Newsletter Subscribe
Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter
Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter

A punishing selloff has swept across global markets in June, dragging down stocks, cryptocurrencies, gold, and silver as investors reckon with the prospect that interest rates may rise rather than fall under new Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh.
The S&P 500 fell 1.4% on Tuesday to close at 7,365, while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.2% as the rout in technology and semiconductor shares deepened. The so-called Magnificent Seven — Microsoft, Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Nvidia, Tesla, and Meta — have shed roughly $2 trillion in market value this month alone, accounting for more than two-thirds of the S&P 500’s June decline, according to Yahoo Finance. Gold fell below $4,100 per ounce on Tuesday, its lowest close in two weeks, while silver futures tumbled more than 5% to settle near $62 an ounce, according to CNBC.cnbc
The catalyst behind the cross-asset decline traces to Warsh’s first FOMC meeting on June 17, where the Fed held rates steady at 3.50%–3.75% but delivered a hawkish surprise. Nine of 19 policymakers projected at least one rate hike by year-end — a stark reversal from March, when none anticipated an increase and the committee had forecast a cut, according to Reuters. Warsh himself refrained from submitting personal rate projections but overhauled the Fed’s communication style, issuing a streamlined statement that eliminated forward guidance, CNBC reported.chase
The U.S. dollar responded by surging to its highest level since May 2025, with the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index hitting multi-month highs. A stronger dollar and the prospect of tighter monetary policy have weighed heavily on assets that thrive in low-rate environments. Deutsche Bank adjusted its gold price target to $4,300 per ounce, warning that three to four Fed hikes could push prices as low as $3,800.cambridgecurrencies
Bitcoin slipped toward $62,000 on Tuesday, extending a decline that has erased more than $1.2 trillion in market capitalization since the cryptocurrency peaked near $126,000 in October 2025, CNN reported. The broader crypto market has contracted from roughly $4.4 trillion at its peak to around $2.2 trillion by the end of Q1, according to CoinGecko data. Ethereum fell to approximately $1,654.reuters
The selloff accelerated after a June 5 session dubbed “Black Friday” by traders, when a stronger-than-expected jobs report — 172,000 positions added versus roughly 80,000 expected — combined with disappointing guidance from Broadcom to send the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index down more than 10% in a single day.bairdwealth
Investors now speculate the Fed could raise rates as early as September, according to Reuters. The Bloomberg Commodity Total Return Index is heading for its worst monthly performance since 2022, down around 10% in June. Saxo Bank noted that commodities are being pressured by a trio of forces: a U.S.-Iran peace deal reducing geopolitical premiums, the hawkish Fed, and dollar strength.reuters
“The market can endure localized weakness as long as the average stock remains resilient,” Yahoo Finance noted — but with the Dow Jones Industrial Average barely budging while megacaps crater, that resilience is being tested.yahoo