Geopolitical tensions and weak Chinese data foster caution in US markets and downturns in Australia's mining sector, threatening the end of the Australia 200's five-week winning streak.
Written by
Market Analyst
United States (US) stock markets traded cautiously during a holiday-shortened week as investors awaited clarity on whether the US will intervene in the Israel–Iran conflict.
President Donald Trump extended the timeline for a decision, stating he would determine 'within the next two weeks' whether the US would join the conflict. This 'two-week deadline' strategy has been used in previous geopolitical decisions - including those involving Russia, Ukraine, and tariffs. These deadlines often expire without concrete action, a pattern referred to as 'TACO' (Threat Announced, Commitment Outstanding). Given the complexities surrounding US involvement in the Middle East, this remains a distinct possibility.
Locally, the Australia 200 is on track to break its five-week winning streak, weighed down by geopolitical risks and sharp losses in the mining sector. This followed weaker-than-expected Chinese economic data, which pushed iron ore to a nine-month low of $92.00 per tonne.
Date: Wednesday, 25 June at 9.30am SGT
In April, Australia’s Monthly CPI rose 2.4% YoY, unchanged for the third consecutive month. The trimmed mean inflation rate (inflation measure within the Monthly CPI indicator) edged up to 2.8% YoY from 2.7% in March.
The inflation data followed the RBA’s decision to cut the Official Cash rate by 25 basis points (bp) to 3.85%, after first-quarter (Q1) 2025 data showed inflation had returned to the RBA’s 2% – 3% target range for the first time since the fourth quarter (Q4) of 2021.
In its post-meeting statement, the RBA revealed that a larger 50 bp cut had been considered, and that the bank would likely have cut rates regardless of the Liberation Day incident. Forecasts for May point to a slight decline in headline inflation to 2.3%.
Markets currently price in a 75% probability of another 25 bp cut in July, and a total of 71 bp of easing by the end of 2025.
Date: Monday, 23 June at 9.45pm SGT
The S&P Global Composite PMI for May was revised up to 53.0 from an initial reading of 52.1, and well above April’s 19-month low of 50.6.
The improvement was led by stronger services sector activity, offsetting a slight decline in manufacturing. Increased new business resulted in faster overall growth compared to the previous month. Employment rose for the third consecutive month, and business confidence reached its highest level since January.
The preliminary forecast for June is for the Composite PMI to edge higher to 53.1, back towards year-to-date highs.
Date: Friday, 27 June at 8.30pm SGT
In April, the headline PCE price index rose by 2.1% YoY, the lowest in seven months and below market expectations of 2.2%. The Fed’s preferred inflation measure, the core PCE price index, increased by 2.5% YoY, slowing from a 2.7% rise in March, marking the smallest gain since March 2021. Additional report details showed personal income and spending grew by 0.8% and 0.2% respectively, both exceeding expectations.
At this week’s FOMC meeting, the Fed kept interest rates on hold at 4.25% – 4.50%. Chair Jerome Powell reiterated a wait-and-see approach, citing tariff-related uncertainty and inflation risks.
Officials projected two rate cuts in 2025, but downgraded the year-end 2025 growth forecast to 1.4% while raising inflation expectations to 3%. The statement noted that the uncertainty of the economic outlook has 'diminished but remains elevated' and removed the previous language about the 'risks of higher unemployment and higher inflation.'
For May, which is likely too soon to reflect tariff impacts, shows preliminary expectations for the headline PCE price index to rise to 2.2% with the core measure expected to ease to 2.5% YoY.
The US rates market is set to end this week, pricing in a 70% chance of a 25 bp Fed rate cut in September and 48 bp in total Fed rate cuts by year-end.
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