What matters in U.S. and global markets today

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Morning Bid U.S.

Morning Bid U.S.

A Reuters Open Interest newsletter

What matters in U.S. and global markets today

 

By Marc Jones, Global Markets Correspondent

Investors' top focus today is the delayed - and slightly unusual -  U.S. consumer price inflation report, which will be an important marker for whether the Federal Reserve is likely to keep cutting interest rates next year. Meanwhile, Wall Street will be watching the tech sector again after the latest signs of bubble trouble due to big spending AI plans at the likes of Oracle. 

I’ll get into all the market news below.

But first check out Mike Dolan’s latest column on why the Bank of England, which is due to cut UK rates very shortly, probably needs to start picking up the pace.

And listen to the latest episode of the new Morning Bid daily podcast. Subscribe to hear Mike and other Reuters journalists discuss the biggest news in markets and finance seven days a week.

 
 

Data refreshes every time you open this email. For more U.S. market news, click here. Please send any feedback to morningbid@thomsonreuters.com.

 

Today's Market Minute

  • Oil and gas major BP has appointed Meg O'Neill, the head of Australia's Woodside Energy as its next CEO to lead its effort to boost profits and refocus on oil and gas after a detour into renewables.
  • ROI Energy Columnist Ron Bousso argues that the surprise appointment of O'Neill as BP's first outsider CEO offers the bruised $90 billion British oil company three clear strategic choices for moving forward: build, buy or be bought.
  • In a high-security Shenzhen laboratory, Chinese scientists have built what Washington has spent years trying to prevent: a prototype of a machine capable of producing the cutting-edge semiconductor chips that power artificial intelligence, smartphones and weapons central to Western military dominance, Reuters has learned.
  • Asia's imports of U.S. crude oil, coal and liquefied natural gas are on track to decline this year despite President Donald Trump's efforts to boost shipments as part of his trade and tariff policies, writes ROI Asia Commodities Columnist Clyde Russell.
  • There is much discussion in U.S. economic circles around "R-star", the theoretical rate of interest that neither spurs nor crimps economic activity. But Federal Reserve officials could soon shift their focus to "U-star," argues ROI Finance Columnist Jamie McGeever. 
 

Optics and Oracles 

The day's top focus is the delayed U.S. consumer price inflation report for November out at 1330 GMT. It will be an important marker for whether the Fed is likely to keep cutting its interest rates next year, although this is not a normal CPI report by any stretch.  

As the government was in shutdown mode the October data wasn’t collected, so there won’t be the usual monthly change number that traders normally zoom in on, meaning the focus will instead be on the year-on-year rates, and how those compare to the previous print in September. 

Economists asked by the Reuters polling team reckon CPI likely increased 3.1% year-on-year in November, which would be the largest gain since May 2024 and up from the 3.0% advance in the 12 months through to September.

But the CPI could print below expectations as the delays to the data collection process mean it was being done when holiday season discounting was in full swing, which could be evident in lower prices for things like furniture and recreation goods.

The tech darlings will undoubtedly remain in the spotlight, too. Wall Street took a turn for the worse Wednesday after ominous-looking news around a $10 billion funding deal for one of Oracle's big U.S. data centres slammed its shares again and saw the mighty Mag 7 have its worst day in over a month. It's all to do with nagging concerns about the stratospheric amounts of money pouring into artificial intelligence - and whether it has inflated the mother of all bubbles.

Before we get to all that though there is plenty of top-tier European action to get through. The Bank of England looks a sure bet to cut UK interest rates. It already was before a soft inflation reading on Wednesday, so the bigger question will be - as Mike Dolan notes - how quickly it follows up. 

We'll then hop over to Frankfurt where Christine Lagarde's European Central Bank will stay on hold, something it is likely to be doing for a long, long time. And in Brussels it is supposed to be decision day in the EU's long-running drama of how to use frozen Russian central bank reserves to prop up Ukraine.

Boomeranging back to the U.S. there's weekly jobless claims data, too. It probably won’t move the dial too much, even if it does coincide with the December nonfarm payrolls survey week, and lastly earnings are due from both Nike and FedEx after the close, both of which are seen as pretty decent bellwethers for the global economy at large.

 
 
 

Today's key chart  

 

Graphics are produced by Reuters.

Concerns around a potential AI bubble are simmering. Server-giant Oracle seems to be front and center. Its 5-year credit default swaps, which debt investors use to hedge their exposure to the firm, have surged to their highest level since the global financial crisis, while its shares have halved in price since mid-October's flagship deal with OpenAI pushed them up by over a third.

Analysts worry that the company’s capital expenditure is expected to rise nearly 70% to $35 billion - more than half the firm's anticipated revenue. By comparison, Microsoft’s proportion will be around 30%. 

 

Today's events to watch

  • Bank of England Rate Decision (12:00 GMT)
  • ECB Rate Decision (1:00 GMT)
  • U.S. November CPI (1:30 GMT)
  • U.S. Weekly Initial Jobless Claims (1:30 GMT)
  • U.S. Dec. Philly Fed Survey (1:30 GMT)
  • Nike earnings
  • FedEx earnings
 

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