Traders adjusted positioning before the Federal Reserve’s December decision and evaluated fresh signals from the ECB, BoE and BOJ.
Firmer expectations for U.S. rate cuts, upgraded Eurozone growth data, renewed fiscal clarity in the UK, and rising conviction in a BOJ move all influenced currency dynamics, while commodities and yields responded to softer labor indicators and ongoing supply shifts.
U.S. Dollar
Euro
British Pound
Japanese Yen
Gold: Gold traded near $4,220/oz as expectations for a Fed cut remained firm ahead of next week’s meeting. ADP reported a 32K drop in private payrolls, Challenger announced 71K November layoffs, and year-to-date cuts neared 1.17 million, all reinforcing easing expectations. Speculation around Kevin Hassett potentially replacing Powell added to this view. Markets now await the delayed September PCE release.
Silver: Silver held above $57/oz and traded near record highs, having doubled since the start of the year. Supply tightness and expectations for deeper Fed cuts supported the rally. ETFs added 200 tons on Tuesday, the highest level since 2022. London saw record inflows, Shanghai inventories hit a 10-year low, and soft U.S. labor data reinforced easing expectations. Hassett’s potential appointment also fed speculation about more aggressive policy.
U.S. 10-Year Treasury
UK 10-Year Gilt
Japan 10-Year Government Bond
Germany 10-Year Bund
ADP Nonfarm Employment Change (Nov): U.S. private firms cut 32,000 jobs, the sharpest drop since March 2023, missing expectations for a 10,000 gain. Small businesses shed 120,000 positions, while medium and large companies added 51,000 and 39,000 jobs. Losses were concentrated in manufacturing, business services, information, construction, and finance. Gains were seen in education/health, leisure/hospitality, mining, and trade/transport. ADP’s Dr. Nela Richardson noted uneven hiring conditions shaped by cautious consumers.
U.S. Initial Jobless Claims: Claims fell by 27,000 to 191,000, the lowest since September 2022, even through the volatile Thanksgiving week. Continuing claims slipped to 1.94 million. Federal employee claims decreased by 599 to 1,125 after a temporary spike tied to the government shutdown.
Euro Area CPI (YoY, Nov): Inflation edged up to 2.2%, slightly above expectations. Services inflation rose to 3.5%, the highest since April. Energy deflation slowed, goods and food stayed steady, and core inflation held at 2.4%. Germany climbed to 2.6%; Spain and the Netherlands eased. France and Italy stayed well below target at 0.8% and 1.1%.
ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI (Nov): The U.S. ISM Services PMI rose to 52.6, the strongest in nine months. Business activity and new orders expanded, backlogs reached their highest level since February, and services momentum improved. Tariffs and the government shutdown weighed on costs and demand. Employment stayed in contraction, supplier deliveries slowed, and price pressures eased to a seven-month low.
China’s Uneven Economic ResilienceChina’s economy began the year with a stronger performance than anticipated, primarily fueled by a strong export sector that helped mitigate stagnant domestic consumption. While headline growth suggests a degree of stability, the recovery's internal structure is notably unbalanced. Also, intensifying geopolitical tensions, specifically the energy disruptions tied to the Iran conflict, threaten to dampen the global outlook and undermine China’s economic momentum.
Detail Optimism Supports Markets (04.16.2026)Markets remained supported as optimism around a potential US–Iran agreement kept risk sentiment elevated.
Markets Balance Between Relief and RiskGlobal markets have begun pricing in a more moderate geopolitical outlook, yet the underlying situation remains unsettled. Diplomatic overtures between the United States and Iran have shown a sense of guarded relief following weeks of heightened anxiety regarding energy flows and critical shipping lanes. Interestingly, the failure of disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz to ignite a total energy crisis has challenged traditional market expectations.
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