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Your Career Horoscope for July 19, 2025

Your Career Horoscope for July 19, 2025

UAE Moments19-07-2025
Today brings confidence, clarity, and momentum to your professional path as opportunities align and plans take shape. Find daily astrological predictions for all sun signs for July 19. We recommend reading the horoscopes for your rising sign.
Aries Career Horoscope
An argument with a supervisor or client will result in some mixed feelings on your part, but if you retreat and reframe your message, you might be able to win them over in a few days.
Taurus Career Horoscope
If you don't have new blood on board, it's time to recruit. If there is, spend extra time with them and hear their ideas about the challenges ahead. You can meld old and new perspectives.
Gemini Career Horoscope
Pleasant surprises are in store, and it's likely you'll end up in a much better position than you were when your day started. You will be the center of attention, and that's just where you operate best!
Read More: The Best Careers for Each Zodiac Sign
Click here to follow our WhatsApp channel for tarot readings, love, health, career, and Chinese horoscopes delivered to your phone daily!
Cancer Career Horoscope
Powerful forces are operating on your behalf, but they may be so far removed you can't recognize them. Don't bother trying to figure it out. Expect new horizons to open up as a result.
Leo Career Horoscope
Your ideals will be tested and you should come out looking great. Whether you want to save the world or just help your people, you'll have the opportunity to do just that before the end of the day.
Virgo Career Horoscope
Recent news turns out to be a little too good to be true, just as you had suspected. While your peers wail and gnash their teeth, proceed with your contingency plans and all will be well.
Libra Career Horoscope
Nobody likes change at first, but you handle it better than most. You'll face the day's news with a little more eagerness than your peers, and that will leave a good impression on everyone.
Scorpio Career Horoscope
When the opportunity arises, jump on it. The risk you take may be calculated or not, but you'll regret it if you don't take it. The payoff will soon be clear, and you'll know you made the right move.
Sagittarius Career Horoscope
Your actions will push the next big project you're involved with, and it should start moving forward under its own momentum after you've worked your magic. Everyone will know it was you.
Capricorn Career Horoscope
Your social life intrudes on your career in a way you didn't expect. It might sting at first, but the long-term consequences should be minimal. Find a balance you can enjoy and learn your lesson.
Aquarius Career Horoscope
It's time to consider the big picture and how it relates to your career goals. You might want to rethink your current path or get back on track by any means necessary. You'll have great insights.
Pisces Career Horoscope
It's a great time to launch a new initiative that improves workplace culture. You're in touch with the inner workings of office relationships, so you can help everyone overcome their differences.
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Wall St Week Ahead: Tariffs, Fed, tech results headline jam-packed markets week
Wall St Week Ahead: Tariffs, Fed, tech results headline jam-packed markets week

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time39 minutes ago

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Wall St Week Ahead: Tariffs, Fed, tech results headline jam-packed markets week

NEW YORK: A looming U.S. deadline for more severe global tariffs is among a barrage of upcoming events threatening to disrupt an increasingly calm U.S. stock market that has set a string of all-time highs. President Donald Trump has extended a deadline to August 1 for when higher levies will take effect on an array of trading partners unless deals are struck. That could boost market volatility heading into next Friday. Much more is on the calendar that could move markets. Investors will watch the Federal Reserve's monetary policy meeting, the monthly U.S. employment report and earnings reports from megacap companies Apple, Microsoft and Amazon. "There is going to be a lot to digest for markets into next week," said Matthew Miskin, co-chief investment strategist at Manulife John Hancock Investments. "Expectations from the markets have gone up relative to several months ago," Miskin said. "So it's just going to be another big week for trying to meet loftier expectations." RECORD HIGHS, FALLING VOLATILITY The benchmark S&P 500 kept tallying new all-time highs during the week. Equities have recovered from a plunge after Trump's April 2 "Liberation Day" tariff announcement set off fears of a recession that have since ebbed. The S&P 500 has surged 28% since its low for the year a week later, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite has jumped 38% in that time. "We just got three years of return in three and a half months," said Chris Galipeau, senior market strategist at the Franklin Templeton Institute. "The equity market needs to consolidate this move." Market volatility measures have eased considerably. The Cboe Volatility Index spiked to 60 in April, but has been below its long-term median of 17.6 for most of July and on Wednesday posted its lowest close in five months. However, pockets of volatility have emerged in the past week. Eye-popping gains in highly shorted stocks such as Kohl's and Opendoor Technologies heralded the possible return of a "meme stock" craze that could signal some over-exuberance in risk appetite, at least among retail investors. Meanwhile, the record-setting rally has lifted valuations to historically expensive levels. The S&P 500 was trading at 22.6 times earnings estimates, well above its long-term average P/E ratio of 15.8, according to LSEG Datastream, which could make the market vulnerable to disappointments in the coming week. Higher tariffs on the European Union and many other countries could take effect on August 1. Trump had paused many of the most severe of his reciprocal tariffs in April, following the bout of extreme market volatility. "There is a particular belief and conviction that the market has that the administration just won't be as aggressive as they've been threatening because of what was experienced in early April," said Kevin Gordon, senior investment strategist at Charles Schwab. "The next hurdle in the trade (situation) is really to see what sticks." FED OFFICIALS AWAIT TARIFF IMPACT The Fed is widely expected to hold interest rates steady in its monetary policy decision on Wednesday, as central bank officials want more data to determine if tariffs are worsening inflation before they ease rates further. But tensions between the White House and the central bank over monetary policy have heightened, with Trump repeatedly denouncing Fed Chair Jerome Powell for not cutting rates. Two of the Fed Board's Trump appointees have articulated reasons for supporting a rate cut this month. A packed week of corporate results includes Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and Facebook parent Meta Platforms, four of the "Magnificent Seven," whose stocks heavily influence benchmark indexes because of the companies' massive market values. With about 30% of S&P 500 companies having reported results, overall second-quarter earnings are on track for a 7.7% increase from a year ago, according to LSEG IBES. That would beat a 5.8% estimated rise on July 1. The week ends with the monthly U.S. employment report on Friday. Employment in July is expected to have increased by 102,000 jobs, according to Reuters data as of Thursday, after rising by 147,000 jobs in June. "We've had relatively strong economic data that almost shows a modest re-acceleration in the economy in June and I think markets are priced to reflect this re-acceleration," Miskin said. (Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Alden Bentley and David Gregorio)

Fed rates are going nowhere fast: Mike Dolan
Fed rates are going nowhere fast: Mike Dolan

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Fed rates are going nowhere fast: Mike Dolan

(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.) LONDON - Incoming U.S. inflation signals are offering the Federal Reserve little or no justification to resume interest rate cuts, and it's hard to see that changing before September. Following an unscheduled visit to the Fed last week, President Donald Trump said he thinks the Fed may be ready to lower rates again. To be sure, at least two of his appointees to the Fed board - Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman - have indicated they might vote for a cut as soon as this week. But they may be alone. Markets certainly remain unconvinced. Futures pricing shows virtually zero chance of a move on Wednesday and only a 70% chance of a cut at the following meeting in September. Markets now even doubt we'll see two rate cuts this year - the median of Fed policymakers' forecasts published just last month. While some clarity on the uncertain trade picture should emerge from this Friday's deadline, the effective overall import tariff rate is still set to be almost 20% higher than at the start of the year. And the impact from that may take months yet to filter through. But there are enough other signals that higher import levies and a weaker dollar are already irking the U.S. price picture, at least enough to keep the Fed wary. As it stands, inflation remains well above the 2% target, and long-term market inflation expectations, now the highest of any G7 country, are above target too and creeping up. The Fed's favored inflation gauge, from the personal consumption expenditures basket, is due for release on Friday, and the annual core rate excluding food and energy is expected to be 2.7% - the same as last month. Consumer price inflation data for the month that has already been released shows pockets of price pressure in key areas affected by the limited tariffs enacted so far. Producer price data was more subdued, but that series doesn't include imported goods. Moreover, manufacturing firms last week continued to show outsized gains in input prices in July. S&P Global's monthly survey of purchasing managers registered an input price reading of 64.6, still far above the 50 threshold between expansion and contraction. Unlike the PPI, that captures imported inputs. By contrast, European manufacturers registered an equivalent input price reading of 49.9. EARNINGS NOISE Tariff-related readouts from the roughly one-fifth of S&P 500 companies that have reported second-quarter updates have been noisier. But economists warn that two aspects of the earnings season could potentially be disguising the tariff impact. The first is significant front-loading of imports in the first quarter to beat the tariffs, the enormous scale of which led to a small GDP contraction in the first three months of 2025. As that tariff-free inventory is run down, costs should rise as tariffs begin to hit. The hiatus may have allowed many firms to keep prices steady or avoid taking significant margin hits through the second quarter. The second aspect economists warn about is the degree to which major companies may want to avoid any public statements on negative tariff hits or any pass-through to consumers due to fears of political backlash. All of which leaves a foggy inflation picture going forward and one unlikely to be clarified much by September. MANDATE To be sure, the Fed has a dual mandate, which includes both keeping prices stable and maintaining maximum employment, and one argument, from Waller at least, is that the labor market is showing signs of softening. And yet employment reports out this week are unlikely to offer much support on that front either, with recent weekly jobless claims data painting a robust picture. While monthly payroll growth is expected to slow in July, the unemployment rate is set to remain near historic lows at about 4.2%, with annual wage growth one percentage point above core PCE inflation. What's more, second-quarter U.S. GDP updates this week are also expected to confirm a brisk bounce-back in overall economic growth to 2.4% after the trade-distorted first-quarter hiccup. Lazard chief market strategist Ron Temple reckons the Fed won't cut at all this year, just like seven Fed policymakers indicated last month. "My logic is that inflation is likely to re-accelerate meaningfully by year-end due to tariffs," he wrote on Friday. "Thereafter, stricter immigration enforcement is likely to create another inflationary force," he said, adding that rising deportations of workers could push up wage inflation, keep unemployment stable, and cause GDP to slow. "That is not a scenario that argues for Fed rate cuts." If the Fed does signal it's ready to ease again, it may struggle to make a cogent case for why it is doing so. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters -- Enjoying this column? Check out Reuters Open Interest (ROI), your essential new source for global financial commentary. Follow ROI on LinkedIn. Plus, sign up for my weekday newsletter, Morning Bid U.S. (by Mike Dolan; editing by Rod Nickel)

Your Career Horoscope for July 27, 2025
Your Career Horoscope for July 27, 2025

UAE Moments

timean hour ago

  • UAE Moments

Your Career Horoscope for July 27, 2025

Find daily astrological predictions for all sun signs for July 27. We recommend reading the horoscopes for your rising sign. Aries Career Horoscope Away from the noise of the working week, the Moon's return to your work sector today will make it easier to hear yourself think while getting a better sense of perspective. With the Moon not only still here when you move into the new working week but into Mars' last full week in your work sector, over the next few days this will see the momentum build, while it is when they align in two days that this will really energise things on the job front. Taurus Career Horoscope A combination of the Moon's return to a playful and creative part of your chart and the Sun still separating from a clash with Pluto that over the last few days has put your work/life balance under pressure, makes this the right reminder at the right time. It is over the weekend that this gives you a reminder to put some guardrails in place, knowing that Mars is just days away from returning to your work sector and from kicking off what could be the busiest months of the year. Gemini Career Horoscope The weekend is always a valuable chance to regroup and especially as there is a lot to unpack after not only an active week across the income, work and career fronts, but where there have been some big changes. With the brakes now off work and job matters and the pace starting to pick up, it was the Moon's transit through your income sector just as the Sun left, that leaves you with everything needed to line up for next week's lucrative developments. Click here to follow our WhatsApp channel for tarot readings, love, health, career, and Chinese horoscopes delivered to your phone daily! Cancer Career Horoscope By the time the Moon leaves your income sector today, it will have formed a friendly aspect to all five planets in your career sector, as it does with each monthly visit. The difference this time is that the Sun has been doing the Sun and as a New Moon, this has been both a window into and helped to energise the opening of both new doors and the doors to the past, second chances and untapped potential on the income and career fronts. Leo Career Horoscope With 16 years of near continuous planetary activity in your work sector having ended earlier in the year and six years of continuous planetary activity on the career front just three weeks ago, you have a rare chance to keep your work hat and professional hats off over the weekend. After a Full Moon on the job front earlier in the month and the Moon having spent last weekend in your career sector, today there is a chance to take a break from it all. Virgo Career Horoscope As she reaches her last weekend in your career sector and prepares to leave next week, Venus has created enough distance from the planets on the job and career fronts that will stay on to keep the momentum going, that she is now doing her own thing. As the planet of money, desire and attraction and as she is on a mission to exploit and attract professional potential and the money, the Moon's return to your income sector in two days will help with that. Libra Career Horoscope Halfway between the Sun's departure from your career sector four days ago and Venus' return in four days, Jupiter's first weekend on his own since returning last month to begin your biggest year for professional growth and expansion in over a decade is a chance to stand back and regroup. Where the Sun has left you with a realistic starting point, before Venus returns to exploit and attract opportunities and potential now, there is a chance to pull back and reassess your professional goals and aspirations. Scorpio Career Horoscope The Sun only returned to your career sector four days ago, but as he settles into his first weekend and the Mercury ends his first full week in retrograde motion here, the Moon leaves and wraps up a New Moon that has seen a lot packed into just a few short days. By the time the Moon leaves today, it will have formed a friendly aspect to all of the five planets in your work sector and with the Sun starting to do the same, with insight into the new doors and those opening to the past, second chances and untapped potential across the job and career fronts. Sagittarius Career Horoscope While the Moon's return to your career sector over the weekend and away from the noise of the working week will initially make it easier to hear yourself think, by the time it aligns with Mars for the last time before the warrior planet leaves, the new working week will be in full swing. For now, this is a chance to start tuning into your professional instincts and imagination, knowing this will come in handy over the coming days. Capricorn Career Horoscope As she reaches her last weekend in your work sector, Venus has created enough distance from Uranus who returned just 48 hours behind her earlier in the week, to be doing her own thing while knowing there is back up. With the Moon set to return to your career sector before Venus leaves next week, it is during her final days and in the heart of the new working week that she will be able to exploit and attract the most potential across the income, work and career fronts. Aquarius Career Horoscope Halfway between the Sun's departure from your work sector four days ago and Venus' return in four days, there is a chance to stand back and regroup during what is Jupiter's first weekend on his own since returning in early June to begin your biggest year for job growth and expansion in over a decade. It is when Venus and Jupiter return next week and the element of luck and the laws of attraction come together that the real chance to exploit and attract work and job matters will begin. Until then, with a chance first to reassess your goals and aspirations. Pisces Career Horoscope By the time the Moon leaves your work sector today and wraps up the New Moon two days ago, a huge amount of water will have passed under the bridge. As well as aligning with the Sun to create a New Moon and with Mercury to get a read on the doors that in retrograde motion he is opening to the past, the Moon will have formed a friendly aspect to all five planets in your income sector. With the Sun and Mercury already starting to do the same, this leaves you with a window into the doors opening to new and untapped potential on both the income and job fronts.

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