Overnight global news you need to know on Saturday

[overnight global news you need to know on Saturday] ① European and American stock markets are mixed, with the Dow down 0.42%, up 1.19% this week, the Nasdaq down 0.35%, up 0.29%, and the S & P 500 down 0.21%, up 0.79%. Among them, the Dow rose four weeks in a row, while the Nasdaq and the S & P 500 rose in four of the past five weeks. JPMorgan Chase rose more than 7.5%, the biggest one-day gain since November 2020. Major European stock indexes collectively closed higher, with Germany's DAX30 index up 0.49 per cent. ② U.S. Treasury Secretary Yellen said the U. S. economy can still achieve a soft landing. ③ BlackRock CEO said the Fed is expected to raise interest rates two or three more times, adding up to 75 basis points. ④ French President Jean-Claude Macron will sign the pension reform bill within the next 48 hours, according to French television station BFM. Nagle, a member of the European Central Bank of the ⑤, said inflation risks in the euro zone were on the upside and more interest rate hikes were needed. ⑥ the European Union plans to impose an 11th round of sanctions on Russia. The ⑦ Securities and Exchange Commission will revise a proposed rule on Friday to make it more clear that digital asset exchanges and decentralized financial platforms must be registered with the regulator. The settlement price of ⑧ international crude oil futures closed slightly higher, up more than 2% this week. WTI's May contract rose 0.44%, up 2.25% this week, while Brent crude rose 0.25% in June and 2.53% this week. ⑨ Twitter CEO Musk plans to set up an artificial intelligence start-up to compete with Open AI. ⑩ Apple is promoting new Mac products after sluggish sales. ⑪ Twitter has introduced a new feature that allows Blue subscribers to send up to 10000 characters in a message, supporting both bold and italic formats. The settlement price of ⑫ COMEX June gold futures closed down 1.92% at US $2015.8 per ounce. The Fed's reverse repo tool was used by the Federal Reserve at $2.254 trillion on Friday.