As a complicated financial trading product, contracts for difference (CFDs) have the high risk of rapid loss arising from its leverage feature. Most retail investor accounts recorded fund loss in contracts for differences. You should consider whether you have developed a full understanding about the operation rules of contracts for differences and whether you can bear the high risk of fund loss.
A pre-Christmas rally finally seems to be in progress, as shrinking volumes and an emptying calendar give stocks the space to move higher. Stocks at last make headway “A marginally more festive atmosphere prevails across stock markets this afternoon, with Christmas now very much within sight for most investors. This Santa rally has been long-expected, and eagerly-awaited, but kept being delayed by central banks, inflation data and other road bumps that have prevented any meaningful bounce developing for most of the month so far. Perhaps, with so little on the agenda before Christmas Day, markets finally have scope for a decent rally to round off such a difficult year.” Oil prices push up following inventory data “Oil has had a good day too, with the rebound from oversold levels gaining strength following the drop in inventory data. A year of two halves has seen oil rally and then drop back, and with no sign of any cut in output from OPEC and a recession still likely next year we could well see further drops in price. Consumers will welcome this at least, since it provides a much-needed respite from the surge in fuel prices that dominated the first half of 2022.”
US stocks are rallying after consumer confidence bounces back and on strong earnings by Nike and FedEx. The news was too good today and that has made the many Grinches on Wall Street tentatively throw in the towel. Return of Confidence Today’s consumer confidence reading is a head scratcher for people expecting the economy to quickly fall into a recession. The Conference Board’s confidence reading surged to 108.3, crushing the consensus estimate of 101.0, and hitting the highest level in 8 months. Both the present situation and expectations readings improved significantly along with upward revisions to the prior month. The CB’s Senior Director of Economic Indicators Franco noted, “Inflation expectations retreated in December to their lowest level since September 2021, with recent declines in gas prices a major impetus.” Consumer spending trends are expected to shift to services as big-ticket items cool further. The economy is still headed towards a recession, but the consumer continues to show signs of resilience which could delay a significant tumble for equities. Home Sales The data continues to deteriorate in the housing market. Existing home sales declined more than expected as surging borrowing costs and weaker consumer hold off home purchases. Fedex Fedex shares are surging after the delivery giant posted the classic earnings beat and cost reduction announcement. This quarter was quite the improvement from the prior one that raised concerns of weakening global demand ahead of the holiday season. The results for both the top and bottom line were lower than a year ago, but an even further acceleration in cost savings is what is helping the share prices. During the earnings call, FedEx CFO Lenz noted that volume declines should moderate as they move through the rest of the year. The worst appears to be over FedEx. Nike Nike crushed this earnings season, inventories are improving, and their outlook going forward was rather upbeat. The results from China are heading in the right direction as they’ve started to reopen. Wall Street is liking Nike’s top and bottom-line beat, better-than-expected margins, and as inventories declined from last quarter. North America sales are healthy and Chinese demand should improve going forward. Oil Crude prices are rallying after stockpiles declined more than expected and as OPEC+ remains committed to keeping supplies tight. The EIA report showed that crude, gasoline, and distillate demand improved from the prior week. Gasoline inventories rose but that was somewhat to be expected as peak driving season is well behind us. Production remained steady while imports tumbled. As we approach peak holiday season, jet fuel demand has clearly returned, approaching the highest seasonal levels seen since 2017. The path of least resistance is clearly higher for oil prices and it should continue if China’s reopening doesn’t have major obstacles. Gold Gold prices are ready to enter holiday mode as the bond market selloff has run out of steam. Gold got a modest boost after falling inflation bolstered consumer confidence and pushed risky assets higher. It looks like gold might struggle to get anywhere close to the $1850 level unless we see a fresh major catalyst. Cryptos Bitcoin wavers as the cryptoverse watches the latest developments with the FTX collapse. Sam Bankman-Fried has agreed to be extradited to the US and we may soon find out who else in FTX will be investigated and what other companies are impacted. Bitcoin isn't getting much of a boost from the positive risk-on environment that is running through Wall Street.
A surprise move by the Bank of Japan yesterday triggered a rise in bond yields and strengthened a move lower in the US dollar. US dollar index monthly chart courtesy of StockCharts.com annotations by Mish Yesterday, the Bank of Japan unexpectedly lifted its ceiling on 10-year government bonds from 0.25 percent to 0.50 percent. Japan 10-year bond yield courtesy of Trading Economics The BOJ lifted the ceiling to stop an unwelcome slide in the yen. In response, bond yields also jumped in the US. US Treasury Note 10-Year Yield US 10-year bond yield courtesy of Trading Economics For the first time in a decade, all major central banks are tightening, with Japan still doing the least. Long term, I doubt this rather pissy move by the Bank of Japan will do much of anything to US treasury yields. And don't expect the new cap to hold either. Speculators will again force the BOJ's hand. Caps won't work. They are a failed policy. The same applies to ridiculous Buyers' Cartel Oil Price Caps. But what about the dollar? US Dollar Support Levels On the monthly chart, there are strong support levels way below at 90 and 80. A weekly chart shows additional support zones. US dollar index weekly chart courtesy of StockCharts.com annotations by Mish The US dollar is right at support. I do not expect much of a bounce here if indeed any. There is minor support at 101 and much stronger support at 95. Given both monthly and weekly support at the 90 level, that is a good spot to bet on reasonable bounce in the dollar. UDN US Dollar Index Bear Fund US dollar index Bear Fund chart courtesy of StockCharts.com annotations by Mish Dollar Fundamentals Deficit spending in the US is totally out of control. Rising treasury yields will consume increasing amounts of tax revenues The Fed is giving away billions of taxpayer dollars in free money to banks. US housing market is collapsing Corporate earnings are falling Consensus earnings are still too high The US stock market is still insanely overvalued, even on a relative basis to the rest of the world The US pace of tightening is slowing while tightening elsewhere rates to catch up a bit. For discussion of free money, please see How Much Free Taxpayer Money is the Fed Giving to Banks? In short, US dollar fundamentals stink. This may not be the best entry as the dollar is right at support but UDN is worth considering here or on a bounce. Understanding Long Term Moves in Gold, What's Going On? Also consider Understanding Long Term Moves in Gold, What's Going On?
The Bank of Japan made a surprise move on Tuesday morning, extending the permissible yield range of 10-year government bonds. The decision caused the yen to strengthen by more than 3%, and the Nikkei225 index lost as much as 4% before recovering almost half of its initial decline. The central bank of Japan said at the end of its regular meeting that it would switch from a 0.25% yield target to a 0.0-0.50% target range instead. As yields had been held at 0.25% solely due to BoJ purchases, the range extension immediately sent yields to the upper end of the range. This decision meant that the BoJ would print fewer yen to buy government bonds for the FX market, strengthening the currency. Strictly speaking, the Bank of Japan has made monetary policy less accommodating. However, the difference with key rates of other countries remains disastrous, as it is the only one keeping rates negative with an active QE phase. On the other hand, the signal from the softer central bank itself is definite and could be a trial balloon for a fundamental policy reversal. Bank of Japan meetings are no longer boring. We also pay attention to the timing of the changes. The powerful interventions of the Japanese Ministry of Finance in November stopped the USDJPY rising and confirmed the reversal in the pair thanks to a decisive move down on a break-down of the 50-day moving average. Throughout December, we saw a three-week consolidation of the pair just above the 200 SMA. The decisive move down after the extended consolidation has been reinforced by the fact that during the lull in the pair, the stop orders pulled closer to the market and are now triggered in droves. A sharp pullback of the pair under its 200 SMA often signals the reversal of the long-term trend. We had similar signals earlier in the EURUSD and the GBPUSD. In addition, the fall of the USDJPY below 133 was below the 61.8% retracement of the entire momentum of the pair from the beginning of 2021 to the peak in October 2022. Market participants' conviction of a hawkish reversal of Bank of Japan policy could trigger a new round of decline in the pair with a technical target near 127. This is where the 50% level of the mentioned last rally and the support area in May of the year gone by are concentrated.
USD/JPY slumps to over a four-month low in reaction to the BoJ's unexpected hawkish twist. The BoJ shocks markets by adjusting the YCC program and provides a strong lift to the JPY. The Fed's hawkish outlook, rising US bond yields underpins the USD and could lend support. The USD/JPY pair came under heavy selling pressure during the Asian session on Tuesday and dived to over a four-month low after the Bank of Japan (BoJ) announced its policy decision. In an unexpected hawkish twist, the Japanese central bank widened the allowable trading band for the 10-year government bond yield to 50 bps on either side of the 0% target from the 25 bps previous. The move is seen as a step towards the policy normalisation process. The BoJ, however, maintains its guidance to ramp up stimulus as needed and projects that interest rates will move at current or lower levels. Nevertheless, the surprise announcement, along with the prevalent risk-off environment, boosts the Japanese Yen. The market sentiment remains fragile amid worries that a surge in COVID-19 infections in China could delay a broader reopening in the country. To a more significant extent, this overshadows the recent optimism led by the easing of strict lockdown measures in China. Apart from this, the protracted Russia-Ukraine continues to fuel concerns about a deeper global economic downturn and tempers investors' appetite for riskier assets. The anti-risk flow is evident from an extended sell-off in the equity markets, which, in turn, benefits the traditionally safe-haven Japanese Yen. On the other hand, the US Dollar is seeing a mixed performance against its major counterparts and fails to impress bulls or lend any support to the USD/JPY pair. That said, a goodish pickup in the US Treasury bond yields, bolstered by a more hawkish commentary by the Fed last week, might continue to act as a tailwind for the greenback. It is worth recalling that the US central bank indicated that it would continue to raise rates to crush inflation. Furthermore, policymakers projected at least an additional 75 bps increases in borrowing costs by the end of 2023. This is the only factor holding back traders from placing fresh bearish bets around the USD/JPY pair. Market participants now look to the post-meeting press conference, where comments by BoJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda might influence the JPY. Apart from this, the broader risk sentiment should provide some impetus. Technical Outlook From a technical perspective, a sustained break and acceptance below the important 200-day SMA could be seen as a fresh trigger for bearish traders. Some follow-through selling below the 133.00 mark, coinciding with the 50% Fibonacci retracement level of the strong 2022 rally, will reaffirm the negative bias and pave the way for deeper losses. The USD/JPY pair might accelerate the slide to the 132.15 intermediate support before eventually dropping to the 131.50 region en route to the 131.00 round figure and the 130.40-130.35 zone. On the flip side, attempted recovery moves might now confront immediate resistance near the 134.00 mark ahead of the 134.20-134.25 region. Any further move up is more likely to attract fresh sellers near the 135.00 psychological mark and remain capped near the 135.50-135.60 horizontal zone. The latter coincides with a technically significant 200-day SMA, which should now act as a pivotal point. A sustained strength beyond, though unlikely, might negate the near-term negative outlook and prompt aggressive short-covering around the USD/JPY pair.
Outlook: This week in the US it’s mostly housing data, consumer confidence and a biggie, personal income and spending on Friday–but Friday is the day before Christmas and almost certainly a short day in Europe and the US. Elsewhere the new include inflation and BoJ meeting in Japan. The IFO and Gfk indices in Germany, and a ton of data from Canada, including CPI and retail sales. Canada will see a run of important releases headlined by consumer prices on Wednesday, where favorable results are the expectations, preceded by what is expected to be a strong rebound for retail sales on Tuesday and no change for monthly GDP on Friday. Two things count the most: the policy response to the Covid surge in China and US inflation. We have a boatload of opinion pieces on the Chine Covid surge situation. We take the view that China knew it would get a surge of cases and deaths of about a million, as described above, and lifted restrictions anyway. This decision was not to show the protesters what the government was protecting them from, but rather an economic decision. Harsh quarantines and city lockdowns were costing too much economically and lifting unemployment in the critical 17-20 year old demographic. Growth forecasts were down around 3.5%. A good third of the expected deaths are expected in the seriously old population that is not the workforce, anyway. Bottom line: China re-opening means good news for two critical areas–inflation will fall on increased supply and rising commodity prices. The market is still not buying the Fed’s resolute stance on rates higher for longer. The Fed foresees the Fed funds rate over 5% next year and for most of all of the year. But futures say otherwise–the implied terminal rate for May remains at 4.83%, with almost a half point of rate cuts still priced between then and the end of 2023. Good news on inflation, maybe–the New York Fed on Friday released its “underlying inflation gauge,” which is NOT core but rather its own alternative to the CPI. For definitions, If you like to get this stuff yourself, you can sign up for the NY Fed’s “email alerts.” Remember, CPI was 7.1%. The NY Fed underlying inflation ("full data set") gets 4.1%, down 0.2%. The "prices-only" measure is 5.6%, down 0.1%. Here’s a juicy statement: The mean “trend CPI” is within a range of 4.1% to 5.6%, a slightly wider range than October. See the chart. The thoughtful Authers at Bloomberg writes “A growing majority of observers think inflation is at last at the point where it will come down without too much more help from monetary policy. Evidence that inflation expectations remain fairly well-anchored bolsters this thesis, as does the belief that commodity prices will continue to fall and that supply chain problems are more or less over. With central banks committed to quantitative tightening (selling bonds from their portfolios into the market), as well as keeping rates high, the argument is that inflation will be under 3% by the end of next summer. Such a scenario plainly motivates a majority of the managers controlling large funds at present. A “pain trade” would thus involve rising bond yields and rising risk assets as the economy continued to stay buoyant.” The mysterious job market in the US is the biggest roadblock to the recession scenario. One pushback to the conventional idea of job growth comes from the Philadelphia Fed’s Early Benchmark Revisions of State Employment Data. The Philly Fed says employment is being seriously overstated by official statistics. In Q2, “In the aggregate, 10,500 net new jobs were added during the period rather than the 1,121,500 jobs estimated by the sum of the states; the U.S. Current Employment Statistics estimated net growth of 1,047,000 jobs for the period.” In other words, employment is overstated by a vast amount–only 10,000 instead of over a million. Authers says “If employment has been overstated this seriously, then the bears may well be right, and further Fed tightening would be very dangerous. Expect this to be a critical issue for the next few months.” Then there is the conventional wisdom that it takes a super0long time for inflation to be tamed. This is “illustrated in the following chart from History Lessons: How “Transitory” Is Inflation? by Rob Arnott and Omid Shakernia of Research Associates LLC.” The chart is hard to read. It says, basically, it can take well over a decade to get inflation down from 8% to 3%. Ah, but we say this is based on past inflation periods driven by excessive demand. This time inflation was driven by supply shortages. Can we use that old experience? Still, it’s haunting that “on the basis of post-1970 history, the notion that inflation having topped 8%...
The central bank torch will pass to the Bank of Japan next week. Even though the consensus is for no policy changes, the prospects for the yen have started to improve heading into a potentially stormy year. There's also a heavy dose of data releases from Canada and the United States.
Outlook: Today the data overload slows down and the main event is the S&P manufacturing PMI for Dec, expected unchanged at 47.7 from Nov, with services perhaps up to 45.5 from 46.2. San Francisco Fed Daly speaks at noon. As the data above indicates, everybody is slowing down, if by less than the gloomsters were predicting only a few weeks ago. All the central banks that raised rates this week and promised an unbreakable commitment to killing inflation are calling for a soft landing. The US economy is slowing, if not fatally so. The Atlanta Fed’s latest Q4 GDPNow stands at 2.8%, from 3.2% last week. Each of the big factors fell. Christmas is 9 days away and while interest in year-end closing levels is as keen as ever, the quality of the analysts’ work gets smudgy and weak. There is too much distracting attention to Musk, who is nearing Trump in obnoxiousness and narcissism. Are we getting the dollar bounce that so many factors seem to justify, or was yesterday a flash in the pan? To get to an answer, we need to decide whether the Fed in particular will chicken out if data shows recession—go back and look at the Empire State and Philly Fed indices. This is what the market is counting on—an end to hiking sooner than the Fed says, in 2023 instead of 2024. But on the whole, we don’t see catastrophically bad data anywhere—yet. Ah, but winter can be a hard one, and economists are already warning that while energy inventories may suffice this time, next year wil be a different kettle of fish. Next week we will be flooded with forecasts for 2023. Every forecaster knows perfectly well it’s a foolish and wasteful enterprise to try to forecast, but markets pay us to do it and it’s needed for decision-makers, who also know perfectly well they will probably have to changes horses in midstream. Our own forecast for the dollar is higher for longer, alongside the Fed’s narrative, but we have yet to see it begin to take hold. This is an excerpt from “The Rockefeller Morning Briefing,” which is far larger (about 10 pages). The Briefing has been published every day for over 25 years and represents experienced analysis and insight. The report offers deep background and is not intended to guide FX trading. Rockefeller produces other reports (in spot and futures) for trading purposes. To get a two-week trial of the full reports plus traders advice for only $3.95. Click here!
BoE raised rates yesterday by 50bp as expected, but speculators look towards the end of the hiking cycle due to recession risk which was highlighted by BoE's Tenreyro & Dhingra. They said that 3% bank rate is more than enough to bring CPI back to target. In fact, Dhingra warned of a deeper longer recession with higher rates already before. As such, it's not a surprise to see the pound weakening since yesterday. Notice that the price fell below the wedge, likely stepping into a corrective phase. 1.19-2.0 is support. We talked about this technical reaction a few days before the market turned as you can see on our screenshot of Elliott wave analysis below. The question is where we go from here? Well, we try to focus on a minimum expectation which in our case is a three-wave drop, ideally wave four. Stocks are already weakening and if this will be the case in the next few sessions we think that pound can very easily make an A-B-C pattern to the south. Updated analysis Broken wedge suggests that temporary top is in and that market is making a three wave decline. Elliott wave analysis GBP/USD Past Elliott Wave expectations When you see a wedge formation at the end of an extended leg, then you should be aware of a change in trend, especially ahead of important events such as was BoE rate decision this week BLACK FRIDAY Monthly 50% Off Lifetime Crypto, FX and major Global Markets. Apply here.
For the third time since April, the S&P500 index faces a sharp sell-off from the 200-day average. And all times, the fundamental reason is a more hawkish Fed policy than the markets had hoped for. In June-August and October-December, the S&P500 started with a technical reversal after it oversold the market. Later buying was supported by signs of weakening inflation, which fed hopes that the Fed would soften its tone. However, Powell and co have been persistent in embedding the idea in the markets that the fight against inflation will be extended. About as insistent as assurances about the "transitory" nature of inflation in 2021. Even if the Fed is wrong in its forecasts now, it can raise the rate so sharply that it will first put a heavy burden on the financial market and, through it, on the entire economy. It is believed that it takes several quarters before the effects of a change in monetary policy are fully reflected in the economy. This is probably why the economy has continued to create jobs despite the most violent monetary tightening cycle since the 1980s. More problems lie ahead, which is predicted by the Fed, expecting GDP growth of only 0.5% and a jump in unemployment from 3.7% to 4.6% over 2023. However, we must remember that the market can be wrong too. The general expectation right now is that the developed world is suffering permanently from low inflation and that the current jump is due to an unfortunate concurrence of one-off factors, the effects of which are already wearing off. So far, we saw a pullback in ship container costs to pre-covid-19 'normal' levels and Crude Oil return to 12-month lows. However, low unemployment and de-globalisation can keep inflationary pressures markedly above the Fed's target for the foreseeable future. However, this week's dynamics are worrying if one looks out of context and only at the charts. After the inflation release, the almost 3% surge in S&P 500 futures was trashed in less than 3 hours. The market closed that day under the 200-day MA, doubting the downtrend break. The strong selling since Wednesday is very similar to what we saw in April and August reversals. On top of that, the index flew over the 61.8% Fibonacci mark of the rise since the beginning of October during the fall. In Thursday's trading, the S&P500 fell helplessly out of the up-trending trading channel that has been neatly forming over the past two-plus months. In theory, a sharp rebound is possible today due to the large-scale quarterly expiry of futures and options. However, a likely increase in trading volumes today could work for both bulls and bears. In addition, we note that still the Fed has lowered the rate hike step and did not dismiss the idea that the next hike could be 0.25 points. We also continue to see bullish signals in related markets. The Dow Jones index remained above its 200-day average and drew a "golden cross" to start the week. EURUSD and GBPUSD have crossed their 200-day averages and attracted buyers on the dip.
WTI Oil The WTI oil price heads lower for the second straight day, as sentiment soured on unexpected hawkish stance of three major central banks, though optimism on hopes about China’s demand recovery and fears on supply disruptions, remains alive. The WTI contract, despite losses in past two days, is on track for bullish weekly close that may delay larger bears, which face headwinds from psychological $70 support, where the action was repeatedly rejected. Signals from daily chart are in favor of further weakness as negative momentum is strengthening and MA’s are in bearish setup, while stochastic emerges from overbought territory. This suggests that the downside remains at increased risk, especially if Friday’s action closes below 10 DMA ($74.39) which would open way for renewed attack at pivotal $70 zone. Firm break below $70 would risk fresh acceleration and expose targets at $68.50 (50% retracement of $6.52/$130.48) and $65.05 (200WMA) in extension. Near term bias is expected to remain with bears while the action stays below the double-top at $77.73/79 (Dec 14,15) and only firm break here would ease downside pressure and allow for stronger bounce. Res: 75.97; 76.55; 77.79; 79.79. Sup: 73.03; 71.91; 70.00; 68.50. Interested in WTI technicals? Check out the key levels
US markets Stock futures were down slightly overnight after a negative day for U.S. equities on Wednesday. After announcing a half a percentage point interest rate hike, the Federal Reserve said it would continue to increase interest rates throughout 2023 and forecasted that the terminal rate will go above 5.1%, higher than expected. U.S. interest rates are currently at a 15-year high of 4.5%. The current 10 Year U.S. Treasury yield is set at 3.50270%. Market Price Move Dow Jones 33,947.10 -1.40% S&P 500 3,998.84 -1.79% Nasdaq 11,239.94 -1.93% Russell 2000 1,840.22 -2.78% Canadian markets The Canada Food Price Report forecasts that the cost of groceries will increase by 7% next year. The report estimates that a family of four will need to spend CA$16,288 on groceries in 2023, an increase of CA$1,065 from this year. A single woman in her 40s is expected to spend CA$3,740 on groceries, while a single man would spend CA$4,168. Vegetables are expected to rise by 8%, seafood by 6%, fruit by 5%, and milk by 11%. 20% of Canadians will likely continue relying on food banks, the report says. Market Price Move TSX 20,242.26 –1.19% European markets European markets saw losses on Monday despite positive movements in Asia hours earlier. The Stoxx 600 was down 0.4% on the day, with almost all sectors ending in the red. Food and beverage stocks fell 1.5% on the day, leading losses, while basic resource stocks gained 0.6%. SBB, a Scandinavian real estate company, was up 13%, leading gains, while Rational, a German appliance manufacturer, dragged down markets with an 8% drop. Market Price Move Euro STOXX 50 3,956.53 -0.54% UK (FTSE 100) 7,567.54 0.15% Germany (DAX) 14,447.61 -0.56% France (CAC 40) 6,696.96 -0.67% Asian markets Shares in Asia were down on Tuesday morning after rising on Monday. China briefly paused trading on Tuesday to commemorate former President Jiang Zemin, who died last week. China is expected to ease its “Zero Covid” strategy following protests and despite high case numbers. Hon Hai Precision Industry, an Apple supplier, was down after reporting that its revenue fell by 11% in November and 29% since the start of October. Market Price Move S&P Asia 50 4,518.19 2.13% Japan (Nikkei 225) 27,857.08 0.13% South Korea (KOSPI) 2,407.17 -0.50% China (Hang Seng) 19,485.15 -0.17% India (SENSEX) 62,834.60 -0.05% Commodities Oil prices were down on Monday amid concerns about how future rate hikes could impact the U.S. economy. Brent crude lost 3%, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate fell 3.3%. Economic and manufacturing activity in China remains suppressed due to COVID-19 regulations and high case numbers, which has caused a decline in demand for oil. OPEC+ confirmed that it plans to cut output by 2 million barrels a day through the end of 2023. Market Price Move Oil (NYSEARCA: OIL) 29.38 -3.13% Gold (NYSEARCA: GLD) 164.39 -1.72% Silver (NYSEARCA: SLV) 20.44 -3.99% Corn (NYSEARCA: CORN) 25.65 -0.77% Lumber (NASDAQ: WOOD) 75.55 -1.33% Currency exchange rates The U.S. Dollar rose on Monday, following reports that the U.S. services industry saw increased activity in November. The non-manufacturing PMI reached 56.5 in November, up from 54.4 in October. The U.S. Dollar was down 1.4% last week and 5% in November — its worst month since 2010. The dollar was up against all major currencies on Monday, including the Yuan, Yen, Euro, and Pound. Market Price Move UK(GBP) £0.82 0.68% Europe (EURO) €0.95 0.24% Canada (Canadian Dollar) $1.36 0.58% Japan (Yen) ¥136.55 1.67% Cryptocurrency Bitcoin and Ether were down slightly during Monday trading hours with declining trading volume. Ethereum has turned inflationary again after activity on the network fell. CRO gained more than 10% after Crypto.com announced that it was launching a series of NFTs with Coca-Cola for the World Cup. Nexo said it plans to stop offering products and services in the U.S. Market Price Move Bitcoin $17,025.90 0.71% Ethereum $1,264.23 -1.34% Litecoin 80.98 4.79% Bitcoin Cash $111.11 1.22% The trading ideas goes into active money management by the team of Elite CurrenSea (ECS), which you can follow at $0 upfront fees over their website.