- US Warns Korea Against Targeting American Tech Firms Amid Trade Escalation
- ECB Must Prepare For New Shocks Including Russian Aggression, Simkus Says
- ECB’s Nagel And Kocher See ECB Key Interest Rates At "Appropriate Level"
- Europe Private Credit Reporting Burden To Be Eased, ESMA Says
- Japan To Respond Appropriately On Forex, Finance Minister Says
- US To Issue General License Lifting Some Sanctions On Venezuelan Oil Industry
- Tengiz Oilfield Seen Recovering Less Than Half Its Output By February 7
- Meta, Corning Ink Deal For Fiber-Optic Cables In AI Data Centers
- UK Politicians Call For Competition Review Of Netflix Bid For Warner Bros
- Oil Major Eni Holds Talks With Mercuria Over Trading Partnership
- Samsung's TriFold Phone Will Cost $2,899 In US, Launch On Jan. 30
- South Africa Weighs Steep Tariffs On Vehicles From China, India

All is relatively quiet on the political front as investors look ahead to Wednesday’s Federal Open Market Committee interest rate decision. Markets expect no fireworks from officials who have already indicated they are leaning out of the January meeting.
Respondents to the latest economists’ poll predicted rate-setters will announce unchanged policy at the conclusion of the two-day meeting. Analysts say markets are effectively fully priced for a hold at 3.5–3.75%, particularly given there will be no Summary of Economic Projections release, and balance-sheet policy is now firmly in the rearview mirror.
On the voting dynamics, JP Morgan’s Michael Feroli noted that after three 25bp “risk-management” cuts in the second half of last year, many FOMC participants had signalled it was an appropriate time to pause. “In fact, the minutes from the December meeting indicated that some voters who went along with the rate cut did so only reluctantly,” he said.
Nonetheless, one White House appointee, Stephen Miran — a vocal proponent of aggressive easing — is expected to dissent once again in favour of a cut. (LiveSquawk – Continue Reading)
A year into the second Trump administration, tariffs have taken center stage in U.S. economic and foreign policy. They are being applied broadly and justified on grounds well beyond traditional trade enforcement, yet they have not produced the economic disruption or retaliation many observers anticipated. However, the significance of this shift lies less in the increase in tariffs than in a broader redefinition of the role trade policy itself now plays in economic and national security strategy. Understanding this shift—and why the response has been more muted than expected—requires grappling with a broader change in how U.S. trade policy is conceptualized and conducted.
For much of the postwar period, U.S. trade policy was designed to operate largely in the background within a multilateral, rules-based trade framework. The system was designed to reduce conflict and discourage retaliatory trade behavior while allowing market forces to play the primary role in allocating economic activity across countries. This framework did not eliminate government intervention; it was not apolitical nor was it divorced from strategic objectives. The system’s architects built in mechanisms intended to allow it to adapt over time, but this adaptive capacity proved limited in practice. Technological change, shifts in global production, and evolving geopolitical conditions placed increasing political strain on a framework that struggled to update its core rules and enforcement mechanisms. (Brookings Institution – Continue Reading)
The European Union has switched on parts of its homegrown secure satellite communications network for the first time, as part of a €10.6 billion push to provide an alternative to Starlink and wean itself off US support amid growing tensions.
Elements of the IRIS2 and GOVSATCOM networks began limited operations last week for government and military use, Defense and Space Commissioner Andrius Kubilius said at the European space conference in Brussels on Tuesday. Ukraine has requested access, and provisions to do so are under way, he said. (Bloomberg – Continue Reading)
- US ADP Weekly Employment Change Jan 3rd: 7.75K (Prev 8.0K)
- US CB Consumer Confidence Jan: 84.5 (est 91.0; prev 89.1; prev R 94.2)
- US FHFA House Price Index (M/M) Nov: 0.6% (est 0.3%; prev 0.4%)
- US Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index Jan: -6 (est -5; prev -7)
- US S&P Cotality CS 20-City (M/M) SA Nov: 0.47% (est 0.22%; prev 0.32%; prev R 0.36%)
- Canada Dec Wholesale Trade Most Likely Rose 2.1% From Previous Month
- US Warns Korea Against Targeting American Tech Firms Amid Trade Escalation - WSJ
- Fed Set To Pause Rate Cuts, With No Clear Path To Resuming – WSJ
- ECB Must Prepare For New Shocks Including Russian Aggression, Simkus Says – RTRS
- ECB’s Nagel And Kocher See ECB Key Interest Rates At "Appropriate Level" – FN
- ECB Must Keep All Options Open On Rates, Kocher Says – BBG
- Europe Private Credit Reporting Burden To Be Eased, ESMA Says – BBG
- French PM Survives No-Confidence Votes As Budget Moves Forward – France 24
- France’s Finance Minister Tells G-7 To Avoid Unilateral Measures – BBG
- Germany Needs New Partners As Trusted Alliances 'Crumble', Economy Minister Says – RTRS
- Netherlands Set To Scrap Bonus Caps For Some Banking, Fintech Staff – BBG
- Japan To Respond Appropriately On Forex, Finance Minister Says – RTRS
- NZ Finance Minister Sets Budget Day Date, Promises Cost-Cutting Focus – NZH
- Five-Year Note Auction Attracts Average Demand - RTT
- Vanke Buys Time In Debt Crisis As Bondholders Accept Delays - BBG
- Dollar Slips Across The Board As Intervention Risk Lifts Yen – CNBC
- MUFG: Speculations South Korea Could Join Japan, US In Joint Intervention – eFX
- Goldman Sachs: BoC Firmly On Hold This Week – eFX
- GBP/USD Loses Some Momentum Ahead Of1.3800 – FXS
- EUR/USD Remains Firm, Targets 1.2000 – FXS
- Sweden’s Finance Minister Proposes Inquiry Into Euro Adoption – BBG
- Crypto Faces Fork In The Road As Clarity Act Support Wavers, Bitwise Says – CD
- Standard Chartered Warns Stablecoins Could Drain $500 Billion From US Bank Deposits By 2028 – Block
- Oil Futures Rise More Than $1 A Barrel As Winter Storm Slams US Output – CNBC
- US To Issue General License Soon Lifting Some Sanctions On Venezuelan Oil Industry, Sources Say – RTRS
- Tengiz Oilfield Seen Recovering Less Than Half Its Output By February 7, Sources Say – RTS
- Russian Oil Backed Up At Sea After India’s Refiners Step Away - BBG
- US Natural Gas Falls After Record Rally As Contract Expiry Nears - BBG
- Margin Rates Update For ICE Futures US Gas And Power Contracts - ICE
- Gold Holds Momentum As Uncertainty Fuels Safe-Haven Bids – CNBC
- UPS To Cut Additional 30,000 Jobs In Amazon Unwind, Turnaround Plan – CNBC
- GM Shares Jump On Earnings Beat, $6 Billion Share Buyback – WSJ
- Northrop Grumman Fourth-Quarter Profit Rises 17% On Strong Sales - BBG
- RTX Posts Higher Quarterly Sales On Strong Engine Demand, Aircraft Repairs – RTRS
- American Airlines Sees Strong Revenue Growth But Warns Of Rising Costs – Proactive
- Kimberly-Clark Posts Higher Profit Ahead Of Kenvue Vote – WSJ
- UnitedHealth Shares Plunge On Weak Guidance, Quarterly Revenue Miss – Proactive
- HCA Shares Jump On Profitability Outlook For Upcoming Year – BBG
- Boeing Swings To Quarterly Profit On Sale, But Unit Losses Disappoint – RTRS
- NextEra Energy Beats Fourth-Quarter Earnings Estimates – Yahoo
- Union Pacific Profit Rises Despite Revenue Falling On Lower Volumes – WSJ
- PACCAR Earnings Missed By $0.01, Revenue Topped Estimates – Investing
- Sysco 2026 Adjusted Earnings Seen At High End Of Range – WSJ
- LVMH Wine-And-Spirits Arm Ends 2025 On Sour Note – Yahoo
- S&P 500 Rises To Record High, Led By Gains In Tech – CNBC
- European Stocks End Higher After EU’s ‘Mother Of All Deals’ With India – CNBC
- Canada’s Move To Import Cheap Chinese EVs Is ‘Slippery Slope,’ GM CEO Says – WSJ
- Meta Inks Deal To Pay Corning Up To $6 Billion For Fiber-Optic Cables In AI Data Centers - CNBC
- UK Politicians Call For Competition Review Of Netflix Bid For Warner Bros – RTRS
- Anthropic Doubles VC Fundraising To $20 Billion On Surging Investor Demand - FT
- Google To Get EU Instructions On Sharing Of Search Data, Android AI Tools – WSJ
- Google’s More Affordable AI Plus Plan Rolls Out To All Markets - TechCrunch
- Citigroup’s Raghavan Reshuffles Corporate Banking Leadership – BBG
- OpenAI Releases Prism, A Claude Code-Like App For Scientific Research - Engadget
- Oil Major Eni Holds Talks With Mercuria Over Trading Partnership- BBG
- Samsung's TriFold Phone Will Cost $2,899 In US, Launch On Jan. 30 – BBG
- SK Hynix Sets Up AI Investment Corporation In US – Maeil