News

Follow the latest analyses and key economic, financial, and global market news in this section. Our team reviews the most important market events daily and provides comprehensive insights for traders and enthusiasts.

  • Risk-On Rebound as U.S. Shutdown Nears End

    Global risk appetite improved markedly today, with strong gains in Asia carrying over into European trading and U.S. futures pointing higher. Investors found renewed confidence amid signs of political progress in Washington, where the Senate approved the first stage of a bipartisan deal to end the monthslong government shutdown. The agreement would fund federal operations […]

    The post Risk-On Rebound as U.S. Shutdown Nears End appeared first on Action Forex.

  • The USD is mixed vs the EURUSD, USDJPY and GBPUSD to start the NA new trading week

    The USD is mixed with the USD lower vs the EUR and GBP by higher vs the JPY as the market reacts to the potential reopening of the US government. IN the video above I take a look at those three currency pairs – the EURUSD, USDJPY and GBPUSD – from a technical perspective.

    Looking at other currency pairs, the AUDUSD, NZDUSD and USDCAD are all showing dollar weakness/currency strength as the market reacts with risk-on flows.

    Of course, the clock is ticking to the Thanksgiving Day holiday and absolute chaos forecast for airlines (it is already a mess). SNAP payments remain a concern for a large swatch of the population and farmers are getting more and more disenchanted as well. All of which is tilting the government to some sort of agreement to end the U.S. government shutdown. As such, the Senate advanced a measure to resolve the impasse, paving the way for House approval.

    Markets are reacting with Treasury yields rising by 3-4 basis points, and stock futures in premarket trading rising with the Nasdaq leading with a gain of 350 points.

    Gold is higher by $95 or 2.38% to $4095. Silver is up $1.75 or 3.63% to $50.07. Bitcoin is higher by $1.297 to $106.011.

    Once the government reopens, delayed economic reports—starting with the September employment data—are expected to be released, offering key input for the Fed’s December rate decision.

    The reopening will also allow federal workers to receive back pay and ease the dreaded disruptions ahead of the Thanksgiving travel season.

    Trump said over the weekend, that most American could get $2000 in a payback from the tariffs collected.

    From central bankers over the weekend.

    The Bank of Japan’s October meeting summary showed growing support for a near-term rate hike, with most policymakers seeing tightening as appropriate if wage growth holds and global conditions remain stable. Eight of thirteen opinions favored a hike soon or outlined conditions for one, and two board members even dissented in favor of raising rates to 0.75%. Governor Ueda urged patience, saying more data is needed to confirm that firms will sustain wage gains despite external pressures. Overall, the BOJ is becoming more confident about normalizing policy but remains cautious about timing, focusing on verifying wage momentum before moving.

    BOJ policy board member Junko Nakagawa said the Bank expects to continue gradually raising rates as Japan’s economy and prices improve but will proceed cautiously given global uncertainties. She highlighted that inflation expectations are rising toward the 2% target, supported by resilient corporate investment and wage growth, though higher prices are straining consumer sentiment. Nakagawa warned that persistent cost pressures could dampen demand and profitability, but overall, medium- to long-term inflation expectations remain firm. Her comments underscored the BOJ’s data-dependent approach in determining whether inflation is driven by sustainable wage dynamics or short-term factors.

    RBA Deputy Governor Hauser said Australia’s monetary policy faces an unusual challenge, noting that GDP recovery began last year with demand slightly exceeding potential output. He emphasized that achieving the inflation target will require maintaining a restrictive stance to narrow the output gap. Hauser added that the economy has avoided the worst-case scenarios, with rate cuts expected to aid growth from late 2025, and highlighted the need to boost productivity through greater investment in new capacity.ECB Vice President Luis de Guindos said the central bank believes current interest rates are appropriate, though adjustments could be made if inflation trends or policy transmission change. He noted that services and wages are progressing in the right direction but stressed the need for prudence in policy decisions despite reduced uncertainty. Overall, his remarks reaffirm that the ECB is likely to maintain its current stance through the end of the year.

    Fed’s Daly (2027 voter, dovish) said policymakers should stay open to further rate cuts while remaining alert to inflation risks, noting that productivity gains could support faster, non-inflationary growth. She added that tariff-driven price increases have not broadened into overall inflation, and the balance of risks has shifted due to a weakening labor market. Daly attributed slower job growth to declining worker demand, acknowledged that inflation has fallen but remains elevated, and described current monetary policy as still modestly restrictive.

    Geopoliticallly, Russia continues its attack on Ukraine with force. Russia says it remains open to resolving the conflict through diplomacy but the situation is stuck

    This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.

  • investingLive European FX markets wrap: Risk rallies as markets eye end to US shutdown

    Headlines:

    Markets:

    • AUD leads, JPY lags on the day
    • European equities higher; S&P 500 futures up 0.9%
    • US 10-year yields up 3.9 bps to 4.131%
    • Gold up 2.5% to $4,098.76
    • WTI crude up 0.4% to $60.05
    • Bitcoin up 1.1% to $105,912

    There wasn’t too much in terms of headlines in European morning trade as we await the US Senate to reconvene later at 1600 GMT to further work out the end to the government shutdown. Hopes are rising since the end of last week on the potential for that and that’s keeping risk trades optimistic to start the new week.

    On the one hand, the shutdown ending could see the return of US economic data which might just bolster Fed rate cut odds amid softer labour market developments. On the other, there’s also relief on funding/liquidity pressures amid the shutdown so that’s also a risk positive overall.

    US futures are holding well higher with European indices also rallying back after having missed out on the late recovery in Wall Street on Friday. S&P 500 futures are up 0.9% while major indices in Europe are posting gains of well over 1% on the day.

    Amid the better risk mood, the aussie is leading gains in the major currencies space with AUD/USD bouncing back by 0.6% to 0.6530. Meanwhile, the yen is the laggard and isn’t helped by Japan prime minister Takaichi spreading her dovish fiscal wings in pushing for stimulus/spending measures. USD/JPY is holding up 0.5% to just above 154.00 on the day.

    As for the dollar itself, it is keeping more mixed and a little steadier but mostly down against the commodity currencies. USD/CAD is also down 0.3% in nearing the 1.4000 mark.

    With risk trades pushing up, gold is also finding dip buying appetite as traders step back in to push precious metals back up to start the week. Gold is now bordering on $4,100 and pushing to two-week highs with silver also up over 3% to just above the $50 mark currently.

    This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.

  • How have interest rate expectations changed after last week’s events?

    Rate cuts by year-end

    • Fed: 16 bps (65% probability of rate cut at the upcoming meeting)

    2026: 82 bps

    • ECB: 1 bps (96% probability of no change at the upcoming meeting)

    2026: 12 bps

    • BoE: 15 bps (57% probability of rate cut at the upcoming meeting)

    2026: 57 bps

    • BoC: 3 bps (87% probability of no change at the upcoming meeting)

    2026: 10 bps

    • RBA: 4 bps (86% probability of no change at the upcoming meeting)

    2026: 18 bps

    • RBNZ: 28 bps (91% probability of rate cut at the upcoming meeting)

    2026: 44 bps

    • SNB: 3 bps (89% probability of no change at the upcoming meeting)

    2026: 8 bps

    Rate hikes by year-end

    • BoJ: 6 bps (75% probability of no change at the upcoming meeting)

    2026: 42 bps

    *The 2026 pricing reflects the cumulative easing expected by the end of 2026, not how much easing is expected in 2026 alone.

    If we take a look at the last update on October 31, we can see that not much has changed in terms of market pricing despite a few key data releases.

    Last week, the main highlights were the US ADP and ISM data, the BoE rate decision and the Canadian employment report. The US data was overall strong but the market pricing remained basically the same suggesting that traders are now probably waiting for the NFP and CPI to have the final say.

    The BoE decision was fairly dovish but Governor Bailey sounded like a December cut was conditional on a
    confirmation of the improvement in inflation. The BoE will get two employment
    and inflation reports before the next meeting, so they will have enough data to
    make a better decision.

    Lastly, the Canadian employment report surprised once again to the upside with a notable fall in the unemployment rate from 7.1% to 6.9%. It didn’t change anything in terms of market pricing just because the BoC already signalled that they reached the end of the cutting cycle. Nonetheless, the data reinforced the BoC’s position.

    This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.

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