December 22, 2025 11:14 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Japanese markets were the main movers as the week got underway. The Nikkei 225 rose alongside other regional equities, benefiting in particular from the earlier slide in the yen, which boosted exporters by making Japanese stocks cheaper in foreign-currency terms. Japanese government bond yields also edged higher, often read as a sign of stability concerns, but the move was largely shrugged off by markets today.
The yen later clawed back some ground, with USD/JPY retracing from early highs around 157.75 to lows near 157.25. JPY bids were helped by verbal intervention from Japan’s top currency diplomat, Atsushi Mimura. Mimura said that authorities are “concerned” about recent foreign-exchange moves, describing them as “one-sided and sharp,” and warned that officials would take “appropriate actions” against excessive volatility. The language was familiar, but the timing, so soon after last week’s central bank meeting, was enough to prompt some trimming of short-yen positions.
Elsewhere in FX, major pairs traded in relatively narrow ranges. Both the AUD and NZD ground out modest gains against the USD.
Oil prices found some early support after a renewed uptick in geopolitical risk. Over the weekend, the United States intercepted a Venezuelan oil tanker, while tensions between Israel and Iran remained elevated, the two news items together helping rebuild a modest risk premium in crude.
In US policy news, the Wall Street Journal reported on an interview/podcast with Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack, who pushed back against recent dovish expectations. Hammack said she favours holding rates steady for several months and remains more concerned about inflation than labour-market weakness, adding that November’s CPI likely understated true inflation pressures.
Corporate chatter included an interesting social-media post from hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, who outlined a proposal for taking SpaceX public without Wall Street banks or IPO fees. The idea would give Tesla shareholders priority access to the deal, framing it as a more democratic alternative to a traditional IPO.
In commodities, spot silver surged 3% to a fresh record high above US$69, while gold prices also rose, pushing back toward US$4,400.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
December 22, 2025 04:39 Forexlive Latest News Market News
As is usual for a Monday morning, market liquidity is very thin until it improves as more Asian centres come online … prices are liable to swing around, so take care out there.
Do be aware that many wholesale market participants have closed now for the holiday period. This is partially because they have closed for the holiday period (d’uh) and partially because others have closed so liquidity and market tradability have diminished. If you are a retail trader it’ll pay to take extra care right through now until January 5, the absence of the other time frame (OTF) until then will make trading more choppy. If that’s your bag, great, but if not your time may be better spent and capital preserved for ammo for the new year.
Coverage on investingLive will diminish until January 5. We’ll still be around, but not quite so much.
After all that, early indications, not too much change from late Friday is showing.
As for the calendar, its nearly empty. Even that People’s Bank of China rate setting is a non-event, more on this below:
China’s Loan Prime Rates (LPRs) were held steady in November 2025, , marking the sixth consecutive month without a change
Most lending in China is tied to the one-year LPR, while the five-year rate guides mortgage pricing. Both rates were last trimmed by 10 basis points in May.
A look at the past changes in the LPR, since early 2022:
China’s main policy rate is now the reverse repo rate, currently at 1.4% for the 7-day.
The 7-day rate serves as a key policy benchmark, influencing other lending rates like the Loan Prime Rates (LPRs). The PBOC uses these open market operations to inject or absorb funds, influencing interbank lending rates.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
December 20, 2025 05:30 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Markets:
The US dollar made some modest headway against the rest of the FX market today bu the big movement was in the yen as USD/JPY rose 220 pips and EUR/JPY hit another record high. The jump started after an initial dip on the BOJ decision. It looks like sellers were hoping the hike would cool the pair and then when it didn’t, it was off to the races. The move was large enough that it prompted some tough intervention talk from finance minister Katayama. That didn’t little to stop it as a quick 40 pips dip was almost immediately bought. The bids continued right until the end of the day as the pair closed at the highs.
In terms of news, the Canadian retail sales headline was soft but the advance number for November was strong at +1.2%. That led to some early USD/JPY selling down to 1.3760 but it reversed later and the pair finished near 1.3800 with the loonie among the laggards.
Flows were dominant as we wind down the year so it’s tough to draw any conclusions.
In equities, it was quad witching and a record estimated $7.1 trillion opex. I thought that might lock up trading but there were some good gains. Eminis ultimately ended just below 6800, which would have been a natural options magnet. Nvidia was a leader along with some travel and chip memory names. Nike was a laggard falling 10% as tariffs eroded margins.
Have a great weekend.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
December 19, 2025 22:14 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Shares of home builders have been beaten up this week on poor earnings and even-weaker forecasts for the months ahead.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
December 19, 2025 22:14 Forexlive Latest News Market News
In the preliminary report, the big surprise was the drop in inflation expectations. Now that tends to correlate with gasoline prices so I’d take it with a grain of salt but the Fed will see it as validation for cutting rates, particularly when combined with the softer CPI report this week.
All that said, the market is seeing just a 20% chance of a January rate cut and just over 50% for March.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
December 19, 2025 20:39 Forexlive Latest News Market News
The surprise story of post-Liberation Day Canada has been just how strong retail sales have been. Unemployment has been creeping up and housing is in a terrible slump in much of the country but consumer keep on spending.
This report is a softer but the advance November reading is very strong.
The notes on October show the largest decrease to core retail sales came from food and beverage retailers, with beer, wine and liquor retailers down 10.6% though it may have been affected by a strike in British Columbia.
Sales were also down at clothing, clothing accessories, shoes, jewelry, luggage and leather goods retailers (-0.7%) and health and personal care retailers (-0.3%) in October
The headline chart doesn’t look great but the underlying numbers have been good.
RBC also publishes a report based on its credit card data and it has core sales up 1.1% on a three-month rolling average.
“Early signs for Q4 remain positive with spending momentum holding up
despite elevated borrowing costs, and still cautious consumer sentiment,” RBC said.
My sense is that retirees are those near retirement are driving much of the spending. Despite home prices losing value since 2022, they’ve still generated incredible returns over the past decade and that’s keeping that cohort spending. For younger generations, unemployment has risen but there are still enough jobs to keep the consumer buoyant.
Looking to 2026, I expect consumers to
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
December 19, 2025 19:39 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Headlines:
Markets:
There wasn’t too much in European morning trade today, with the day being the supposed last “real” trading day for the year. Come next week, the Christmas and New Year break will overshadow everything else and that should lead to thinner liquidity conditions until we wrap up the year.
But for today, there was some decent action – particularly with the Japanese yen as the currency tumbled after the BOJ policy decision. The central bank raised its short-term policy rate by 25 bps to 0.75%, marking the highest in 30 years. However, the yen fell across the board in what is a sell the fact move.
USD/JPY already climbed up to 156.00 after the decision but extended gains as BOJ governor Ueda did not offer too much certainty of when the next rate hike will be. He did drop hints that it could be in March but as we all know, the threshold to trigger such conditions is very much higher than the one needed for today.
As such, USD/JPY also jumped up to break the early December highs in a push above 157.00 with the pair now up over 1% to 157.30 levels – its highest in nearly a month.
Besides that, the dollar held steadier in the major currencies space with the euro and pound keeping lightly changed against the greenback. The same as well for the loonie and aussie, with the FX looking rather dull outside of the yen today. That despite UK retail sales disappointing on economic woes, not being enough to do much to change the sterling outlook for now.
In other markets, European indices were relatively muted in closing out the week while US futures are pointing to a solid jump in tech shares once more. S&P 500 futures are up 0.8% with Nasdaq futures up 1.4% as investors continue the relief rally after the US CPI report yesterday.
In the commodities space, gold is not showing much interest alongside silver as precious metals continue to hang near the highs for the year. A consolidation of gains ahead of the holiday period perhaps? Meanwhile, Bitcoin is posting a decent bounce back to around $88,000 but the technical picture remains challenging with the cryptocurrency poised to end the year lower for the first time since 2022.
To those taking off for the holidays, I wish you a pleasant break and an enjoyable one at that. Merry Christmas and a very Happy New Year to everyone, in case we don’t cross paths again on the server for the year. Have a good one!
This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.
December 19, 2025 17:14 ICMarkets Market News

The post Ex-Dividend 22/12/2025 first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.
December 19, 2025 16:39 ICMarkets Market News
US Stocks Rally After Weaker CPI Print – Nasdaq up 1.4%
US equity markets advanced overnight as softer inflation data buoyed risk sentiment. The latest CPI print came in at its lowest level since 2021, though analysts caution that recent government shutdown disruptions may have skewed the figures. All three of the major indices closed in positive territory, led by tech stocks, which rebounded from yesterday’s drop. The Dow Jones added 0.14% to finish at 47,951, while the S&P 500 climbed 0.79% to 6,774, while the Nasdaq outperformed, rising 1.38% to 23,066. US Treasury yields eased, with the 2-year down 2.1 bps to 3.462% and the 10-year slipping 3.1 bps to 4.122%, reflecting expectations for a slower pace of tightening. The US Dollar Index ended slightly firmer at 98.44, up 0.08%, after an initial post-CPI dip. The Bank of England delivered a widely anticipated 25 bps rate cut, while the European Central Bank held policy steady. Oil prices were marginally higher as traders continued to weigh supply risks heading into 2026. Brent rose 0.12% to $59.75, while WTI gained 0.23% to $56.08. Gold briefly spiked to its highest level since late October following the CPI release, but settled lower, down 0.15% at $4,331.16 at the close.
Another Busy Day to Close Out the Trading Week
It is another busy day ahead for traders, with another key central bank rate call scheduled, as well as some more tier 1 data releases later in the day. In the Asian session, attention will centre on Japanese markets, where the Bank of Japan is expected to announce its interest rate decision—a 25-basis point hike is widely priced in. This is followed by a press conference later in the day, where traders will look closely for hints of more hikes in the new year. The European session will see the release of UK Retail Sales data (exp +0.3% m/m), which will provide insight into consumer spending trends ahead of the holiday season. Early in the US session, Canada will report retail sales (exp 0.0% m/m), offering a snapshot of economic momentum north of the border. Later in the session, US data will round out the week, with Existing Home Sales (exp 4.15 mio) figures released alongside the revised University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment and Inflation Expectations data, key indicators for assessing household confidence and the inflation outlook.
The post General Market Analysis – 19/12/25 first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.
December 19, 2025 16:14 ICMarkets Market News
IC Markets Global – Europe Fundamental Forecast | 19 December 2025
What happened in the Asia session?
Asia’s trading session featured anticipation around the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) policy decision, expected to hike rates to 0.75%—the highest since 1995—along with Japan’s November CPI data showing headline inflation at 2.9% and core at 3.0%. Markets reacted positively to this alongside positive US cues from softer inflation, driving broad gains without major surprises in other macro releases like China’s prior data.
What does it mean for the Europe & US sessions?
Yesterday’s softer-than-expected U.S. CPI fueled equity rallies and Treasury yield drops, reinforcing 2026 Fed cut bets, while ECB projections highlight modest euro area growth amid U.S. tariff relief; today pivots to U.S. home sales at 10 AM ET and massive options expiry, with thin holiday liquidity amplifying moves. Asian shares gained overnight on cooling U.S. CPI (core at 2.6% YoY vs. 3.0% expected), boosting rate cut hopes despite data distortions from the government shutdown.
The Dollar Index (DXY)
Key news events today
Existing Home Sales (3:00 pm GMT)
Revised UoM Consumer Sentiment (3:00 pm GMT)
What can we expect from DXY today?
The DXY has weakened 1.78% over the past month and 9.23% year-over-year, with forecasts pointing to 98.28 by quarter-end and further downside to 96.10 in 12 months due to anticipated Fed easing. USD/JPY experienced volatility with initial rallies reversing on CPI data, though pullbacks remain buying opportunities amid rate differentials. In Uzbekistan, local expectations signal a USD decline by 34-35 som.
Central Bank Notes:
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bearish
Gold (XAU)
Key news events today
Existing Home Sales (3:00 pm GMT)
Revised UoM Consumer Sentiment (3:00 pm GMT)
What can we expect from Gold today?
Gold maintained its upward trajectory near $4,330/oz, buoyed by investment demand in markets like India, a softer dollar, and Fed rate cut anticipation, though jewellery buying slowed seasonally; year-to-date gains exceeded 67% with short-term forecasts eyeing further highs around $4,440 amid stable bullish technicals.
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bullish
The Euro (EUR)
Key news events today
No major news event
What can we expect from EUR today?
The euro advanced to multi-month highs near $1.178, driven by US dollar weakness from soft jobs data (64K payrolls, 4.6% unemployment) and ECB hints at pausing easing, alongside upbeat Eurozone sentiment indicators like ZEW at 33.7; forecasts suggest potential upside to 1.1820 if support holds, though geopolitical shifts in Ukraine talks add optimism to regional markets.
Central Bank Notes:
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bullish
The Swiss Franc (CHF)
Key news events today
No major news event
What can we expect from CHF today?
The franc shows resilience with limited intraday volatility; EUR/CHF and USD/CHF pairs reflect subdued dollar moves ahead of US data. Broader forecasts predict steady appreciation, with CHF/USD potentially reaching 1.29 in a year. The Swiss franc continues its robust trend on December 19, 2025, supported by the SNB’s cautious 0% rate policy amid deflation, safe-haven flows from geopolitical risks, and forecasts of testing USD/CHF resistance near 0.7995, while longer-term outlooks favour further gains against the dollar.
Central Bank Notes:
The next meeting is on 19 March 2026.
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bullish
The Pound (GBP)
Key news events today
Retail Sales m/m (7:00 am GMT)
What can we expect from GBP today?
The British Pound remained resilient yet cautious against the USD at approximately 1.3381, influenced by softer UK inflation data reinforcing BoE rate cut expectations and technical forecasts predicting a short-term correction to 1.3285 before potential upside to 1.3565, amid steady market digestion of central bank signals and minimal aggressive selling.
Central Bank Notes:
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bullish
The Canadian Dollar (CAD)
Key news events today
Core Retail Sales m/m (1:30 pm GMT)
Retail Sales m/m (1:30 pm GMT)
What can we expect from CAD today?
The Canadian dollar exhibited resilience with a slight uptick versus the USD near 1.3772, fueled by oil gains and pre-retail sales positioning, though forecasts indicate stability with potential quarterly improvements against major peers amid central bank divergence. Retail sales figures released on December 19 were a focal point, following recent softer US CPI data that spurred rate-cut speculation but left the long-term USD/CAD bias tilted upward. Oil prices climbed 0.9%, bolstering the commodity-linked loonie.
Central Bank Notes:
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bullish
Oil
Key news events today
No major news event
What can we expect from Oil today?
Oil prices experienced volatility on December 19, 2025, with WTI crude dipping to around $55.83 per barrel amid ongoing supply concerns. A US blockade on Venezuelan oil tankers, ordered by President Trump, provided some upward support earlier in the week, pushing prices toward $56, but fears of a Russia-Ukraine peace deal and potential Russian oil re-entering the market tempered gains.
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bearish
The post IC Markets Global – Europe Fundamental Forecast | 19 December 2025 first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.
December 19, 2025 16:14 ICMarkets Market News
IC Markets Global – Asia Fundamental Forecast | 19 December 2025
What happened in the U.S. session?
During the U.S. session, the combination of a downside CPI surprise and steady jobless claims shifted the narrative further toward a 2025 easing cycle that begins in March, rather than January, keeping a “goldilocks” feel to macro conditions. The immediate market reaction favored risk assets and duration: U.S. equity indices and gold outperformed, the front end of the Treasury curve rallied, and the dollar softened against major peers, with GBP, EUR, and pro‑cyclical FX among the main beneficiaries.
What does it mean for the Asia Session?
Asian traders should be prepared for elevated volatility centered on the Bank of Japan, with a widely expected hike from 0.50% to about 0.75% and Governor Ueda’s press conference likely to drive sharp moves in JPY and regional risk assets. Attention will then shift to UK retail sales as a gauge of European consumer resilience, followed by Canadian retail sales for insight into North American demand and CAD dynamics. Into the US session, existing home sales and the revised University of Michigan sentiment index will provide fresh reads on the US housing market and consumer confidence, shaping closing‑week positioning in USD, global equities, and high‑beta Asian currencies
The Dollar Index (DXY)
Key news events today
Existing Home Sales (3:00 pm GMT)
Revised UoM Consumer Sentiment (3:00 pm GMT)
What can we expect from DXY today?
The Dollar is trading near 98.4 on the DXY, modestly firmer intraday but still in a broader corrective downtrend after losing almost 9% over the past year as markets price in a post‑Fed‑cut environment with a shallower US rate premium. With no major US data releases scheduled, price action is expected to be flow‑ and headline‑driven, particularly around the Bank of Japan decision window, leaving USD vulnerable to further selling on any risk‑positive or dovish‑policy news but capable of short‑covering rallies if global risk sentiment sours.
Central Bank Notes:
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bearish
Gold (XAU)
Key news events today
Existing Home Sales (3:00 pm GMT)
Revised UoM Consumer Sentiment (3:00 pm GMT)
What can we expect from Gold today?
Gold remains close to record territory in the mid‑$4,300/oz region after a roughly 60–70% surge this year, with intraday forecasts pointing to a volatile but upward‑tilted range around $4,255–$4,440 and no clear sign yet of a major top. The market tone is broadly bullish but increasingly cautious, as traders balance strong tailwinds, lower real rates, central‑bank and safe‑haven demand, de‑dollarization flows, and persistent geopolitical and inflation concerns against the risk of corrective pullbacks from historically stretched levels as year‑end liquidity thins.
Next 24 Hours Bias
Strong Bullish
The Australian Dollar (AUD)
Key news events today
No major news event
What can we expect from AUD today?
Going into Friday, the Australian Dollar is on the defensive, trading just below 0.66 after several sessions of losses that pushed it to a two‑week low against the US Dollar, with the move driven mainly by a firmer USD and cautious global risk sentiment rather than fresh domestic shocks. Australia’s data calendar for the day is light, featuring only lower‑tier credit indicators, so traders are focusing on external catalysts such as US economic releases, equity market swings, and evolving expectations for Fed and RBA policy, while technical analysts continue to flag the 0.67 region as a key resistance level that must be cleared for any sustained AUD recovery.
Central Bank Notes:
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bullish
The Kiwi Dollar (NZD)
Key news events today
No major news event
What can we expect from NZD today?
Today, the New Zealand Dollar is trading in a consolidative, slightly defensive posture around the mid‑0.57s against the US Dollar, retreating from early‑December highs as risk appetite cools and strong domestic GDP data fails to shift RBNZ policy expectations toward imminent tightening. The broader trend over the past month remains modestly positive for NZD, but with the Fed already cutting rates, the RBNZ seen on hold, and global markets turning more cautious, short‑term price action is likely to revolve around whether NZD/USD can defend support near 0.5750 or slips back toward the lower end of its recent range.
Central Bank Notes:
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bullish
The Japanese Yen (JPY)
Key news events today
BOJ Policy Rate (Tentative)
Monetary Policy Statement (Tentative)
BOJ Press Conference (Tentative)
What can we expect from JPY today?
The Japanese yen today is in a holding pattern but underpinned by strong expectations that the BoJ will deliver a landmark rate hike to 0.75% at its December 18–19 meeting, bringing policy to a three‑decade high. Price action in USD/JPY around the mid‑155s reflects this tug‑of‑war between anticipated domestic tightening and broader dollar dynamics, while markets brace for elevated volatility and potential carry‑trade unwinds once Friday’s decision and guidance hit the tape.
Central Bank Notes:
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bearish
Oil
Key news events today
No major news event
What can we expect from Oil today?
Oil is trading slightly higher today, with WTI in the mid‑50s and Brent near 60 dollars per barrel as the market digests a rebound from recent multi‑year lows. Prices were lifted earlier in the week after President Donald Trump ordered a full blockade of sanctioned Venezuelan tankers, heightening supply‑disruption fears, but sentiment remains cautious because global production and inventories still suggest an oversupplied market. Over the past month, crude has lost around 5% and is down close to 18% over the past year, reflecting persistent demand concerns despite ongoing geopolitical flashpoints
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bearish
The post IC Markets Global – Asia Fundamental Forecast | 19 December 2025 first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.
December 19, 2025 16:01 ICMarkets Market News
Asian stock markets are trading mostly higher on Friday, buoyed by broadly positive cues from Wall Street after softer-than-expected U.S. inflation data reinforced confidence that the U.S. Federal Reserve may continue cutting interest rates next year. Asian markets had ended mostly lower in the previous session.
The Australian share market is modestly higher, extending Thursday’s gains. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 is trading above the 8,600 level, supported by strength in technology and financial stocks, though losses in gold miners are limiting upside. The index is up about 0.4 percent, while the broader All Ordinaries Index is also trading higher.
Mining stocks are mixed, with modest losses in BHP Group and Fortescue offset by gains in Rio Tinto and Mineral Resources. Oil stocks are also mixed, as gains in Origin Energy and Beach Energy counter declines in Santos and Woodside Energy. Technology stocks are broadly higher, while major banks are posting solid gains across the board. Gold miners, however, are mostly lower.
In Japan, the market is trading sharply higher, rebounding from the previous session’s losses. The Nikkei 225 has climbed to near the 49,600 level, led by strong gains in automakers, financials and technology stocks. Investors are also watching closely as the Bank of Japan concludes its monetary policy meeting, with expectations of a 25 basis point rate hike.
Elsewhere in Asia, markets across Taiwan, China, Hong Kong, South Korea and Southeast Asia are trading mostly higher. On Wall Street overnight, U.S. stocks rebounded strongly, led by the Nasdaq, while European markets also closed higher. Crude oil prices edged up slightly amid ongoing geopolitical concerns.
The post Friday 19th December 2025: Asian Markets Rise on Fed Rate-Cut Hopes, Australia and Japan Lead Gains first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.