αααΆαααΆααααααααααα·αααααααααα αΆααααααΆα ααα·αααααΉαααααααΈ 26 ααααααΆ ααααΆα 2025Β
Β
αααΆαααΆαααααΆαααααααααααΊααΆααΆαααααααααααααααΈααααααΆα αααααΈααΈααααααα·α αα ααααΆαααααΌα ααΆαα ααααα’αΆαααα·α αααααα’αΊαααΌ αα·ααααα»α αααααΆαα αααΎαααα’ααααΎααΌα ααΆααααααααα·α αα ααααΉαααα·ααΆαααααααΆαααααΆααααααΉαααααααααΆαα·ααααααααααααααααΆααΆαα·αααΈ Donald Trump ααΆαα½αααααΌααΆαα·ααααααααααααααα αα·ααααααααααα½ααααααααΆαααΆααΎαα
ααΆαααα·αααα αααΆαααΆααααααααΊααΆαα αααΎαααα’ααααΎααα·ααααααΆαααΎααααα»α ααΌα ααααααΌααααααΆααααα»αααΆαα αΆαααα»αααΆααααΌααααΆααα·αα·αααα
αα ααααα’αΆαααα·α
ααααΆαααΆαααααααα·α αα α’αΆαααα·αααΆαααααααα»αααΉααααααααααα½ααααΆαααααΆαααααααΆαααααΆαααΎαα‘αΎαααααΆαααΆαααΉααααααααααααΆαααΆαα·ααααααα αα·αααΆααα·αα αααΆααααΆααααααααααααΆαααααααα·α αα α ααΆααααααα ααΊα αΆααααααΎααα ααααααααΆαααααααααΆαα·ααααααααααΆαααααααα α·α αα·αα’αΆαααα·α ααααααΆααααΆαααΆααααα αΆαααααααα Trump ααΎαααααΆααααΆααΆααααααΆαα’αΆαααα·αααα Jerome Powell ααΎααΆααα·ααααααΌααααααα’ααααΆααΆαααααΆααα αααα αΆααΆααααΈααααααΆαααααΎα±ααααΈααααΆαααΆααααααΆαααΆααααααααΆα α αΎαααΆααααα»αα±αααααααααΆαα‘αΎαααααααα αΌααα ααα $3,500 αααα»ααα½αα’αααα ααααααΈ 22 ααααααΆ ααααΆα 2025α ααα»αααααααααααΆαααααΆαααααΆααα α»αααααααΉα $3,281.60αα·α αα ααααααΈ 23 ααααααΆ αα ααααααααΆαααΆαααΉαααΆαααΆαααααααα ααΆαααααααααα Trump ααΆαααΎαα‘αΎαααΆ ααΌααααααΉαα’αΆα αααααΆααααααααΎαααα·αααααααααααα α·α ααααααααααααΆαααααΆαααα ααααΎαααααΆααααΆααΆααααααΆαααααΆαααΆαααααααααααααα ααΆαααααααΆαααααΆααααααα»αα±αααααααααΆαααααΆααα α»αα
ααΆαα½αααΉαααααΉαααα·ααΆαααααααΆαααααΆααααΈααααα»ααααααΆα αααα ααΎαα’αΆα ααααααααΆααΈααααΆαααααΈααααααααΌαααΆααααα»αααααααααααααα½αααααααααΆαααΆαα·ααααααα αααααΊααΆαααααΎα±ααααΆαααΆαααααΆααααααΌαααΌααααααααααα’αΆααααααααααααΈααααΆα αα·αααΆααααααααα½ααααααααΆαααΆααΎαα ααΌα αααα ααααα·αααΎααΆααααααΆααΆαα½αααααααα αΆαααΈααΆααααααΌααααααααΆαααΆαααΉαααααΆαα·ααααααααααΆααα ααααα’αΆαααα·α αα·αα α·α αααααΆααΉαααααααααΎα±αααααααααΆαααααΆααα α»αα
αααα»ααααα·α ααααα·αααΎβααΆαβααΆαααΉαβααΆαβαααα»αβα‘αΎαβααααβααα αααβαααβααα Trump ααΆαβα’αααΆα βααααΆαβααα ααβαααα»αβααΆαβαααα α»αβα’ααααΆβααΆαβααααΆαα αααβααΆβααβααΉαβαααα»αβα±ααβααΆαβα‘αΎαβαααβααααα·αβααααΌαβαα·αβαααα αα αΌαααααααααααα ααΎαααααΆαα§ααααα CME FEDWatch ααΈααααΆααα ααααΏααΆααααΆ αααΆααΆααααααΆαα’αΆα ααΉααααααΆα’ααααΆααΆαααααΆαααα αΌαααααααα·αα»ααΆ ααααΆα 2025α
α’αααΈααααα½αααΆαααΆαα
ααΎαααΈααα ααΈααααΆαααααΉαααΆαααΆααα ααΎαα·ααααααααΈααααΆααααα»ααααααΆα αααα αααα’αΆα ααΉαααΆααααααααααα½αααααΆαααααα»αααΈααααΆαααααααα
αααααα’αΊαααΌ
αααααΆααααΈααΆαααα’αΆααααααα 90 αααααααα Trump α αααααααα 20% αα½α αα ααΎααα·αααΆααααΎαααΆααα·α αα αααααααααααΆαα½αααΆαααΎαα‘αΎααα αΌαααααααααααα‘αΎαα ααα»αααα ααΌα ααα Moody’s ααΆαααΎαα‘αΎα ααααααα·α αα αααααα’αΊαααΌαα ααααααααα»αααΉαα αΆαα·ααααααα·ααααα·ααααααα·α αα α ααΆαα½αααΉαααααααα·αααααααΆααα α»αααΈαα ααΈααααααΌα ααΆ α’αΆα‘αΊαααα ααΆααΆαα α’α»αΈααΆααΈ αα·αα’ααααααΆα ααααααα αΆαααΆααααΆαααΆαααααααα·α αα αα ααΆαα’αΊααα»ααα αααα·αααα’αααααΎα ααΆαα·ααααα αααα»ααα·αααααα·ααααα αα·αααααΆαααα αααααααααααΌαααΆαααααααα ααααααααααα ααααααΆαααΆαααΆαααΉααααααααααααα ααΌα αααα ααΈααααΆαααααΉαααΆααΉαααΆαααΆαααα α»αα’ααααΆααΆαααααΆααααααααααααα αααα»αααααααΆ ααΎααααΈαααα»αααααΎαααααααα·α αα αααααΈααΆα’αα·ααααΆ αα·αααΆαααααΆααααααααααααΆααααααααααααα’αΆα ααΆαααα αΆααααααααααα
αααααααααα»α
αααααΈααΆαα·αααΆαααΆαααααΆααααααΌαα αααΎααααααΆααααααααα·α αα αααααααααααααα»ααααα»ααααααΆα ααααααααα αααααααααααα»ααα αααααααααΉαα αΆαα·αααααααΆαααΆααααΆααααααααααΆαααααΈαααα αΆααααααααααααα Trump ααΆαα·ααααα αααα»ααα·ααααααααα αα·αααΆαααΆαα αααααααααα½α αααα’αΆα ααΆαααααααααΆαααααΆααααααααΎαααααααα·α αα α ααΆααααααα IMF ααΆαααΆαααααααααΆαααααΆααααααααΎααααααααααααααα»αααΈ 1.1% αα 0.6% α αααααΊαααααΆααααααααααααα»αααΊααΉαααα’ααααΎααΆαααΆαα αααα α α·α αααααΆααααΌαααααΆααααΈαα ααααα’αΆαααα·α ααΌα ααααααΆαααααΆααααααΌαααααααααΆααααΆα Trump αα·αα α·αααα’αΆα αααααΆαααααααΈααααΆααααααααααααααα»ααααααα
ααΌα ααααα αΎα ααΈααααΆαααΉαααΆαααΆααα ααΎααΆααααααα α α·αααα’ααααΆααΆαααααΆαααααααααΆααΆααααααΆααααα»α αααααααΎα‘αΎααα αααααΆα αααααααααααΆααααααΆα’αΆα ααΉααααααΆα α’αααΈαααααααΆααααΊαααα·ααα ααΎαα»αααααααΆ αα·αααα ααααΈαααααααΆααααααααα½ααα αααα’αΆα αααααααΌαααααααΆαααααααα·α αα αααααααααα
|English Version|
Weekly Data Summary Report
As ofβ April 26, 2024
Below is the two-week summary on the major economies such as the United States, the Eurozone, and Japan, which is mainly based on the economic indicators, critical events related to President Donald Trump’s trade conflict with other trading partners, and gold price movements.
Disclaimer: Please note this is opinion-based; do not take it as investment advice.
The United States
The US economy experienced significant volatility due to the escalation of the trade war and policy uncertainty. The period began with rising US-China trade tensions and Trump’s attacks on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for refusing to lower the rate. These attacks fueled market anxiety and sparked gold prices to a record high of $3,500 per ounce on April 22, 2025, before pulling back slightly to $3,281.60 on April 23 as tariff de-escalation hopes grew. In fact, Trump softened his stance toward both Chinaβs trade conflict and Powell, citing on lowering of tariffs on Chinaβs goods while backing off his threat to fire FED Chair Powell.
With these two main events this week, we could assume that the recent market was marked by trade-driven factors that fueled market swings, consumer sentiment, and gold price volatility. Therefore, any signals of potential US-China trade easing would continue to temper the gold prices amid persistent uncertainty.
One thing to remember is that if tension sparked once again while Trump has the power to threaten to lower the interest rate, then this would also push the gold back to its peak. As of now, as per the CME FEDWatch tool, the market is still priced in for a rate hold until June 2025.
Looking forward:
The US employment report this week will also cause huge volatility and offer further insights about the labor market conditions.
The Eurozone
After Trumpβs 90-day suspension of 20% tariffs, no agreement materialized until today. Yet, as Moody’s has flagged, the Eurozone economy is still facing the risk of recession. With a downgraded outlook from major unions such as Germany, France, Italy, and Spain, this suggests that the EU is still experiencing stagnation, particularly in the manufacturing and services sectors, while external demand remains weak amid tariff tensions. Therefore, the market anticipates further easing in April to boost growth, although inflation and supply chain disruption could be challenges.
Japan
Although not much changes for Japanβs economy this week, Japan is still facing stagnation risk from Trumpβs tariffs, particularly in its auto and export sectors, which could potentially cut the growth forecast. In fact, the IMF cut Japanβs growth forecast from 1.1% to 0.6%. This is a result of Japanβs dependent market in China after its first trading partner, the US, so changes between Trump and China could also affect Japanβs market.
Therefore, all eyes are on the Bank of Japan’s interest rate decision, which takes place this week with an unchanged rate. But the important part falls on the speeches and statements that could dictate further economic insights.