Week Ahead
The ASX 200 hits a record high, influenced by strong February earnings, while US and European markets show mixed signals from economic data impacting investor sentiment.
After another choppy week, United States (US) equity markets are poised to finish near the flatline. NVIDIA's impressive fourth-quarter (Q4) earnings met with disappointment, pressuring the Nasdaq 100 towards its third monthly loss in four months. However, this sparked rotation into defensive and cyclical stocks, keeping the Dow Jones on track for its tenth straight month of gains.
Closer to home, the ASX 200 hit a fresh record high of 9202.9, supported by a stellar February earnings season. Entering the final stretch for February, the index is up 3.50% month-to-date, on track for a third consecutive month of gains and its largest monthly advance since May.
Date: Monday, 2 March at 12.45pm AEDT
For January, the RatingDog Manufacturing PMI edged higher to 50.3 from December's 50.1, closely aligning with market expectations. It was the fastest pace of expansion since last October, supported by firmer new orders (including a welcome lift in exports) and a modest uptick in output. Firms added a few staff for the first time in three months, although the gain was small. Input costs rose at the quickest rate since September due to higher metal prices, which allowed selling prices to finally increase after a prolonged period of weakness. The only concern was a decline in business sentiment to a nine-month low as worries about broader growth persisted.
The February print will be the first significant reading after the Lunar New Year holiday, so some noise is expected, but the market generally anticipates a modest rise to around the 50.5 area. A reading above 50 would be seen as a positive for the renminbi (CNY) and risk sentiment, particularly if it suggests earlier policy support is starting to be effective. Conversely, a decline back below 50 would reignite discussions about the need for more stimulus.
Date: Tuesday, 3 March at 9.00pm AEDT
January's flash showed 1.7% YoY as expected, marking the lowest since September 2024. Core inflation fell to 2.2%, its lowest level since October 2021, highlighting that the disinflation process is still underway.
For February, the consensus is approximately 1.7 - 1.8%. Core inflation is expected to dip further towards 2.1%, reflecting ongoing moderation in services and softer non-energy industrial goods.
With the European Central Bank (ECB) having left rates unchanged in early February and appearing content to maintain this stance, the threshold for any shift remains high. A result in line with expectations will support the 'patient, data-dependent' approach and keep rate cut expectations deferred to the second half of the year.
Date: Wednesday, 4 March at 11.30am AEDT
The third quarter (Q3) 2025 showed a 0.4% QoQ growth, below the 0.7% consensus forecast but sufficient to maintain the annual rate at 2.1%. This marked the 16th consecutive quarter of growth for the Australian economy.
Overall, domestic final demand, particularly private investment at +2.9% QoQ, led by machinery and equipment for data centres, offset the drags from inventories and trade, contributing to the 0.4% headline growth.
At this point (before all partials are released), the market expects around 0.6% for Q4 2025 GDP, with the annual rate at approximately 2.1% YoY, just below the RBA's December 2025 forecast of 2.3% YoY.
A figure in line with this will unlikely alter expectations for the RBA's next rate hike, anticipated for May 2026.
Date: Saturday, 7 March at 12.30am AEDT
January's non-farm payrolls report surprised with the US economy adding 130,000 jobs versus the 55 - 70,000 forecast range, resulting in an unemployment rate drop to 4.3% from 4.4%.
Even after downward benchmark revisions to prior months, the solid headline figure helped ease concerns about a rapidly cooling labour market that had been building at the end of 2025.
For February, consensus estimates a more 'normal' gain in the 70,000 - 90,000 range, with the unemployment rate steady around 4.3% - 4.4%. Following the January outlier, this reading will test whether the labour market is stabilising at a slower but positive pace or if the softer trend from late last year is re-emerging. Currently, the US interest-rate market is pricing in roughly 50 basis points (bp) of Federal Reserve (Fed) cuts in 2026, with the first 25 bp move expected in July and another in December.
The Q4 2025 earnings season is heading into its final stretch, with upcoming reports from companies such as Target, Crowdstrike, Broadcom, Okta, JD.Com, Costco, and Marvel Entertainment.
This information has been prepared by IG, a trading name of IG Australia Pty Ltd. In addition to the disclaimer below, the material on this page does not contain a record of our trading prices, or an offer of, or solicitation for, a transaction in any financial instrument. IG accepts no responsibility for any use that may be made of these comments and for any consequences that result. No representation or warranty is given as to the accuracy or completeness of this information. Consequently any person acting on it does so entirely at their own risk. Any research provided does not have regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and needs of any specific person who may receive it. It has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and as such is considered to be a marketing communication. Although we are not specifically constrained from dealing ahead of our recommendations we do not seek to take advantage of them before they are provided to our clients.