No Data
U.S. stock market preview: Heavyweight news! Non-farm data exceeds expectations, and the three major equity index futures jump; Fed "top three": there is still a long way to go to maintain the 2% inflation target.
The US earnings season will kick off next week, putting the US stock market to the test; the increase in US currency supply indicates a reversal of the concentration trend in the US stock market, and mid-small cap stocks may have opportunities; over 1 million chips will be shipped! Nvidia's sales in China are expected to reach $12 billion this year.
This week's bull stock in the US | Electric vehicle stocks collectively soar! Tesla's rise exceeded 24%, Ideanomics rose nearly 16%; Broadcom rose nearly 8%, and received the layout of "Congress Mountain Stock God" Pelosi.
This week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 0.48% to close at 39,308 points; during the same period, the S&P 500 index rose by 1.4% to close at 5,537.02 points; and the Nasdaq index rose by 2.57% to close at 18,188.3 points.
Be alert to non-farm payroll undermining interest rate expectations at 8:30 pm tonight!
Will tonight's non-farm data help boost interest rate expectations as multiple weak economic data this week have boosted them in turn?
Will there be any surprises in the non-farm data? The first major US data release day of the second half of the year has arrived.
If we were to discuss the most unpredictable economic indicators in the US market this year, non-farm payroll data would definitely make the list. Tonight marks the first non-farm evening of the second half of the year. What kind of surprises will this night bring? Will the data performance be unexpected once again?
"Trump 2.0" may be coming soon! Which major assets will "dance" and which will "lie flat"?
As traders assume that Trump's return to the White House is a basic market expectation, how should investors act?
Two top global assessment institutions warn of the risk of a US-European debt explosion.
Debt in the United States and other developed countries continues to rise, and only severe market pressure can change this trend.