Here’s today’s ‘Just A Minute’ bringing you a 60 second summary of what’s happening in the financial markets:
Main Trading Event Of The Day: U.S. Unemployment Claims @ 12.30 GMT
WHAT WE’RE WATCHING TODAY
Dollar Pauses After Rally; Euro Close To 3-Month Low
The dollar hovered near a two-month high against a basket of major currencies today, taking a pause after rallying due to a shake-out of long positions in sterling and a drop in the euro. The dollar index eased 0.1 percent to 80.490, close to Wednesday’s high of 80.581, its highest level since early April. A break above 80.599, the April 4 peak, will take the index back to highs not seen since mid-February. Traders seemed to be at a loss to explain the greenback’s rise apart from pointing to month-end dollar demand. The euro edged up 0.1 percent to $1.3604, holding slightly above a three-month low of $1.3587 set on Wednesday. Expectations of some policy action from the European Central Bank (ECB) have been mounting, a key reason for the recent underperformance in the euro. Many economists expect the ECB to cut its deposit rate into negative territory next week.
Gold Is Sinking…Will It Get Worse?
Gold extended losses to a third straight session on Thursday, hitting 16-week lows on a stronger dollar and weak physical demand in top buyer China. The gold market continues to show more signs of weakness as the precious metal closed at $1,259.30 per ounce, down another $6.20 after Tuesday’s $25 slide. The fact that Wednesday’s drop takes bullion below its second critical support level of $1,262 is troubling some traders as technical pressure could continue to weigh on gold in the days ahead. Gold is seen as looking increasingly weak as geopolitical concerns over Russia and Ukraine subside and that the only motivation to buy gold might be an upward turn in inflation or a war, neither of which seem to be a reality at the moment. In the meantime, Wednesday’s stronger dollar offered no support. The question is being asked by many traders, therefore, is, where does gold go from here?
Apple To Acquire Beats Electronics
Apple has announced that it will acquire headphone maker Beats Electronics for $3 billion.The deal is expected to close in the fiscal fourth quarter. Apple will pay $2.6 billion in cash and another $400 million in equity. It will also continue to use the Beats brand. Beats Electronics is a key vendor in the premium headphone market. Apple reportedly began talks to buy the company in early May. Beats’ profit margins in the headphone market may be substantial. A pair of its high-end headphones sell for as much as $450, but production costs across the brand are said to run to only about $14 a pair. Apple said the deal would add to earnings in fiscal 2015. Beats also recently entered the streaming music business placing it in head-to-head competition with much larger veteran rivals Pandora and Spotify.
That sums up today’s highlights! Keep in touch with all the day’s events on our Facebook, Twitter, Google+ & LinkedIn pages. We hope you have a profitable day on the markets.