Critical minerals are back in focus for investors as gold's climb above $4,000 underscores a broader shift toward hard assets with strategic scarcity value.
A fractured market session, with defensive assets and blue-chip industrials outperforming technology, is forcing portfolio managers to reassess positioning heading into the half-year close.
A savage 4.60 per cent plunge in the Nasdaq has sharpened the case for dividend-paying equities, with gold's surge to US$4,058 an ounce underscoring the flight from risk assets.
A brutal session on the Nasdaq is forcing acquirers and bankers to reprice assumptions, even as gold's surge and a resilient Dow signal that appetite for deals is far from dead.
Monday's brutal divergence between technology and the broader market is a warning that the easy-money era for mega-cap growth stocks may be entering a painful reckoning.
A savage 4.60 per cent sell-off in the Nasdaq and a flight to gold above US$4,000 an ounce tell the story: fixed income traders have lost faith in near-term rate relief.
With the Nasdaq shedding 4.60% in a single session and gold pushing past US$4,000 an ounce, the volatile mid-2026 market is separating disciplined young investors from those who will regret panic selling in a decade.
A brutal day for technology stocks and a flight to safety in gold are telling investors that the bond market's long-running anxiety about growth and debt is finally bleeding into equities.
A wave of management reshuffles and strategy pivots at major technology companies is unsettling investors, sending the Nasdaq Composite down 4.60 per cent as the quarter closes.