Keyword: Dollar
Dollar
has 78.4% among keywords.
BS Score: 5.6%.
Articles analyzed: 5.
Words analyzed: 2,784.
Analyzed articles
ZeroHedge
- By Tyler Durden
- 6/27/2026, 5:25 PM
Negativity Bias 56% - Ambiguity (Equivocation) 49.5% - Confirmation Bias 40.4%
On the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, Michael Cembalest, Chair of Market and Investment Strategy for JPMorgan Asset & Wealth Management, uses the imaginary “Aquilaceph” - a half bald eagle, half octopus - as a metaphor for America’s continued tight grip on global markets. Chapter 1: The dollar’s grip on reserve... more
ZeroHedge
- By Tyler Durden
- 6/26/2026, 8:00 PM
Framing Effect 81.2% - Negativity Bias 81.2% - Recency Bias 56.5%
Tl;dr: Mega-Cap's worst week since Liberation Day weighed on Nasdaq as dispersion within the AI ecosystem and broadening outside of it dragged the index down (while The Dow and Small Caps outperformed). Bonds were bid as inflation fears eased and oil prices plunged. The dollar ended higher, weighing on precious metals and crypto. AI... more
The Japan Times
- By Kazuaki Nagata
- 5/21/2026, 7:00 AM
Post Hoc (False Cause) 70.7% - Biased Writer Voice 60% - Confirmation Bias 53.3%
The Bank of Japan’s wait-and-see approach is being stress-tested live as bonds fall and the yen remains weak, even after intervention, with some analysts wondering whether the cool approach to interest rate increases on the part of the monetary authorities might be feeding into the problem. “I believe long-term bond yields are rising... more
The Japan Times
- By No Author
- 5/7/2026, 2:57 AM
Biased Writer Voice 30.2% - Anchoring Bias 26.6% - Primacy Effect 26.6%
Japan is prepared to respond on all fronts to speculative moves in the foreign exchange market, the nation's top currency official signaled, after authorities were suspected of having conducted intervention over the holiday period. "We're targeting all angles" when it comes to intervention, Atsushi Mimura, vice finance minister for... more
The Japan Times
- By Jeff Sommer
- 5/2/2026, 5:25 AM
Ambiguity (Equivocation) 69.2% - Negativity Bias 54.8% - Recency Bias 30.8%
The world’s leading central bankers are stuck. In stately succession in the past week, policymakers in Tokyo, Washington, London and Frankfurt decided that despite long-stated intentions to shift short-term interest rates, this was not the time to take action. In each case, they concluded that they had better just leave short-term... more