GRAPHIC-Take Five: Giddy Up
BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 02:15 AM ESTFeb 13 (Reuters) - Much of Asia will be off to celebrate the Lunar New Year as the year of the fire horse begins, a rare combination said to pair elements of energy with volatility.
Markets will hope for signs of the former from consumer
bellwether Walmart's
1/WELCOME TO THE CLUB
Fresh off hitting $1 trillion in market cap, Walmart
Walmart
2/HEAVY METAL
Europe's four largest mining companies - Rio ?Tinto,
Glencore
The demand picture for metals is well known. Data centres
need copper, as does the grid ?infrastructure needed to power the
AI build-out. U.S. political uncertainty and worries about the
independence ?of the Federal Reserve ?have propelled gold - and to
some extent silver - higher.
That surge has seen the four companies' market value jump by
more than $65 billion since the start of the year, despite the
abandoned merger between Glencore
3/FLASH - AAH! A lot of the uncertainties that plagued companies ?around the world, from Europe to the engines of "Factory Asia", this time last year - namely, U.S. tariffs - have not exactly gone away, but they're a lot more in ?hand.
And this is showing up in global surveys of business activity, which in January showed a pickup in most major economies.
Services are gathering momentum as price pressures continue to subside, while manufacturing is acting as more of a drag. The surveys don't just tell investors what has happened. Sub-indexes on new orders, employment and pricing all give a sense of how companies are preparing for the months ahead.
With a lot of questions hanging over longer-term job security and company bottom lines from the rollout of artificial intelligence right now, investors may scour February's flash purchasing managers' ?surveys more closely than ?usual.
4/JOBS, PRICES AND DROWNING STREET
UK labour market data and inflation readings will provide fresh fodder for markets, even though investors ?are still digesting the fallout from the recent instability at the heart of Prime Minister Keir Starmer's government. Labour market numbers due on Tuesday will show if a gradual cooling of wage growth - closely ?watched by the Bank of England - has continued. Attention shifts to January inflation data on Wednesday. The reading rose to 3.4% in December, down from a peak of over 11% in 2022 but still the highest in the Group of Seven economies. While lower energy prices coming into effect in April should help drag inflation closer to the BoE's 2% target, much of that slowdown is due to one-off factors.
With political turmoil creating a febrile backdrop for sterling and gilts, markets will be sensitive to data shifts, while Fitch is due to review its UK rating on Friday.
5/STERN WARNINGS Bank Indonesia's policy meeting on Thursday will be closely watched by investors after MSCI threatened a downgrade to frontier market status last month, triggering a $80 billion wipeout - the country's worst rout since the Asian financial crisis in 1998. Soon after, Moody's ?cut the country's credit rating outlook, while rival benchmark compiler FTSE said it would postpone a scheduled index review. The central bank could resume its easing cycle after cutting interest rates by a total of 150 basis points between September 2024 and September 2025. Elsewhere, on Wednesday, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand will announce the first monetary policy decision since Governor Anna Breman joined from ?Sweden's Riksbank in December. Breman is expected to hold rates, but growth has ?rebounded sufficiently quickly that her next move is expected to be a hike - perhaps as soon as September.
(Graphics by Mayank Munjal ?and Sumanta Sen, compiled by Karin Strohecker. Editing by Mark Potter)
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