-
Stocks in Asia launched a new week higher. Nikkei gains 1.8%, S&P/ASX 200 adds 1.3% while Kospi trades 0.6% higher. Indices from China gain over 1%
-
DAX futures point to a higher opening of the European session
-
United States and United Kingdom blame Iran for an attack on Israeli tanker off the coast of Oman last week
-
According to the Telegraph report, United Kingdom will offer booster vaccine shots to 32 million people in September
-
An infrastructure deal worth $1 trillion has been introduced to the US Senate and may be voted on in the later part of the week
-
Chinese manufacturing PMI dropped from 50.9 to 50.4 pts in July (exp. 50.8). Non-manufacturing index dropped from 53.5 to 53.3 pts (exp. 53.4)
-
China decided to ban travel between some regions of the country amid rising coronavirus case count
-
Precious metals trade mixed - gold drops, silver trade flat while palladium and platinum gain
-
Oil and agricultural commodities pull back. Industrial metals gain
-
Bitcoin trades near $39,500 mark
-
AUD and GBP are the best performing major currencies while NZD and JPY lag the most
GBPJPY made a failed attempt to break above the 153.40 resistance zone last week. Pair pulled back and the downtrend structure looks to remain intact. However, the downward move was halted at the start of this week at 152.20 zone. Source: xStation5
This content has been created by XTB S.A. This service is provided by XTB S.A., with its registered office in Warsaw, at Prosta 67, 00-838 Warsaw, Poland, entered in the register of entrepreneurs of the National Court Register (Krajowy Rejestr Sądowy) conducted by District Court for the Capital City of Warsaw, XII Commercial Division of the National Court Register under KRS number 0000217580, REGON number 015803782 and Tax Identification Number (NIP) 527-24-43-955, with the fully paid up share capital in the amount of PLN 5.869.181,75. XTB S.A. conducts brokerage activities on the basis of the license granted by Polish Securities and Exchange Commission on 8th November 2005 No. DDM-M-4021-57-1/2005 and is supervised by Polish Supervision Authority.