Uncover the Hidden Market Moves: Fundies Cheat Sheet May 25-29, 2026 Reveals All!

Uncover the Hidden Market Moves: Fundies Cheat Sheet May 25-29, 2026 Reveals All!

Ever get that feeling the news cycle is spinning so fast, you need a seatbelt just to keep up? Last week was exactly that—where headline risk and macro data merged into one wild rollercoaster ride. The dollar barely budged after a dizzying week of swings, gold shrugged off its war premium gains, and oil dove thanks to hopeful whispers about an Iran deal. Meanwhile, equities are on an eight-week winning streak—that’s longer than my morning coffee lasts! Friday threw a curveball, too: a record-low University of Michigan sentiment clashed with soaring inflation expectations, all while Kevin Warsh took the Fed Chair helm. And just when you thought it couldn’t get more surreal, Trump dropped a bombshell on peace talks, sparking optimism and skepticism alike. With Memorial Day trimming the week short, all eyes turn to the April PCE inflation print—could this be the make-or-break moment that defines the market’s next move? It’s a heady mix that’s got me asking: when did the “fundies” become this much of a suspense thriller? LEARN MORE.

If last week proved anything, it’s that headline risk and macro data are no longer separate stories. The dollar finished nearly flat after a week of whipsaws, gold gave back its gains as the war premium drained, oil collapsed on Iran deal optimism, and equities clocked an eighth straight weekly gain — the longest streak since 2023. The defining moment came Friday, when a record-low University of Michigan sentiment print collided with a seven-month high in inflation expectations and Kevin Warsh’s swearing-in as the new Fed Chair.

For a full recap, visit: Finance & Forex Weekly Recap: May 18 – 22, 2026

The weekend then delivered its own shock. Trump announced Saturday that a peace deal has been “largely negotiated” with an announcement coming shortly — though Iran’s Fars news agency dismissed the claim as “far from reality,” citing unresolved disagreements over the nuclear program, blocked assets, and Strait of Hormuz administration. Bitcoin has already absorbed some optimism, recovering from Friday’s $75,800 lows toward $77,000.

The week ahead arrives short one US session, with Monday closed for Memorial Day. That compresses every major catalyst into a Tuesday-through-Friday window — and Friday is where the entire week likely gets decided, with the April PCE inflation print landing into pre-month-end positioning.

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