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1Bitget UEX Daily | U.S. House Limits Trump’s Military Action Against Iran; Bitcoin Deeply Corrects to $63,000; AI Chip Supply Crisis Emerges (June 04, 2026)2The largest-scale clashes since the ceasefire! Kuwait says Iran's attack injured 63 people, Trump "puts out the fire": Negotiations are going smoothly, an agreement may be reached over the weekend.3US crude oil inventories have fallen to their lowest level since 2004. Can Trump still keep oil prices under control?
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17:31
Daly: Inflation is mainly driven by tariffs, and the impact is expected to gradually diminish.According to Golden Ten Data, ChainCatcher reports that Federal Reserve’s Daly stated inflation is mainly driven by tariffs, and these effects are expected to gradually subside.
17:07
Federal Reserve: In the week of June 3rd, the outstanding amount of U.S. commercial paper not seasonally adjusted increased by $2.4 billion.The balance of commercial paper outstanding by foreign financial institutions in the U.S. without seasonal adjustment increased by $1 billion. The seasonally adjusted balance of U.S. commercial paper outstanding increased by $1.07 billion.
17:04
Boston Fed research shows oil shocks have a weaker impact on the U.S. compared to the 1970sResearchers at the Boston Fed stated in a report released on Thursday that an oil price shock similar to the current one triggered by the Iran war would push the U.S. Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index up by 1.5 percentage points in the following year, whereas in the 1970s it would have raised the index by 2.2 percentage points. The researchers noted that, in the face of a similar shock, employment growth in the 1970s would decline by 1.8 percentage points, but this effect “has largely disappeared in recent years.” Egon Zakrajšek, chief economist at the Boston Fed and one of the report’s authors, believes that this means “monetary policy should pay more attention to the inflation effects associated with oil shocks, rather than employment effects.”
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