|

Spain Industrial Output Cal Adjusted (YoY): 3.4% (May) vs 2%

Author

FXStreet Team

Composed of a group of economic journalists and FX experts, the FXStreet content team produces and oversees all content published on FXStreet. It provides a purely journalistic approach to the Forex market.

More from FXStreet Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD: Gains remains capped below 1.3400

GBP/USD trades in positive territory, with the upside capped below 1.3400 in the European session on Friday. The US Dollar extends weakness following a weaker-than-expected US Nonfarm Payrolls report, which fades Fed rate hike expectations.

EUR/USD stays firm around 1.1450  amid weaker US Dollar

EUR/USD remains on the front foot at around 1.1450 in European trading on Friday. The pair seems poised to register gains for the first time in three weeks as receding US Federal Reserve rate hike bets keep the US Dollar under pressure.

Gold stays on track to snap four-week losing streak amid fading Fed hike bets, weak USD

Gold retains its bullish bias for the third straight day and traders near a one-and-a-half-week high during the first half of the European session. The precious metal seems poised to register gains for the first time in five weeks, with bulls still awaiting a move beyond the $4,200 mark before positioning for an extension of this week's recovery from the lowest level since November 2025.

Hyperliquid gears up for a higher leg as bullish momentum resurfaces

Hyperliquid (HYPE) extends gains above $66 maintaining a long-term upward trend supported by its rising 50-day EMA around $60. Retail demand for HYPE rises in the near term, with Open Interest up around 5% over 24 hours as funding rates hold above zero, while institutional demand remains muted so far this week.

Week ahead – ISM services PMI and Fed Minutes to shake Fed hike bets
The US dollar is finishing the week on the back foot against most of its major counterparts this week, losing the most ground against the kiwi, the franc and the pound. Despite the pullback, investors remained adamant in their view that the Fed may have to press the rate hike button before the turn of the year.
Kevin Warsh offers no policy clues: Why markets still got their answer

Financial markets came to Sintra looking for clues about the Federal Reserve's (Fed) next move. They largely left with confirmation that Fed Chair Kevin Warsh intends to make those clues much harder to find.