Oil at lows, gold pulling back: markets exhale
Wall Street recovers as crude slides toward $70 and gold eases off its highs. Less fear of oil, less fear of inflation.
A calmer day on Wall Street, and the calm came from the usual place: oil. WTI crude slid toward $70 a barrel — its lowest since early March. With the Strait of Hormuz cooling off, the fear of a supply shock drained away, and when oil falls, so does the ghost of inflation.
Stocks said thank you. The Dow and the Nasdaq climbed, most sectors in the green, led by industrials and consumer names. Tellingly, gold — the nervous investor’s safe haven — fell more than 3%, back toward $4,000 an ounce. When the world looks less scary, the precious metal loses its shine.
What’s next
Eyes are on results from Micron, the memory-chip maker seen as a thermometer for AI appetite. And the Fed’s shadow never quite leaves: the US central bank has signalled inflation is still too high, so nobody’s expecting rate cuts any time soon. For wallets in Portugal, the bit that counts is oil — a cheaper barrel today usually shows up as relief at the pump a little down the road.
Illustrative · Photo: Robert Lens / Pexels