• US indices rebound
• Bernie Sanders withdrew from the presidential election
Oil prices rebounded in another volatile session today, as investors hope that new production cut deal might be reached during tomorrow OPEC+ meeting. However some doubts remain as to whether the US will support the deal by reducing its own production. Accordingly to the latest EIA report, US crude inventories rose more than 15 million barrels in the week ended April 3rd, the biggest one-week rise in crude inventories since the series began in 1982 and well above market expectations of a 9.271 million. During today’s session WTI rose over 3% and Brent went up over 1.2%.
The dollar index pared earlier gains to trade around 100.00. S&P Global Ratings cut Australia’s credit-rating outlook to negative from stable mentioning an expected rise in public debt and the first recession in almost 30 years. Australian parliament returned on Wednesday to pass an emergency AUD 130 billion stimulus package that will help pay the wages of an estimated 6 million Australians during the coronavirus pandemic and economic downturn.
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand announced on Tuesday that it would buy up to NZD 3 billion of local government debt to ease liquidity strains in the market as part of the measures to support the economy from the coronavirus pandemic.
AUDUSD is one on of the top performing majors today. Aussie managed to recover early losses despite that S&P downgraded country’s rating. If the bullish bias remains on the markets, then the currency pair might be heading towards 0.64 resistance level. However investors should keep in mind, that there is many important macroeconomic releases scheduled for tomorrow, therefore high volatility can be expected. Source: xStation5Daily summary: Wall Street tries to stop the sell-off 📌Gold down 1.8%, Bitcoin loses 4.5%
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