
- Moving the market
The market opened lower and pretty much stayed that way, dragged down early by JPMorgan Chase.
Traders were digesting the latest CPI inflation data (core up 0.2% MoM and 2.6% YoY—both below estimates) while weighing President Trump’s push for a one-year 10% cap on credit card interest rates.
JPMorgan’s CFO basically said the industry might fight back hard, sending the stock down more than 2%. Goldman Sachs followed with a 1%+ drop, and payment giants like Mastercard and Visa each slid around 5%.
The CPI reading (plus last week’s softer jobs report) reinforced the idea that the Fed might hold off on rate cuts at their next meeting. No big surprise—equities couldn’t shake the pressure.
In the end, the major indexes closed modestly lower. Bond yields eased, the dollar chopped sideways, and while Bitcoin and some metals finished higher, they all came off intraday highs.
Mega-caps did their usual dump-pump-dump routine with no clear direction. Gold touched a new record high before fading, and silver stole the spotlight again, topping $89 for the first time and closing up almost 2%.
To me, it feels like when stocks and most assets are drifting aimlessly, but silver’s still smashing records, the hard-asset bull is just doing its own thing… while the broader market might be getting a little tired and needs a fresh catalyst soon.
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