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The Chinese Yuan, up 2.2%, was the strongest national currency, followed by the US Dollar, up 2.0%. The Japanese Yen was the weakest national currency, rising 0.6%, followed by the Canadian Dollar, which added 1.3%. USD cash was outperformed by treasury securities (both short term and long term) which rose 2.2%.
Equity indexes, with the exception of gold stocks, all moved higher, led by the Nikkei 225, up 2.1%, and the Dow Jones Industrials, up 2.0%. Outside of gold stocks, which dropped 0.5%, Euro STOXX50 was weakest, rising 0.8%.
Once again, commodities saw the most violent price action, both positive and negative. Crude oil rose 4.7%, and platinum advanced 3.8%, while coffee fell 6.9% and cotton dropped 0.1% to a new all-time low. Silver closed the week up 2.1%.
Ethereum fell 4.8% and Bitcoin slid 0.7%, but some smaller cryptos made gains, including the privacy coin Monero (symbol XMR, not in table) which rose 1.8%.
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By Charles VollumThe Chinese Yuan, up 2.2%, was the strongest national currency, followed by the US Dollar, up 2.0%. The Japanese Yen was the weakest national currency, rising 0.6%, followed by the Canadian Dollar, which added 1.3%. USD cash was outperformed by treasury securities (both short term and long term) which rose 2.2%.
Equity indexes, with the exception of gold stocks, all moved higher, led by the Nikkei 225, up 2.1%, and the Dow Jones Industrials, up 2.0%. Outside of gold stocks, which dropped 0.5%, Euro STOXX50 was weakest, rising 0.8%.
Once again, commodities saw the most violent price action, both positive and negative. Crude oil rose 4.7%, and platinum advanced 3.8%, while coffee fell 6.9% and cotton dropped 0.1% to a new all-time low. Silver closed the week up 2.1%.
Ethereum fell 4.8% and Bitcoin slid 0.7%, but some smaller cryptos made gains, including the privacy coin Monero (symbol XMR, not in table) which rose 1.8%.
Click for PDF version