- Trump Says Iran Deal Has Been Signed, Text To Come Soon
- Macron Says Hormuz Maritime Mission Can Be Deployed Within Days
- US At Odds With Allies Over How Easy It Is To Reopen Hormuz
- IMF Says Still On ‘High Alert’ For War Impact After Iran-US Deal
- Nvidia’s Jumbo Bond Sale Draws $85 Bln Of Investor Demand
- Citi Sees Dollar-Yen Correction To Below 155 By Year-End
- US Oil Reserve Hits 43-Year Low As Trump Aims To Tame Gas Prices
- Anthropic To Meet With Trump Administration Over Mythos Dispute
- Salesforce To Buy AI Customer Service Platform Fin For $3.6 Bln
- Tesla Presented Misleading ‘FSD’ Safety Data To European Regulators
- Fox To Buy Streaming Device Maker Roku For $22 Bln
- Centene Offers Most Staff Buyouts After Obamacare Member Losses

Growing concern that underlying inflation expectations could become unanchored is said to be driving the Bank of Japan’s case for higher interest rates.
At the conclusion of its closely watched monetary policy meeting, the BoJ is widely expected to raise rates by 25 basis points to 1.00% on Tuesday afternoon local time.
In a break from convention, Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino will chair the policy meeting, while Shinichi Uchida is set to deliver the post-meeting press conference in the absence of hospitalised Governor Kazuo Ueda.
Despite some positive developments in the Middle East, BoJ officials have expressed concern that the pace at which companies are passing higher costs on to consumers has accelerated to a point where policymakers may need to act. “If we miss the timing, we may be forced to raise rates significantly later.” (LiveSquawk – Continue Reading)
The apparent winding down of the Iran war is set to improve investor confidence in Europe’s largest economy, according to analysts.
An analysts’ poll predicted that the forward-looking economic sentiment reading from a survey conducted by Germany’s ZEW economic institute is expected to climb to -6.0 points from the -10.2 in May, itself an improvement over April’s result, which was a three-year low.
The institute’s current conditions indicator is expected to edge higher to -77.0 points from -77.8, which would keep it in negative territory, its home since December 2021. (LiveSquawk – Continue Reading)

Ahead of Wednesday’s FOMC decision, the watchword among central bank watchers has been “continuity”. Anyone expecting Kevin Warsh, the newly appointed Fed chair, to shake things up at his first meeting in charge will likely be disappointed.
Federal Reserve policymakers are widely expected to leave interest rates unchanged at the conclusion of their two-day meeting, with the fed funds target range currently at 3.50%-3.75%. The decision is expected to be unanimous.
Analysts look for the accompanying statement to acknowledge continued labour market resilience, while also recognising elevated inflationary pressures.
JP Morgan economist Michael Feroli said these developments could push the committee in a more hawkish direction. (LiveSquawk – Continue Reading)
A rate hike at this Thursday’s Bank of England decision had already become highly unlikely. And thereafter, the US-Iran deal has nudged the pendulum back towards a prolonged pause. Markets now price just a 25% chance of a July hike and only one rate increase this year, down from a peak of three.
Our view has long been that the Bank is somewhere between doing nothing and hiking once – and 4% inflation is an important line in the sand. The Bank argued last summer that when it exceeds that level, it’s more likely that inflation becomes more embedded and second-round effects more likely. (ING – Continue Reading)
Leaders of the G7 countries are expected to reach agreement on a list of critical minerals on which they should cooperate to curb Chinese dominance, but the EU is pushing back against a US demand for minimum pricing of minerals.
The G7 plans to release an outcome document on critical minerals at the summit that will focus on a small number of strategically important minerals, including heavy rare earth elements such as antimony, graphite and tungsten.
But the EU is leading resistance to a plan drawn up by US vice president JD Vance that would feature minimum pricing for critical minerals based on a pricing formula drawn up by the US Pentagon. (EU Observer – Continue Reading)
US companies looked to offload more than $40 billion of debt in the credit markets on Monday, as they tried to capitalize on investor optimism after the US and Iran reached a tentative agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
Borrowers from Nvidia Corp. to Qnity Electronics Inc. sought to capitalize on a rally across global markets as oil prices tumbled, stocks climbed and short-term Treasury yields fell, indicating lower expectations for US interest-rate hikes in the near term. Nvidia was set to be the biggest issuer in the investment-grade market, while Qnity brought one of the largest offerings to leveraged loan investors as prices on high-yield debt rose, driving yields lower. (Bloomberg – Continue Reading)
- US NAHB Housing Market Index Jun: 35 (est 37; prev 37)
- US Empire Manufacturing June: 5.7 (est 13.5; prev 19.6)
- Canada Manufacturing Sales (M/M): 4.2% (est 4.5%; prev 3.0%)
- Canada Housing Starts May: 261.4K (est 255.2K; prev 279.3K; prev R 278.4K)
- Trump Says Iran Deal Has Been Signed, Text To Come Soon – RTRS
- US Officials Says Iran Pact Signed, Hormuz Traffic Will Rise Significantly – RTRS
- Macron Says Hormuz Maritime Mission Can Be Deployed Within Days – POLITICO
- US At Odds With Allies Over How Easy It Is To Reopen Hormuz - BBG
- Benjamin Netanyahu Faces Domestic Backlash Over US-Iran Deal – FT
- Prospective US-Iran Deal Positive, But Still Subject To High Uncertainty - Fitch
- Warsh's Debut Press Conference May Reveal His Strategy For Inflation, Rates - RTRS
- UBS Sees Warsh Catching A Break On Rates With Reprieve From Oil - BBG
- Gavin Newsom Says Trump Directed DoJ To Investigate Him And His Wife – Guardian
- ECB Expands Probe On Private Credit To More Banks As Fears Mount – BBG
- ECB's Kazimir Says More Rate Action Needed After First Hike – Investing
- Euro Area Is Seeing Ratings Increasingly Converge, Scope Says - BBG
- Portugal Central Bank Keeps 2026 Growth View, Trims Deficit Forecast – RTRS
- Morgan Stanley: BoJ To Hike And RBA To Hold this Week - eFX
- IMF Says Still On ‘High Alert’ For War Impact After Iran-US Deal - BBG
- Treasury Yields Slide As Iran Deal Drives Rethink On Fed Interest Rate Hikes – CNBC
- Nvidia’s Jumbo Bond Sale Draws $85 Bln Of Investor Demand – BBG
- US Private Credit Default Rate Remains At Record High 6.0% In May 2026 - Fitch
- Citi Sees Dollar-Yen Correction To Below 155 By Year-End – Investing
- USD Weakens On US-Iran Peace Deal; Supported By Hawkish Fed Outlook – FXS
- AUD Rebounds As Softer US Dollar Supports Risk Sentiment – FXS
- Oil Prices Fall About 5% As Iran Deal Is Set To Open Hormuz Strait - CNBC
- US Oil Reserve Hits 43-Year Low As Trump Aims To Tame Gas Prices - BBG
- Citi Cuts Brent Forecasts As US-Iran MOU Points To Hormuz Flow Normalization - RTRS
- Gold Drifts Higher As Iran, US Agree To Halt War - CNBC
- Credit Agricole: Recommend Buying Gold At $4338, Targeting Bounce To $5420 – eFX
- Screwworm Spreads Beyond Initial Control Zone In Risk To Cattle - BBG
- JPMorgan Traders Turn Bullish On US Stocks Citing Peace Deal- BBG
- Anthropic To Meet With Trump Administration Over Mythos Dispute - CNBC
- SpaceX IPO Raises Total Of $85.7 Bln As Underwriters Exercise ‘Greenshoe’ Overallotment Option – CNBC
- Salesforce To Buy AI Customer Service Platform Fin For $3.6 Bln - CNBC
- Tesla Presented Misleading ‘FSD’ Safety Data To European Regulators – RTRS
- Google Announces $1.5 Bln Investment To Expand Alabama Data Centre Campus – TR
- Fox To Buy Streaming Device Maker Roku For $22 Bln – CNBC
- Sen. Warren Wants Info On Private Equity Deals For Data Centres – Axios
- Centene Offers Most Staff Buyouts After Obamacare Member Losses - BBG
- Britain To Sell Mini Nuclear Reactors To Sweden – Telegraph
- Japan Weighs EV Battery Collection Mandate As Waste Volume Grows – Nikkei