logo
Your Career Horoscope for June 26, 2025

Your Career Horoscope for June 26, 2025

UAE Moments5 hours ago

Find daily astrological predictions for all sun signs for June 26. We recommend reading the horoscopes for your rising sign.
Aries Career Horoscope
When Mars returned to your work sector last week, Venus had already been in your income sector for weeks and was too far ahead for them to connect directly before she leaves next week. However, where over the weekend the Moon helped to bring the two together, it is Venus' friendly aspect to the South Node in your work sector today that can establish a more stable link between forces on the income and job fronts that are both wanting to move things forward.
Taurus Career Horoscope
For one last day there is no competition or pressure on Pluto in your career sector, with the work/life balance monitoring of your work/life balance over recent months set to resume again from tomorrow. While this is something that will ultimately benefit you personally and professionally and you are able to learn from the past, in the heart of the working week, there is a chance to work with the planet of change and transformation to tailor things to suit you.
Gemini Career Horoscope
What a difference a few days can make. Having begun the week under pressure from Venus, as she pushed home a need to know when to keep your work hat on and when to take it off, the asteroid Juno is benefiting from the Moon and Mercury's last full day in your income sector. The Moon's friendly aspect to Juno in your work sector is boosting your confidence and anticipation on the income and job fronts, while a sharp nose and head for money together is making it easier to work smarter.
Click here to follow our WhatsApp channel for tarot readings, love, health, career, and Chinese horoscopes delivered to your phone daily!
Cancer Career Horoscope
The is something curious developing on the career front, as if having all received the same message at the same time, all five planets in your career sector have their feet on the brakes as they slow ahead of retrograde turns. Four will turn retrograde in July, the first as early as by the end of next week and the last in August, taking away the urgency while increasing the potency of the already rich resources you have to draw on.
Leo Career Horoscope
Having not only begun the week in your career sector but aligned with Venus and Uranus here and at a friendly aspect to the South Node and Mars in your income sector, the Moon may have moved on, but the connection between the money and professional gods remains. This time, it is a friendly aspect between Venus on the career and the South Node on the income front, something that is helping the planet of money in her efforts to steer this professional year in a lucrative direction.
Virgo Career Horoscope
The Moon's departure from your career sector yesterday has left you with more than just your professional instincts sharp, a download of information and insight to unpack while more emotionally and intuitively engaged and aware. This first visit since the Sun and Jupiter left has been a valuable chance to regroup, while leaving you time to unpack the information, insights and messages that can help you line up for Venus' return next week.
Libra Career Horoscope
The Moon is not only still in your career sector after yesterday's New Moon, but just as Mercury has reached the last full day of his short 18 day visit. With the Sun still in the early days of a month long visit and Jupiter in the early weeks of a 12 month quest for professional growth and expansion, before they both leave tomorrow the Moon and Mercury are working to leave you with your professional instincts sharp and everything needed to keep your head in the game.
Scorpio Career Horoscope
The lead up to the Moon's return to your career sector tomorrow is an important point in any month for having your antennas up while keeping an open mind and especially with Mercury returning as well. Knowing that tomorrow you will have both the Moon's professional instincts and Mercury's intellectually savvy edge to draw on makes this something worth waiting for.
Sagittarius Career Horoscope
Before leaving your work sector earlier in the week, the Moon not only aligned with Venus and Uranus before they left but formed a friendly aspect to the South Node and Mars in your career sector, for the first time since the warrior planet of the cosmos returned. The Moon may have moved on, but that connection is still strong with Venus, moving into her final nine days in your work sector just starting a friendly aspect to the South Node on the career front that will peak tomorrow.
Capricorn Career Horoscope
Thanks to the Moon's departure from your work sector yesterday, this hasn't just left you more emotionally and intuitively engaged and aware, but with everything needed to prepare for Venus' return next week. This first visit since the Sun and Jupiter left was a chance to regroup but also draw on the experiences and resources gained over the last 13 months. This gives you time to unpack a download of information, insights and messages before the next chapter begins.
Aquarius Career Horoscope
The Moon is not only still in your work sector after yesterday's New Moon and as an alignment with the Sun and Jupiter that peaked here yesterday starts to separate, but as Mercury reaches his last full day. With the Sun in the early days of a month long visit and Jupiter in the early weeks of a 12 month visit, this is just the beginning of a major quest. While the Moon and Mercury will both leave tomorrow, for now they are keeping your instincts sharp while helping you keep your head in the game and your feet on the ground.
Pisces Career Horoscope
There might still be a strong focus on the playful, creative and adventurous side of life's fence today, but on the job front, this can work to your advantage ahead of the Moon and Mercury's return to your work sector tomorrow. Knowing that tomorrow you will have the Moon's instincts and intuitive edge and Mercury's intellectually savvy edge and mental focus to draw on, makes this something that is worth waiting for.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Will analysts break their 10-year streak on US soybean acres? -Braun
Will analysts break their 10-year streak on US soybean acres? -Braun

Zawya

timean hour ago

  • Zawya

Will analysts break their 10-year streak on US soybean acres? -Braun

(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a market analyst for Reuters.) NAPERVILLE, Illinois - The U.S. Department of Agriculture next Monday will publish one of its most important surveys of the year, which also happens to be among the more difficult to forecast. But amid all the noise the June acreage report can create, there has been one constant for ten years running: the trade overestimating soybean acres. New-crop Chicago soybean futures last Friday were less than 2 cents per bushel away from inking new yearly highs, though they have since tumbled 5%. Meanwhile, December corn futures notched contract lows on Wednesday, settling 12% off their February high. To boot, the next few weeks are a seasonally heavy period for U.S. corn futures and Corn Belt weather forecasts are looking decent for now. This means that a much larger-than-usual report shock may be needed on Monday for the corn or bean market to consider a change of course. That's not the most likely outcome, but history suggests it's not impossible. TRACK RECORD The upcoming numbers are not easy to predict. U.S. corn and soybean plantings have landed outside the pre-report range of estimates in four of the last six Junes, though not necessarily in the same years. Soybean acres have come in below the average trade estimate for the last 10 Junes, while corn acres landed above it in seven of the last 10 years, including the latest four. On average, analysts expect U.S. corn plantings at 95.35 million acres in Monday's report, up very slightly from the March figure of 95.326 million. Ten of the 24 estimates pegged corn acres declining from the March survey, interesting given that whisper numbers back in the spring exceeded 96 million acres. The average trade guess reflects the typical lean as June corn acres have been higher than in March in 15 of the last 20 years. The latest two instances where June acres were lower happened in 2019 and 2020, featuring one of the wettest Midwestern springs and then the pandemic. The trend on whether soybean acres rise or fall from March to June is perfectly split over the last two decades. But recently, the bias is for June soybean acres to be smaller than the March ones, having occurred in five of the last six years (not 2020). That makes this year's expectations interesting as analysts peg soybean acres at 83.655 million acres, up slightly from 83.495 million in March. Fourteen of the 24 analysts voted for a larger June bean acreage versus March. The sentiment shift away from corn and toward beans since March likely comes as super wet conditions in eastern areas delayed corn planting, potentially favoring soybeans. But nationally, corn planting was average to faster than average for the entire spring. However, it should be noted that while corn profitability had been significantly better than that of soybeans since last fall, corn prices by themselves were not exactly attractive. This could keep a lid on any corn acreage gains on Monday. The analyst estimate ranges on corn and soybean acres are wider than in the past couple years, reducing but not eliminating the chance of a complete miss. Karen Braun is a market analyst for Reuters. Views expressed above are her own. Enjoying this column? Check out Reuters Open Interest (ROI), your essential new source for global financial commentary. ROI delivers thought-provoking, data-driven analysis of everything from swap rates to soybeans. Markets are moving faster than ever. ROI can help you keep up. Follow ROI on LinkedIn and X. (Writing by Karen Braun; Editing by Chris Reese)

US foreign investment slump - anomaly or warning?: McGeever
US foreign investment slump - anomaly or warning?: McGeever

Zawya

timean hour ago

  • Zawya

US foreign investment slump - anomaly or warning?: McGeever

(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.) ORLANDO, Florida - Much of the 'de-dollarization' debate has focused on foreign exposure to U.S. securities like stocks and bonds. But investors shouldn't ignore foreign direct investment flows, the traditionally sticky capital that may also be sending out warning signals. Foreign direct investment (FDI) typically involves an overseas entity acquiring the assets of a company in another country or increasing its holdings, often via the purchase of machinery, plants or a controlling stake. FDI is therefore considered a longer-term investment compared to portfolio flows, which can be more volatile. U.S. President Donald Trump says he has attracted record foreign investment into the country. Indeed, the White House has a page on its website with a "non-comprehensive running list of new U.S.-based investments" since Trump's second term began. The running total is in the trillions of dollars and includes pledges from several foreign countries. Included are more than $4 trillion in U.S.-bound investments pledged by the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Japan and Saudi Arabia. During Trump's trip to the Middle East last month, he said the U.S. is on track to receive $12-$13 trillion of investments from countries around the globe, which includes "projects mostly announced ... and some to be announced very shortly." These flows may emerge in full, in time. But official figures on Tuesday showed that FDI in the first quarter actually fell to $52.8 billion, the lowest total since the fourth quarter of 2022. That's well below the quarterly averages of the past 10 and 20 years. The Commerce Department figures also showed that the U.S. current account deficit widened to a record $450.2 billion in the quarter, or 6% of U.S. GDP, meaning FDI inflows barely covered 10% of that shortfall. Should the Trump administration be worried? TARIFF DISTORTIONS The short answer is probably not, at least not yet. FDI flows are typically far smaller than portfolio flows into equity and fixed income securities, so from the perspective of funding the current account deficit, the drop in FDI is not as pressing a concern. On the other hand, if foreign investors are also buying fewer U.S. securities, capital from elsewhere will be needed to fund that deficit. Additionally, America's balance of payments data in the first quarter was hugely distorted by domestic consumers and businesses front-running Trump's tariffs, loading up on imports before the duties kick in later this year. Trump's bet is that the deficit will shrink this year and beyond as his 'America First' policies spur more "onshoring" from domestic firms as they bring production back home and the weakening dollar helps U.S. manufacturing by making exports more competitive. The subsequent boom will attract investment from companies and governments overseas. In theory. However, these dynamics work both ways. For example, the European Union is by far the largest provider of U.S. FDI, accounting for 45% of the total in 2023, according to Citi. The combination of the continent's German-led fiscal splurge, U.S. tariffs and 'de-dollarization' concerns could easily crimp that flow, perhaps significantly. Another potential risk to U.S.-bound FDI is 'Section 899' - the possible tax of up to 20% on foreigners' U.S. income that could be part of Trump's budget plans. A Tax Foundation report in May found that Section 899 would "hit inbound investment from countries that make up more than 80 percent of the U.S. inbound FDI stock." Industry pushback may water down Section 899, but it remains a cloud on the U.S. investment horizon. The U.S. is the world's biggest recipient of FDI, with a 25% share of global volumes in 2023, up from around 15% before the pandemic, according to Citi. Its economy is the largest in the world, a thriving hub of innovation, pioneering technology, artificial intelligence and money-making potential. That will always attract FDI. Whether it attracts as much in this new environment remains to be seen. Enjoying this column? Check out Reuters Open Interest (ROI), your essential new source for global financial commentary. ROI delivers thought-provoking, data-driven analysis. Markets are moving faster than ever. ROI can help you keep up. Follow ROI on LinkedIn and X.

Gold rises as weaker dollar, Trump's Powell criticism fuel uncertainty
Gold rises as weaker dollar, Trump's Powell criticism fuel uncertainty

Zawya

time2 hours ago

  • Zawya

Gold rises as weaker dollar, Trump's Powell criticism fuel uncertainty

Gold prices edged higher on Thursday, lifted by a weaker dollar and growing uncertainty after reports suggested U.S. President Donald Trump had considered replacing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell as early as September or October. The reports raised concerns over the future independence of the U.S. central bank, boosting demand for safe-haven bullion. Spot gold was up 0.2% at $3,339.20 per ounce, as of 0242 GMT. U.S. gold futures rose 0.3% to $3,353.10. The dollar fell to its lowest level since March 2022, making greenback-priced gold less expensive for overseas buyers. Powell told a U.S. Senate panel on Wednesday that while Trump's tariffs may cause a one-time price hike, the risk of persistent inflation is significant enough for the central bank to be cautious about further rate cuts. "Trump clearly wants a dovish Fed Chairman next time around, so the increased likelihood of an aggressive rate-cutting cycle is pinning down the USD," KCM Trade Chief Market Analyst Tim Waterer said. Bullion tends to do well during periods of uncertainty and in a low-interest-rate environment. On Wednesday, Trump called Powell "terrible" and said he is considering three or four candidates for the top Fed post. Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump has even toyed with the idea of announcing Powell's potential successor by September or October. Markets are awaiting U.S. GDP print due later in the day, while also keeping a watch for data on Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) on Friday. "Gold is just basically treading water for the moment until we get a read on the next batch of U.S. macro data including GDP and core PCE," Waterer said. A ceasefire between Israel and Iran appeared to be holding on Wednesday as Trump, at a NATO summit, praised the swift end to the 12-day conflict and said he would seek a commitment from Iran to end its nuclear ambitions at talks next week. Spot silver edged up 0.2% to $36.36 per ounce, platinum firmed 2.3% to $1,385.38, while palladium surged 5.5% to $1,115.58.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store