Buying the Invesco CurrencyShares Japanese Yen ETF in my Perfect 5 ETF Portfolio
Following my own recommendation in my Special Report 5 Places to Hide from a Downturn--and Still Make Some Money I'm adding "Invesco CurrencyShares Japanese Yen ETF (FXY) to my Perfect 5 ETF portfolio today. As I wrote in that Special Report, "JPMorgan Chase recently...I’m selling VEA out of my Perfect 5 ETF Portfolio today
I'm continuing to revise the holdings in my Perfect 5 ETF Portfolio in order to reduce risk from the effects of a global trade war and yet to still make some money--as I outlined in my Special Report: 5 Places to Hide from a Downturn--and Still Make Some Money. I...Canadian tariffs on global (not just U.S.) steel imports a major escalation in building trade war
The Canadian government will slap a combination of quotas and higher tariffs on steel imports from China, South Korea, Brazil and Turkey. This is a major step beyond the retaliatory tariffs announced by U.S. trading partners in response to higher U.S. tariffs of 25%...Markets today “seem” to say North Korea summit more important than G7 explosion
At 2 p.m. New York time the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index was up 0.3%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was ahead 0.22%. And the NASDAQ Composite index had inched higher by 0.27%. Which is surprising given that the Group of 7 meeting ended Saturday with the...Emerging markets “emerging” as focus of worry over trade, strong dollar, credit crunch
If you can't tell from the cascade of negative commentary, you certainly should be able to tell from trend in share prices: emerging markets have become the focus of current worries about global trade, the effects of a strong dollar, and the potential for a credit...Today markets don’t care about trade or tariffs–but what about if the G7 meeting explodes this Friday?
The Group of 7–Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States–is scheduled to meet on Friday, June 8, and Saturday June 9 to discuss, in theory, global economic growth. In reality, the group will discuss trade, U.S. tariffs, and U.S President Donald Trump’s trade policies.
Financial markets have a case of “trade jitters” today
It’s actually amazing to me that U.S. stock markets weren’t down more today given all the uncertainty regarding trade relations between United States and China, between the United States and its NAFTA partners Canada and Mexico, and between the United States and the European Union.
It looks we might get a China trade deal before one on NAFTA
Today, House Speaker Paul Ryan announced a May 17 deadline for the Trump administration to submit a proposal NAFTA revision to Congress–if President Trump wants this Congress to vote on a revised agreement. The odds of an agreement emerging from current talks and moving on to Congress on that schedule are just about nil. At the same time news of significant horse trading is coming out of U.S.-China trade talks.
Oil prices climb from Monday’s lows but supply worries damp recovery
The financial markets decided that a global trade war wasn’t quite upon us yet this morning. That let stocks and oil bounce back a tad. But it also gave oil traders room to start worrying about oil supply again–after they spent Monday worrying that a global trade war would lead to a collapse in demand.
Markets trying to get ahead of today’s tariff news
The only thing that is (relatively) certain is that President Trump will announce $50 billion in tariff and other trade restrictions aimed at China. That announcement is scheduled for 12:30 p.m. today in Washington. There’s plenty of speculation today about the nature and extent of China’s response.
Trick or trend: So which U.S. “allies” get a tariff exemption?
So which countries will get an exemption from the Trump administration’s 25% tariff on imported steel and 10% on imported aluminum? If the administration passes out enough exemptions, then what remains will be a tariff targeted at China–and maybe at South Korea.