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Forexlive Americas FX news wrap 30 May: PCE dips but may be the low for the cycle.

31 May 2025
  • US major indices close mixed with the Dow higher, S&P unchanged, and Nasdaq lower.
  • Crude oil futures settle at $60.79
  • More Japan Akazawa: No change in stance that tariffs, including those on auto, regretable
  • Trump: Tariffs are important. He is happy with appeals court decision
  • Iran says Pres. Trump threat to destroy Iran's nuclear facilities is a clear red line
  • Baker Hughes oil rig count -4 to 461
  • JPM Dimon: US government should get rid of carried interest
  • European indices close mostly higher. France's CAC falls
  • WH Chief of Staff Miller:China must show its commitment to rules-based international order
  • Japan's economic minister Akazawa met with US Treasury Secretary Bessent and Lutnick
  • Chiina's spokesperson:Both China and US have maintained communication over concerns
  • Atlanta Fed GDPNow growth estimate for Q2 rose to 3.8% from 2.2%
  • University of Michigan sentiment for May final 52.2 vs.51.0 estimate
  • WSJ Timiraos: This month is good, but what will the impact of tariffs going forward
  • US core PCE for April 0.1% vs 0.1% estimate. Core YoY 2.5% vs 2.5% estimate
  • Canada GDP Q1 Annualized 2.2% vs 1.7% estimate
  • USTR Greer on CNBC: We have tools if the tariff ruling goes the other way.
  • US Trade Representative Greer: China behaviour is completely unacceptable
  • Trump: China has totally violated its agreement with US
  • The USD is mixed vs the 3 major currency pairs with prices near MA levels
  • Germany May preliminary CPI (HICP) +2.1% vs +2.0% y/y expected
  • Forexlive European FX news wrap: Slow session as we await the US PCE release

The April US core PCE price index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, rose 0.1% month-over-month, matching expectations. On a year-over-year basis, core PCE increased 2.5%, also in line with forecasts. The prior month’s figures were revised slightly higher, with core PCE YoY adjusted to 2.7% from 2.6%. Headline PCE rose 0.1% m/m and 2.1% y/y, just below the 2.2% forecast, indicating some easing in price pressures. Core PCE excluding food and energy also rose 0.1%, while service prices excluding energy came in flat, down from 0.2% previously. Overall, good data.

In addition to the inflation data, personal income surged 0.8%, beating the 0.3% estimate and continuing a strong two-month trend after a prior upward revision to 0.7%. However, personal consumption rose just 0.1%, down from 0.7% in March, though inflation-adjusted consumption held steady at 0.2%. Strong income bodes well for the consumer.

The caveat for inflation: While the April data shows inflation largely under control, WSJ's Nick Timiraos noted two headwinds that could push future year-over-year figures higher.

  • First, low monthly PCE readings from mid-2024 will soon roll off the 12-month calculation window, mathematically raising YoY comparisons.
  • Second, tariffs may introduce new inflationary pressures moving forward.

With a string of soft monthly data starting in May 2024, upcoming MoM prints of 0.2% or more in headline or core PCE would likely lift annual inflation readings further. So it is likely PCE data has reached a low for now. The Fed and the market will have to deal with that dynamic going forward.

The U.S. advance goods trade balance data was also released today for April 2025, and it showed a significant improvement, with the trade deficit narrowing to -$87.6 billion from -$162.3 billion in March (nearly a halving of the prior month), a decrease of $74.6 billion. This marked a substantial reduction compared to the forecasted deficit of $143 billion.

Change in Imports and Exports:

  • Exports: Goods exports increased by $6.3 billion to $188.5 billion in April from $182.2 billion in March.

  • Imports: Goods imports decreased dramatically by $68.4 billion to $276.1 billion in April from $344.5 billion in March.

Reasons for the Dramatic Change: The significant improvement in the trade balance was primarily driven by a sharp decline in imports, coupled with a modest increase in exports. While specific reasons for the import drop are not fully detailed in the provided data, it seems tariff induced inventory accumulation may have reached its peak for now at least.

As a result of primarily the trade data, the Atlanta Fed GDPNow growth estimate for Q2 surged to 3.8% from 2.2%.

Later in the morning the Univ. of Michigan consumer sentiment in May held steady at 52.2, matching April’s level and coming in above both the preliminary reading of 50.8 and the 51.0 estimate. This marks a stabilization after four consecutive months of sharp declines. The current conditions index came in at 58.6, slightly below last month’s 59.6, while expectations improved to 47.9 from a preliminary 46.5 and prior 47.3—still the second-lowest reading of the year.

Inflation expectations moderated. One-year inflation expectations declined to 6.6% from the 7.3% preliminary figure (and just above last month’s 6.5%), marking the smallest month-over-month increase since the election. Five-year expectations dropped to 4.2%, down from 4.6% preliminary and 4.4% last month—the first decline since December 2024.

According to survey director Joanne Hsu, sentiment was buoyed late in the month by the temporary pause in some China tariffs, which improved expectations for business conditions. However, these gains were offset by weaker assessments of personal finances, tied to stagnant incomes. Consumers generally remain concerned about the future, and while trade policy clearly influenced sentiment, the tax and spending bill in Congress has yet to register with the public.

IN the farewell press conference to Elon Musk - who sported a black eye that he said was a result of horsing around with his son - President Trump reiterated the importance of tariffs and expressed satisfaction with the recent appeals court decision supporting his position. He commented on Elon Musk’s ongoing involvement with DOGE, calling it “his baby,” and noted that many within the team will stay on. Trump also emphasized that budget cuts will continue in a precise, surgical manner, with the effects expected to become clear in the long term.

On foreign policy, he stated that a Gaza deal is close, and there is a real possibility of a breakthrough with Iran in the near future. Iran has expressed other views, but who really knows. Turning to domestic issues, he expressed his desire to see a larger tax cut in the House bill and suggested that Harvard's funding should be redirected to support trade schools.

Regarding international relations, Trump described Putin and Zelenskyy as both stubborn. He reported that his recent meeting with Fed Chair Powell went well, and while he expects to speak with President Xi of China, no specific time has been set for that conversation, but he has hope a deal can be made.

The calmer comments on Xi and China during his press conference came after a morning sharply worded post, where President Trump claimed that China was facing grave economic turmoil just two weeks ago, brought on by the high tariffs he imposed, which he said made it "virtually impossible" for China to trade into the U.S.—the world’s largest marketplace. According to Trump, this abrupt economic pressure led to widespread factory closures and even civil unrest in China. Wanting to avoid further destabilization, he said he made a quick deal with Chinese leadership to help prevent a worsening crisis. While this deal initially brought stability, Trump now accuses China of having “totally violated” the agreement, expressing frustration with what he sees as a betrayal despite his efforts to be “Mr. Nice Guy.” His tone suggests a hardening stance on trade enforcement going forward.

Midday, Bloomberg reported that US was mulling wider China tech sanctions with a subsidiary crackdown.

The deals - especially with China and the EU will continue - but once, no new trade deals were completed.

The US stock market closed mixed today but higher for the month.

  • Dow Industrial Average, +54.34 points or 0.13% at 42,270.07
  • S&P down -0.48 points or -0.01% at 5911.69
  • Nasdaq down -62.11 points or -0.22% at 19113.77

The Russell 2000 closed lower by -8.49 points or -0.41% at 2066.26

For the trading week, the indices all closed higher:

  • Dow rose 1.60%
  • S&P rose 1.88%
  • Nasdaq rose 2.01%
  • Russell 2000 rose 2.01%

US yields closed lower:

  • 2-year yield 3.899%, -3.7 basis points
  • 5-year yield 3.959%, -3.8 basis points
  • 10-year yield 4.398%, -2.6 basis points
  • 30-year yield 4.924%, +0.1 basis point.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.

World indices overview: news from US 30, US 500, US Tech, JP 225, and DE 40 for 29 May 2025

30 May 2025

The court ruling that repealed tariffs imposed by the current US administration boosted investor optimism and global stock indices. Find out more in our analysis and forecast for global indices for 29 May 2025.

US indices forecast: US 30, US 500, US Tech

  • Recent data: a federal trade court blocks Trump’s global reciprocal tariffs and orders the administration to rescind them
  • Market impact: global indices resume growth as demand for stocks from investors increases

Fundamental analysis

The court ruling permanently blocks the tariffs unless an appellate court allows President Donald Trump to reinstate them during further legal proceedings. The Department of Justice has already filed a notice of appeal. This decision significantly undermines his economic agenda, and global markets responded positively.

In its ruling, the three-judge panel of the US Court of International Trade stated that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), which Trump used to justify the tariffs, does not grant the president authority to impose universal import duties. The US administration has filed an appeal.

US 30 technical analysis

The US 30 index broke above the recently formed resistance level at 42,430.0, with the support level shifting to 42,030.0. A new level has yet to form. The situation in the US 30 continues to change – this marks the third trend reversal. Technically, the conditions for an uptrend have emerged, but the formation of a sideways channel is also possible. The boundaries of this range may be breached, but without a trend continuation.

The following scenarios are considered for the US 30 price forecast:

  • Pessimistic US 30 forecast: a breakout below the 42,030.0 support level could push the index to 40,215.0
  • Optimistic US 30 forecast: a breakout above the 42,430.0 resistance level could drive the index to 43,890.0
US 30 technical analysis

US 500 technical analysis

The US 500 index has entered a corrective phase, with the support area shifting down to 5,640.0 and new resistance forming at 5,960.0. There is a growth impulse, which may lead to a breakout above the current resistance level. The index maintains its upward trajectory, with the potential to evolve into a stable medium-term uptrend.

The following scenarios are considered for the US 500 price forecast:

  • Pessimistic US 500 forecast: a breakout below the 5,640.0 support level could send the index down to 5,355.0
  • Optimistic US 500 forecast: a breakout above the 5,960.0 resistance level could propel the index to 6,085.0
US 500 technical analysis

US Tech technical analysis

The US Tech index has consolidated above the 200-day Moving Average, indicating persistent upward momentum. The support line has shifted to 19,980.0, and the resistance level is marked at 21,435.0. Given the current dynamics, the likelihood of a medium-term uptrend remains high if the price consolidates above the 21,435.0 level after breaking above it.

The following scenarios are considered for the US Tech price forecast:

  • Pessimistic US Tech forecast: a breakout below the 19,980.0 support level could push the index down to 19,150.0
  • Optimistic US Tech forecast: if the price consolidates above the previously breached resistance level at 21,435.0, the index could climb to 22,230.0
US Tech technical analysis

Asian index forecast: JP 225

  • Recent data: Bank of Japan’s core CPI for May (preliminary) came in at 2.4%
  • Market impact: if inflation continues to rise, the Bank of Japan may adopt tighter measures – traditionally perceived as a bearish signal for the stock market

Fundamental analysis

The Bank of Japan’s core Consumer Price Index (CPI) reflects the year-over-year price change for goods and services, excluding fresh food. In May 2025, the figure stood at 2.4%, higher than the forecast of 2.3% and the previous reading of 2.2%, indicating that inflation in Japan remains persistent and may be intensifying.

Higher-than-expected inflation increases pressure on the Bank of Japan to tighten monetary policy (e.g., raising interest rates). This could boost bond yields and make equities less attractive. Traders and analysts will now closely monitor BoJ statements and further macroeconomic data to assess the likelihood of a policy shift.

JP 225 technical analysis

The JP 225 index rebounded from the 36,590.0 support level and headed towards resistance at 38,765.0. If this level is breached, the previously formed medium-term uptrend will continue. At the moment, there are no signs of a trend reversal.

The following scenarios are considered for the JP 225 price forecast:

  • Pessimistic JP 225 forecast: a breakout below the 36,590.0 support level could push the index down to 33,820.0
  • Optimistic JP 225 forecast: a breakout above the 38,765.0 resistance level could drive the index to 39,625.0
JP 225 technical analysis

European index forecast: DE 40

  • Recent data: Germany’s unemployment rate for May (preliminary) was 6.3%
  • Market impact: since the actual figure matched the forecast and remained unchanged from the previous period, investors are unlikely to revise their strategies significantly

Fundamental analysis

Germany’s unemployment rate (6.3% for May 2025) reflects the proportion of the working-age population actively seeking employment. This figure matched both the forecast and the previous month, indicating stability in the labour market. It shows neither improvement nor deterioration.

The absence of negative surprises may help maintain the current market sentiment. Given the stagnant labour market, investors may shift focus to upcoming data on wage growth, inflation, and PMI to gain a clearer picture of economic conditions. This report has a moderate impact on the German stock market and is interpreted as a neutral signal.

DE 40 technical analysis

The DE 40 index has established key levels: resistance at 24,305.0 and support at 23,270.0. The current trend shows strengthening upward momentum. The index retains the potential to reach a new all-time high.

The following scenarios are considered for the DE 40 price forecast:

  • Pessimistic DE 40 forecast: a breakout below the 23,270.0 support level could send the index down to 22,245.0
  • Optimistic DE 40 forecast: a breakout above the 24,305.0 resistance level could propel the index to 24,855.0
DE 40 technical analysis

Summary

The US court decision to repeal imposed tariffs generated positive sentiment among investors. Several existing tariffs on specific goods, such as aluminium and steel, remain unaffected by Wednesday’s ruling as the president did not invoke IEEPA to justify them. The US 30 index once again broke above the resistance level, reversing the early signs of a downtrend. Japan’s JP 225 is advancing towards its current resistance level. The US 500 and US Tech indices continue to trade in an uptrend, with Germany’s DE 40 aiming for another all-time high.

Hardy’s Macro View: Rule #1 for the Trump 2.0 market era.

21 May 2025
This is part one of a four-part article series on how to stay nimble, calm and safe in the turbulent era of Trump 2.0.

Note: This article is marketing material..

This is the first of a four-part article series on how the trading and investing playing field have changed in the Trump 2.0 era, one that is in sharp contrast to everything that came before it, precisely because Trump is trying to upend the global order as we knew it. The enormous market volatility before and after Trump’s Liberation Day tariff announcements offer some important lessons just as it may tempt us to make some possibly very dangerous conclusions. But now to the chase….

Preview: what just happened that burned both the bulls and the bears? This past weekend and Monday were a microcosm of the Trump presidency and its interaction with the markets. After closing lasts week on a strong note, US equity markets were suddenly in bad shape briefly early Monday before rallying strongly to close in the green on the day. The brief bout of pessimism was touched off in part by the latest fears that Trump’s “big, beautiful” tax cut and spending bill that is winding its way through the House of Representatives risks spiking US treasury yields as it seems his administration is failing to make any credible effort to lower deficits. Moody’s, the bond ratings agency, added to this fear with a downgrade of US treasuries from their AAA reading, that last major bond ratings agency to do so. As well, US Treasury Secretary Bessent warned on Sunday that those punitive Liberation Day tariffs could be imposed for countries after all if they don’t negotiate “in good faith” – whatever that means. And somehow, come the market open, the market brushes away the fears and rallies to a new high for the month.

This push and pull of sudden jumps from optimism to pessimism and back is like a little microcosm of what has unfolded for US equity markets since Trump took office in late January. First we had the massive cratering of confidence on the US DOGE cutting spending and US president Trump on the trade warpath with tariffs here, tariffs there and tariffs everywhere. This culminated at the early April lows when Trump very briefly allowed the very high new "Liberation Day" tariffs against all major US trading partners announced on April 2 to take effect before suddenly announcing a 90-day suspension of those tariffs to allow time to negotiate bilateral trade deals with all US trading partners.

Because China was not included in the Liberation Day tariff suspension, the market comeback was held back until Monday, May 12, after a weekend agreement in Geneva, Switzerland between the US and China saw the huge 145% US tariffs on China reduced to 30% and the China's 125% tariffs on US reduced to 10%.  That helped clear the way for last week’s rally as what an FT columnist has dubbed the “TACO trade” was engaged once again: Trump Always Chickens Out. This is the oft repeated pattern of Trump staking out a wild policy position that he then largely backtracks from later. First the horror and selling and then the huge sigh of relief and rally when Trump backs off. Arguably, since inauguration day, we have seen one enormous TACO trade. And yet, uncertainty remains and changes are still afoot.

Chart: The great fall and recovery – symptomatic of the Trump 2.0 era? The market was very bullish in anticipation when Trump won the election in 2024 as everyone remembered the great equity market runup in 2017 as Trump slashed taxes for companies and individuals. But this time, the fun didn’t last for long as the disruptive DOGE, immigration crackdowns, and not least massive tariff announcements threatened sentiment and the outlook. The fear levels peaked in early April when Trump’s Liberation Day tariffs were allowed to go into effect very briefly before a suspension for negotiations was announced.

Source: Saxo

What is the outlook now that we are back to flat on US equities in 2025? TACO trade or not, many are breathing a sigh of relief after the disorienting volatility now that we have come more or less full circle since the beginning of the year, with US equities back to about flat on the year. Note that global investors are not as happy as US-based investors, as the major US equity indices are actually still down on the year in EUR terms and especially in JPY or CHF terms, as the US dollar has fallen.

With things a bit calmer after the bulls were burned from February into early April, and the bears were positively barbecued from the early April lows until mid-May, we should take stock of any lessons we can learn that will help us avoid excess drama in our portfolios. To help in this effort, I have come up with four axioms or “rules” for the Trump 2.0 era that can hopefully help investors and traders stay a bit safer in this environment. The first rule is:

Rule #1: Policy and market volatility are going to continue – embrace it.

Trump might “chicken out” at times, but the underlying policy moves are for real and a deadly serious shift in US economic statecraft and industrial policy that is a response to massive instabilities that have been growing for years.

Like his style or hate it, Trump is the first US president to take a serious stab at reversing the imbalances that the post-WWII system created, particularly since the mid-1990’s. For the last few decades, mercantilist powers like Germany, Japan, South Korea and above all China took advantage of the USD-based global order to keep their currencies artificially cheap to encourage a buildup of export-driven industrial capacity. The system required the US to run permanent large deficits to send enough US dollars for the world to use the US dollar as the chief global reserve currency. This allowed US to afford a high living standard, even as the setup drove a worsening inequality problem at home as manufacturing job disappeared, just as it drove a hollowing out the US industrial base.

Now, Trump is using tariffs, trade rules, and alliances as levers for American advantage, essentially playing the same game that mercantilist states have been playing, but now in reverse. Just because he takes 7 steps forward and 5 steps back doesn’t mean we aren’t going somewhere. And ironically, perhaps precisely at times when things have calmed down nicely, Trump feels emboldened to unleash a fresh policy initiative that sets everyone on edge all over again.

What does this mean for your investments and trading?

Make sure that you see the forest for the trees – the question is the speed with which, not whether we are detonating the old global order. Yes, Trump nearly always backtracks (TACO’s) on unrealistically strong policy moves to avoid excess immediate damage to market confidence, knowing that his legacy will “wear” the stock market performance under his time at the helm. But his chaotic style is forcing real change by economic players on the ground. Companies must now consider making huge and possibly expensive changes to diversify or reshore their supply chains that would never have been taken unless the Trump administration wasn’t cracking the whip. The speed is always a huge question mark in this new regime, but the direction of travel isn’t. Consider the single, if very large, case of Apple – which still produces most of its iPhones in China. Even as Trump carved out exceptions to eye-watering tariff levels it imposed on China to allow Apple to continue to export iPhones and other gear to the US at reduced levels, Apple announced that it would shift its production of iPhones to India. This sparked fresh Trump anger as he clearly wants those iPhones produced in the USA. A move to India is already expensive for Apple, but a move to the US would be far more so. And can Apple afford to lose market share by passing on all of those costs to its customers? Other companies will have to make similar considerations, but for especially critical industries that are needed. Which leads us to….

Figure out who will benefit. This transformation in US economic statecraft will likely not end up being across the board, but aimed mostly at specific, strategic industries that keep the gears of the US economy going around and its people comfortable for which the US cannot rely on far-flung or adversarial countries like China for supply chains. That is still a lot of industries – everything related to digital, pharmaceuticals, energy and all transport infrastructure (especially shipping, which China completely dominates), high tech and even basic industrial low-tech and if it is an input to any of the above. Only low value add industries like recreational goods and some textiles might largely escape US tariff focus. The US tariffs will mean higher costs and lower profit margins for some companies that need to invest in reshoring or diversifying their supply chains. But other companies might benefit from a protectionist umbrella that avoids the profit-destroying competition with especially Chinese companies that aren’t interest in profits but only servicing the Chinese mandate to control productive capacity. Think ship-building as per above, dual military-civilian technologies in chips and even shipping containers, nuclear energy, pharmaceuticals and strategic commodities like rare earths.

Realize that the Fed isn’t what it used to be: no more bailouts just to avoid volatility. Because of the massive uncertainty on growth and especially inflation that Trump’s economic and economic statecraft is generating, the Fed has been sidelined as it can’t provide the kind of support that it has provided at nearly every turn at least as far back as 1998 when it bailed out the notorious LTCM hedge fund. Excessive Fed easing only keeps alive operators in the economy that otherwise wouldn’t’ stay alive, and are therefore a dead weight, productivity drain on the US economy. As well, any Fed easing from here will likely have far more to do with keeping the US treasury market functioning smoothly and the US government able to pay its bills than at supporting asset market prices (even if the effect can at times be the same.) It’s hard to believe after the nearly three decades that the central banks were masters of the universe, but those days are over. We are in a new era of fiscal dominance, in which government policy is in the drivers’ seat – i.e., Trump and the Republicans are at the wheel. That will remain the case at least until after the US mid-terms in late 2026, and possibly beyond if the Republicans retain control of the House and Senate, and to some degree anyway as long as Trump maintains the ability to make significant policy moves like those on tariffs through executive order.

Stay tuned next week for Rule #2 of the Trump 2.0 market era.

John J. HardyGlobal Head of Macro StrategySaxo Bank
Topics: Macro Trump Version 2 - Traders Trump Version 2 - Investors Equities Highlighted articles