Week Ahead
Global markets face a pivotal week as AI valuation concerns weigh on Wall Street, the ASX 200 stalls, and investors await critical economic data from the US and Australia.
The S&P 500 and Dow Jones are poised to finish a second consecutive week lower, as renewed concerns over artificial intelligence (AI) valuations – reignited last week by earnings from Broadcom and Oracle – continue to weigh on sentiment. The worries centre on soaring capital expenditure (capex), heavy debt, construction delays, massive cash burn, and mixed second-quarter (Q2) earnings, all of which have eroded confidence.
Locally, the ASX 200 is set to snap its three-week winning streak, with no evidence yet of the traditional Santa Claus rally. The energy and health care sectors have been the main drags, while the financial and real estate sectors have outperformed the broader market.
Date: Tuesday, 23 December at 8.30am SGT
At its December Board meeting, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) held the cash rate unchanged at 3.60%, as widely anticipated, marking the third consecutive hold.
The decision came with a hawkish tone in the accompanying statement. Key observations included inflation appearing more broad-based, strengthening private sector growth, a recovering housing market, a still-tight labour market, capacity utilisation above long-run averages, elevated unit labour costs, and potential for further capacity pressures if private demand continues to accelerate.
RBA Governor Michele Bullock's subsequent press conference reinforced this hawkishness, noting that a rate cut was not considered, while the Board did discuss scenarios that could warrant a hike. Bullock emphasised the RBA’s tightened bias: ‘If it looks like inflation is not coming back to the band then the Board will have to take action and it will.’
The upcoming minutes will be closely scrutinised for deeper insights into potential triggers and timing around a first rate hike or a shift back toward a neutral policy stance.
The Australian interest rate market is pricing in 9 basis points (bp) of RBA rate hikes for February. There are 25 bp of rate hikes priced for August and a cumulative 39 bp of rate hikes priced between now and the end of 2026.
Date: Tuesday, 23 December at 9.30pm SGT
The US economy rebounded strongly in Q2 2025, with real GDP growing at an annualised 3.8% according to the final (third) estimate from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). This marked a sharp turnaround from the -0.6% contraction in first quarter (Q1), driven primarily by surging consumer spending, robust business investment (particularly AI-related), and a significant drop in imports, which boosted net exports.
Due to the federal government shutdown, the BEA cancelled the advance estimate for Q3 and will combine it with the second estimate due next week – effectively serving as the first official print.
Market expectations for this ‘second’ estimate centre on a moderation from Q2's pace. Consensus forecasts cluster around 2.0 – 3.0% annualised growth, though it is worth noting the Atlanta Federal Reserve (Fed) GDPNow model is tracking at 3.5% as of 16 December. All of this is expected to confirm that the US economy was on solid footing before the government shutdown began on 1 October.
Date: Tuesday, 23 December at 11.00pm SGT
The Conference Board (CB) consumer confidence for November came in at 88.7. This represented a sharp drop of 6.8 points from the prior month's revised 95.5, marking the lowest reading since April.
The Present Situation Index dropped 4.3 points to 126.9, while the Expectations Index plunged 8.6 points to 63.2 – remaining below the 80-recession signal threshold for the tenth straight month.
Key drivers included:
These drivers appear likely to weigh again this month, with preliminary expectations looking for a number around 89. The US interest rate market currently prices in roughly 16.5 bp of cuts for the March Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, with about 60 bp of rate cuts embedded between now and the end of 2026.
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