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Welcome to the Warsh era with MORNING BID AMERICAS

Anna Szymanski is the Editor-in Charge of Open Interest.

As markets awaited the first meeting of the new Federal Reserve chair Kevin Warsh at the helm?of the U.S. Central Bank, global stocks were stable on Wednesday. Investors will focus on the message today as policymakers are expected to leave interest rates unchanged. Oil prices stabilized on Tuesday after falling below $80 per barrel for the first time since months, as new details about the U.S. Iran memorandum emerged. This included the possibility of lifting sanctions on Iranian oil.

Below, I'll go into more detail. Listen to the Morning Bid podcast. Subscribe to the Morning Bid daily podcast and hear journalists discussing the latest news in finance and markets seven days a weeks.

WELCOME INTO THE WARSH ERA Although policymakers are not expected to make any changes to the federal funds rate at this time, the markets will be paying close attention to the way Warsh votes and his language during the press conference today. Donald Trump, who appointed Warsh, had repeatedly called for rate cuts when the previous Fed chair Jerome Powell was in charge. Trump has reiterated that he prefers a looser policy. However, he has stated that he will allow Warsh to do as he pleases.

Warsh's problem is that the markets will view his words and action through a political prism regardless. This makes effective communication much more difficult. Warsh's stance on the market is a big question today. Rate hikes are expected this year due to the Iran War-induced energy squeeze, and relatively positive economic data in the United States.

The preliminary agreement between the U.S. & Iran will have an impact on inflation and interest rates, but how much is still unknown. Bond yields dropped on Wednesday, as oil prices fell in early trading. Brent crude, the global benchmark, was hovering at $79 per barrel. This latest drop is attributed to reports that the U.S. would waive sanctions on Iranian crude oil for a specific period, and all U.S. sanctions as well as UN sanctions against Iran will be lifted once a deal has been signed. It's still too early to tell how much oil and natural gas will come out of the Strait of Hormuz over the next few months. There are many unknowns regarding the deal and the damage caused by the Gulf War to energy facilities. It is possible that the market will experience some volatility as it finds its new equilibrium. The Dow also closed at an?record level for the second consecutive day, as pressure on U.S. technology stocks yesterday caused the S&P and Nasdaq to fall. Elon Musk’s SpaceX, however, continued to climb, ending up with a nearly 5% gain, surpassing Amazon’s market value - and briefly even surpassing Microsoft’s. Wall Street futures are pointing upwards just before the bell. A UK CPI report on Wednesday revealed that the inflation rate in May was lower than expected. This print comes one day before Bank of England's meeting, and provides further?justification to keep rates unchanged, as is expected by many.

Chart of the Day

SpaceX's market value, which was $2.646 trillion on Tuesday, briefly exceeded Microsoft's $2.92 billion. Apple, Alphabet, and Nvidia are all over $4 trillion, followed by Apple, Alphabet, and Nvidia.

Watch today's events

* U.S. Federal Reserve rate decision (2:00 p.m. ET) and press conference (2:30?pm EDT). EDT)

* U.S. May retail sales (8:30 a.m. EDT)

G7 leaders hold discussions on global economy in France

Want to receive "the Morning Bid" in your email every morning? Subscribe to the newsletter. Follow us on LinkedIn, X and ROI. The opinions expressed by the author are their own. These opinions do not represent the views of News. News is committed to independence, integrity and neutrality under the Trust Principles. (By Anna Szymanski, Additional writing by Al Reed and Editing by Hugh Lawson).

(source: Reuters)