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Trading Day: No tariff clarity, or market movement

Trading Day: No tariff clarity, or market movement

Reuters5 hours ago
July 8 - TRADING DAY - Making sense of the forces driving global markets
By Alden Bentley, Editor in Charge, Americas Finance and Markets
Jamie is enjoying some well-deserved time off, but the Reuters markets team will still keep you up to date on what markets were focused on today and why they took a breather. I'd love to hear from you so please feel free to reach out at Alden.Bentley@thomsonreuters.com, opens new tab
Today's Key Market Moves
Today's Key Reads
From 'fantastic' to 'spoiled': How Japan's trade effort to woo Trump backfired
Gold ETFs drew largest inflow in five years during first half of 2025, WGC say
In the Fed's hunt for a reason to cut rates, surveys and tariffs make answers elusive
Investors put 'Liberation Day' lessons to work, scarred by tariff tumult
Trump says steep copper tariffs in store as he broadens his trade war
No tariff clarity, or market movement
Investors let the fluid tariff situation simmer on Tuesday, sitting on their hands a day after knocking stock indexes back from record highs as U.S. President Donald Trump warned that new levies would hit a range of trading partners, including Japan and Korea. While Wall Street was in sideways mode seemingly fatigued by tariff headlines, the beaten down dollar posted the second of back-to-back gains and Treasury yields ticked higher for the fifth day running.
The new date to watch is August 1 with Trump showing again his eagerness to allow time to reach deals by pushing back the deadline, which had been Wednesday since he postponed April's ill-received opening tariff gambit.
In the meantime the market will stay ready for surprising turns from the White House and otherwise be waiting for economic data, the Federal Reserve and other known unknowns to incentivize trade. No major indicators are on the calendar this week, and the only set pieces to look for Wednesday are the auction of $39 billion of 10-year notes, the Treasury's benchmark U.S. debt instrument, and the release of minutes from the Fed's last meeting when they held the policy rate at 4.25%-4.5%, where it has been since December.
Futures show investors expect cuts beginning in September. Last week, we saw the unemployment rate fell in June, while inflation has ticked up, also the wrong direction for easing soon.
The June transcript won't reveal policymakers in great discord. They weren't very divided in their economic projections, with 10 seeing several cuts this year and nine effectively pushing easier monetary policy into 2026.
Powell has insisted that any cuts will depend on the data. Meanwhile, the market will wait for the numbers and probably take the minutes in stride too.
What could move markets tomorrow?
Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, opens new tab, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
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