The US dollar posted a mild recovery against most major currencies on Wednesday, with the dollar index (USDX) up by 0.26%, amidst rising US Treasury yields, and a delay in tariff announcements which is fuelling some tentative optimism.
The yen edged lower against the dollar on Wednesday, on concerns over new U.S. tariffs under Donald Trump’s administration, while attention shifted to the Bank of Japan’s policy meeting set to begin later in the day. The Bank of Japan (BoJ) is anticipated to increase interest rates at the conclusion of its two-day policy meeting on Friday. This expectation stems from recent economic data, including inflation and wage figures.
Wall street sentiment appears improved, with the main U.S. stock indices posting a series of daily gains in the past week. Strong support was provided by Netflix, as the stock soared nearly 10% following the company's announcement of a record-breaking 19 million new subscribers in the fourth quarter of 2024, significantly exceeding Wall Street's forecasts. In addition, several AI related stocks helped boost sentiment, after President Trump, Softbank, OpenAI and Oracle unveiled a $500 billion joint venture, named Stargate. This collaboration among tech giants involves an initial investment of $100 billion, with plans to allocate up to $500 billion over the next four years.
On the cryptos front, Bitcoin experienced a decline on Thursday following a brief surge fueled by anticipation of more favorable cryptocurrency regulations with Trump as President. This optimism stemmed partly from the Securities and Exchange Commission's announcement of a task force to guide crypto regulation under its new leadership. However, the market's enthusiasm waned as no executive orders specifically addressing crypto were issued in Trump’s first few days in office.
For Thursday markets will most likely be focusing on Canada’s Retail Sales numbers, U.S. Jobless Claims, and a speech by President Trump at the World Economic Forum Annual Meetings. For the week ahead markets attention could turn to the U.S. Flash Manufacturing and Flash Services PMIs, the University of Michigan revised consumer sentiment survey and existing home sales.