General Risk Warning for stocks, cryptocurrencies, ETP, FX & CFD Trading. Investment assets are leveraged products. Trading related to foreign exchange, commodities, financial indices, stocks, ETP, cryptocurrencies, and other underlying variables carry a high level of risk and can result in the loss of all of your investment. As such, variable investments may not be appropriate for all investors. You should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. Before deciding to trade, you should become aware of all the risks associated with trading, and seek advice from an independent and suitably licensed financial advisor. Under no circumstances shall Witbrew LLC and associates have any liability to any person or entity for (a) any loss or damage in whole or part caused by, resulting from, or relating to any transactions related to investment trading or (b) any direct, indirect, special, consequential or incidental damages whatsoever.
Recommended Content
Editors’ Picks
EUR/USD rises to daily tops past 1.0800 post-NFP
The selling bias in the Greenback gathers extra pace on Friday after the US economy created fewer jobs than initially estimated in April, lifting EUR/USD to the area of fresh peaks above 1.0800.
GBP/USD surpasses 1.2600 after disheartening US Payrolls
The resumption of the downward pressure in the US Dollar motivates GBP/USD to extend its earlier advance to the area beyond 1.2600 the figure in the wake of the release of US NFP.
Gold climbs to new highs above $2,300 on poor NFP prints
The precious metal maintains its bullish stance and breaks above the $2,300 barrier on Friday after US Nonfarm Payrolls showed the economy added fewer jobs than expected during last month.
XRP edges up after week-long decline as Ripple files letter in reply to SEC’s motion
Ripple filed a letter to the court to support its April 22 motion to strike new expert materials. The legal clash concerns whether SEC accountant Andrea Fox's testimony should be treated as a summary or expert witness.
Week ahead – BoE and RBA decisions headline a calm week
Bank of England meets on Thursday, unlikely to signal rate cuts. Reserve Bank of Australia could maintain a higher-for-longer stance. Elsewhere, Bank of Japan releases summary of opinions.