Global markets rise, led by Hong Kong and Germany
The Hang Seng index leads global gains in 2025, up 22.61% year-to-date, followed by Germany’s DAXK (+15.42%). The U.S. S&P 500 is also up, reflecting optimism in developed markets.
IBOVESPA -2,16% (135.900,00) | DOLAR 0,00% (5,46) | S&P 500 -0,03% (617,65) | Dow 30 1,19% (444,66) | Nasdaq -0,40% (88,55) | NYSE FANG+ -4,17% (0,12) | Bitcoin -0,07% (105.640,00) | Ethereum 0,00% (2.410,00) | Cboe -0,52% (232,00) | Russell 2000 0,93% (217,45) | FTSE 100 0,40% (163,20) | DAX PERFORMANCE-INDEX -0,94% (44,51) | CAC 40 3,10% (41,88) | Nikkei 225 -1,74% (1,15) | SSE Composite Index 0,00% (1,11) | Shenzhen Component 0,00% (1,15) | FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI 0,00% (1,66) | KOSPI Composite Index -0,22% (8.980,00) | TSEC weighted index -5,00% (1,00) | TA-125 0,48% (8.250,00) | EGX 30 Price Return Index -0,99% (37,36) |
The Hang Seng index leads global gains in 2025, up 22.61% year-to-date, followed by Germany’s DAXK (+15.42%). The U.S. S&P 500 is also up, reflecting optimism in developed markets.
The S&P 500 fell 0.2% and Nasdaq 0.5% on Friday, as investors grew cautious over potential Fed rate cuts and U.S. uncertainty on military involvement in Iran.
The U.S. market remains alert to the escalation between Iran and Israel, anticipating potential impacts on risk assets and market volatility in the coming days.
Bitcoin dropped over 4% to $99,237, reflecting profit-taking and a broader global risk-off sentiment.
The Federal Reserve signaled caution regarding interest rate cuts and continues to monitor the effects of artificial intelligence on jobs and productivity.
Tesla announced a partnership to build China’s largest energy storage facility, expanding its footprint in the Chinese energy market.
Cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase moved its European headquarters to Luxembourg in search of a more favorable regulatory environment.
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) tied to ether have seen six consecutive weeks of inflows, signaling renewed institutional interest in cryptoassets.
The European Commission is considering new measures to stimulate the defense sector and boost the economy amid weak eurozone growth.
The technology sector jumped 10.3% in May, lifting the S&P 500. Meta and Alphabet were among top performers, still seen as undervalued despite strong rallies.
Bitcoin fell to around $99,300, the first time in over a month it dropped below $100K, following U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites. The overall crypto market dropped 7% in 24 hours, with Ethereum down nearly 10%.
The total crypto market cap fell by about 7% in 24 hours, reflecting risk-off sentiment after the U.S.-Iran military escalation.
A cyberattack linked to pro-Israel groups burned millions in BTC and TRX, yet Bitcoin remained stable, demonstrating institutional maturity and investor confidence.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs, especially IBIT (BlackRock) and FBTC (Fidelity), drew $2.4B in new capital over eight days, while Ethereum ETFs saw slower inflows.
Ethereum led the day’s losses among major cryptos, dropping almost 10%, with ETH ETFs drawing just $19.1 million in fresh inflows, showing waning institutional appetite.
Hong Kong-listed biotech firm Prenetics purchased 187 BTC at $106,712 each, reinforcing the trend of Asian firms pursuing direct Bitcoin exposure.
The crypto market is consolidating between $3.2T and $3.4T, with key support at $3.2T and resistance at $3.52T as investors watch for signs of recovery.
Bitcoin, Ethereum, BNB, Solana, and XRP remain the leading cryptos by market cap, driven by institutional growth and global adoption.
Companies like GameStop and MicroStrategy added over $1.75 billion in Bitcoin to their balance sheets, highlighting the corporate shift toward crypto assets.
Analysts expect U.S. rate cuts and approval of altcoin ETFs like Solana to fuel a new crypto bull market in 2025.