipline. https://t.co/OIkTzuLwQV
Equity futures point to a higher opening this morning after a tech-driven selloff on Friday that snapped a nine-week win streak for the S&P 500.
Read more in the Morning Brew. https://t.co/ja3neKOWuP
Job growth surprised to the upside again in May, reinforcing expectations that policy easing may remain on hold. CIO Larry Adam shares perspective on today's market-moving headlines in Up & Adam. https://t.co/WMV8BuwQZ1