Week Ahead
The ASX 200 surged more than 2.5% this week, buoyed by strong earnings from major banks. Attention now shifts to key economic events and US earnings that could influence global market trends.
United States (US) equity markets began the week with optimism but retreated by the weekend. Concerns were driven by renewed fears surrounding artificial intelligence (AI) capital expenditures, anxieties about technology disruption, and a stronger-than-expected non-farm payrolls report delaying hopes for near-term Federal Reserve (Fed) rate cuts.
In contrast, the ASX 200 experienced a robust week, climbing over 2.5%. The February reporting season delivered its usual mix of earnings beats and bombshells. Strong earnings from heavyweight stocks, particularly the banks, overshadowed underperformance from smaller constituents, pushing the index higher.
Date: Wednesday, 18 February at 9.00am SGT
In its last meeting of 2025 on 26 November, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) lowered its official cash rate (OCR) to 2.25%. The 25 basis point (bp) cut, approved by a 5-1 vote, brought total easing in the cycle to 325 bp from the peak of 5.50%.
The RBNZ cited significant spare capacity in the economy, providing confidence that medium-term inflation would return to and remain around the 2% target mid-point. Inflation stood at 3% in the September quarter but was projected to fall to around 2% by mid-2026 as one-off pressures dissipated and core measures declined.
The central bank highlighted early signs of improvement in economic activity and the labour market. Near-term indicators suggested a return to modest GDP growth in the September quarter after weakness earlier in 2025, with business feedback indicating demand had stabilised despite remaining subdued.
Reflecting this, the RBNZ's forward guidance shifted from dovish towards data dependence: 'Future moves in the OCR will depend on how the outlook for medium-term inflation and the economy evolve.'
Reinforcing this optimism, the RBNZ lowered its official cash rate (OCR) track to 2.20% by June 2026, slightly less than market expectations. While leaving room for one more cut, this signalled the RBNZ likely considers its easing cycle largely complete.
Looking ahead to next week's meeting (the first under new Governor Anna Breman), the RBNZ is expected to maintain the OCR at 2.25%. Unlike the RBAs recent hike on persistent inflation, New Zealand faces spare capacity, cooling wage growth, and labour market slack. With no equivalent demand pulse and easing inflation pressures, there is no rush to tighten.
Date: Thursday, 19 February at 8.30am SGT
For December, employment in Australia surged by 65,000, significantly exceeding the 30,000 gain expected. The unemployment rate fell to 4.1% from 4.3%, defying expectations of a rise to 4.4%, while the participation rate edged higher to 66.7%.
While December data is notoriously volatile, often influenced by seasonal factors like Christmas hiring, this labour force report nonetheless reinforced the RBA’s assessment of tight labour market conditions. It also validated feedback from RBA liaisons, who noted that a significant share of firms continues to struggle with sourcing labour.
The RBA’s primary concern here is that this persistent labour market tightness will feed into wage growth and, more broadly, into inflation within an Australian economy where price pressures are already uncomfortably high.
These factors, alongside elevated inflation, prompted the RBA to raise rates by 25 bp at its meeting last month. The rate hike was accompanied by updated RBA forecasts which lowered its year-end unemployment forecast to 4.3% from 4.4%, while simultaneously raising its core inflation forecast to 3.2% from 2.7%.
Next week's January labour force update is expected to show a more modest gain of 25,000 jobs, with the unemployment rate ticking up to 4.2%. Markets will be watching for confirmation of a cooler number after December's outlier.
Should we see another strong job number, it could lead the market to pull forward the timing of the RBA’s next rate hike, currently about 75% priced for June.
Date: Friday, 20 February at 9.30pm SGT
The US economy expanded at an annualised rate of 4.4% in the third quarter (Q3) 2025, marking its strongest advance in two years and accelerating from Q2's 3.8%. This impressive growth was fuelled by resilient consumer spending and robust exports. While imports and inventory adjustments provided some offsets, the overall performance highlighted the economy's resilience, even amidst tariff uncertainties and softening labour markets.
However, the 43-day US government shutdown last year casts a notable shadow over the upcoming Q4 GDP release, with expectations for Q4 2025 GDP to moderate towards 3.5%. Interestingly, the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow estimate, updated 10 February 2026, projects a slightly stronger 3.7% annualised rate for Q4, having incorporated recent trade data and other indicators without subjective adjustments.
A partial rebound from the shutdown's impact is anticipated in the first quarter (Q1) 2026, also supported by the tailwinds of President Trump's 'One big, beautiful Bill'.
The Q4 2025 earnings season rolls on with reports set to drop next week from companies Dash, Coca Cola, Walmart, Deere and Company, and Dropbox.
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