Markets are jittery — and now the talk is raising rates, not cutting them
A strong US jobs report flipped the bets. Gold cooled off, oil stayed expensive, and stocks had their worst week in months.
Anyone hoping for rate cuts before summer got a bucket of cold water. A much stronger-than-expected US jobs report — 172,000 positions when about 80,000 were penciled in — sent markets recalculating in reverse. Suddenly, instead of cutting rates, some are pointing to a hike before year-end.
The Federal Reserve left rates untouched at its mid-month meeting, as everyone expected. The trouble is what comes next: with inflation stubborn, mostly thanks to energy, money stays expensive for longer. Brent crude is hovering above $92, and that bleeds into nearly everything.
The upshot: gold, which had rocketed, handed back much of its 2026 gains (still near $4,500, mind you, and 30% above a year ago), and stock markets had their worst week since late March.
What this has to do with us
High rates abroad don’t stay abroad. They mean a stubborn Euribor, mortgage payments that won’t ease, and pricier credit for anyone who needs it. This isn’t panic — it’s prudence: if you can, avoid rushing into debt and keep your money working somewhere safe.
Illustrative · Photo: Alex Luna / Pexels