December 10, 2025 01:14 Forexlive Latest News Market News
The U.S. Treasury sold $39 billion of 10 year notes at a high yield of 4.175%
AUCTION GRADE: C+/B-
The 10 year note auction came in with a 0.0 basis point tail which is precisely the six-month average. The bid to cover was just marginally higher than the six-month average. The domestic the bidders were just above the six-month average while the in directs were also just above the six-month average. As a result the dealers were saddled with about 1.2% less than the norm.
That was good enough for a C+/B- grade in my view.
There is little reaction. However, in general, the 10 year yield is comfortably above the 4.0% level at 4.17%. Recall that toward the end of November, the yield reached a low of 3.962%. The current level is near the high levels going back to September 26 and is also near a swing area between 4.17% and 4.199%. Move above that area and we could see a further pop in yields.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
December 10, 2025 00:45 Forexlive Latest News Market News
European Indices End Mixed as Trading Winds Down
The major European stock indices closed the session mixed, with performance varying across the region. Germany’s DEU40 led to the upside, gaining 0.49% at 24,162.66, while France’s CAC40 lagged, falling 0.69% to 8,052.52. The UK’s FTSE 100 (UKX) hovered near unchanged levels, slipping just 0.03% to 9,642.00.
Spain’s market data included duplicate readings for the IBEX 35, both showing the index up 0.13% at 16,734.49, confirming a modest gain on the day. Italy’s FTMIB also posted a respectable rise of 0.33%, closing at 43,574.51.
U.S. stock indices are mixed as London and European traders call it a day
As European traders head for the exits, U.S. equities are mixed in early trading.
Dow Jones (DJI): 47,724.12, down 0.03%
S&P 500 (SPX): 6,854.43, up 0.12%
Nasdaq (IXIC): 23,588.28, up 0.18%
The modest moves reflect a cautious tone ahead of today’s Treasury auction and lingering macro uncertainty.
U.S. Treasury Yields head higher ahead of 10 year auction
The U.S. Treasury market is showing small upward moves in yields across much of the curve:
2-year: 3.6043% (+0.021 basis points)
5-year: 3.7691% (+0.017 basis points)
10-year: 4.1741% (unchanged)
30 year 4.800%, (-1.5 basis points)
Further out the curve, long-end yields dipped slightly, with the 20-year and 30-year down by 0.012 and 0.014 respectively.
A key focal point today will be the U.S. Treasury’s auction of $39 billion in 10-year notes at 1:00 PM ET, which could influence yield direction and risk sentiment into the afternoon session.
Commodities & Crypto: Silver Breaks Above $60 for the First Time Ever
The commodities complex is uneven, with crude oil under pressure while precious metals surge.
US Oil: $58.22, down 1.05%
Gold: $4,206.095, up 0.37%
Silver: $60.115 — up 3.40%, trading above $60 for the first time ever
Bitcoin: $93,727, up 3.40%
Silver’s breakout above the $60 mark marks a historic milestone, underscoring strong investment flows into precious metals as inflation hedges and volatility dampeners.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
December 9, 2025 23:39 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Government data releases are catching up following the 46-day shutdown.
November CPI arrives December 18, while December CPI and real earnings will be released on January 13.
January jobs report shifts to January 9, restoring a near-normal schedule for labor-market data.
As the government works its way out of the 46-day shutdown, the economic data calendar is finally beginning to realign. The BLS will release the delayed November CPI report on December 18, and has now scheduled the December CPI for January 13. On that same day, the agency will publish real earnings for December, helping fill in the inflation-adjusted income picture.
The U.S. Employment Situation report—normally released on the first Friday of each month—will instead arrive on Friday, January 9, roughly one week later than usual. That timing marks a return to a more typical rhythm for labor-market reporting, suggesting that at least the jobs calendar will be back on track as the backlog clears.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
December 9, 2025 22:14 Forexlive Latest News Market News
October hires were little changed, holding at 5.1 million.
The hire rate remained steady at 3.2%.
No significant hiring shifts occurred across any major industries
In October, total separations were little changed at 5.1 million and a 3.2% rate.
Total separations fell in health care & social assistance (-111,000) and the federal government (-34,000).
Quits in October were little changed at 2.9 million with a 1.8% rate.
Quits were down 276,000 over the year.
Quits decreased in:
Accommodation & food services (-136,000)
Health care & social assistance (-114,000)
Federal government (-25,000)
Federal government quits hit a series high of 46,000 in September.
Quits increased in:
Arts, entertainment & recreation (+38,000)
Information (+21,000)
The quits is at the lowest since 2020. That is indicative of a jobs market that has some anxiety. People tend to quit jobs when they are confident of getting another job. That is not the case now. However, it was for October in the midst of a shutdown
We saw initial jobless claims last week move below 200K. It was Thanksgiving week which can be influenced by seasonals but we will see. The ADP data today, saw a move back to positive after being negative more recently (with the ADP monthly coming in negative).
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
December 9, 2025 22:00 Forexlive Latest News Market News
The White House economic advisor Hassett is speaking and says:
What’s particularly interesting right now is the intense focus on economic data. Critics such as Miran and Bessent argue that the current Federal Reserve is not forward-looking enough, saying policymakers should be anticipating economic shifts rather than reacting to them. In contrast, Kevin Hassett’s is now aligning more closely with the Fed’s existing framework—including the oft criticized Chair Jerome Powell, who repeatedly emphasizes that the Fed remains data-dependent in setting policy.
Betting markets still support Hassett. On Polymarket, traders currently assign Hassett a 76% probability of becoming the next Fed leader—down from about 88% yesterday, but still firmly in the lead. Kevin Warsh, by comparison, sits at roughly 12%, suggesting market confidence remains strongly tilted toward Hassett despite recent volatility.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
December 9, 2025 20:39 Forexlive Latest News Market News
US is to allow Nvidia H200 chip exports to China.
Although good news, Jensen Huang, recently said he is not sure China would accept H200 even if restrictions are eased — Beijing may prefer home-grown chips or chips already certified under export rules. Chinese firms and regulators appear increasingly focused on domestic AI-chip makers (like Cambricon Technologies) and building self-sufficiency. There’s growing pressure—both economic and political—on companies not to rely solely on foreign hardware.
Nvidia shares have moved higher and are up $3.90 or 2.15% at $186.46.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
December 9, 2025 20:30 Forexlive Latest News Market News
From ADP:
For the four weeks ending November 22, 2025, U.S. private employers added an average of 4,750 jobs per week, according to the NER Pulse, a weekly update of the monthly ADP National Employment Report (NER).
Three times a month, ADP Research publishes preliminary estimates of the week-over-week change in U.S. employment based on a four-week moving average. These estimates are based on ADP’s finely tuned, high-frequency data. Data is seasonally adjusted and made available with a two-week lag.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
December 9, 2025 19:45 Forexlive Latest News Market News
The most notable mover in the session was the Japanese Yen. The JPY continues to weaken across the board despite the incoming BoJ rate hike and constant jawboning from Japanese officials.
Part of the problem could be that the BoJ waited far too long and it’s now looking to deliver a cautious rate hike right when other major central banks are shifting to a hawkish stance.
The market has also already priced in a rate hike this month and at very least another in 2026, so it’s hard to see the BoJ outhawking the market pricing, leaving limited room for JPY appreciation on a hawkish repricing.
We also got a report from Financial Times saying that Chinese regulators have been discussing ways to permit limited access to H200 chips. No final decision had been made yet though. For context, Trump yesterday announced that the US will allow Nvidia to sell H200 chips to China.
US equity indices weakned a bit on the headline but recovered quickly as this news isn’t new. In fact, China has been implementing restrictions on foreign AI chips like Nvidia, AMD and so on in state-funded data centers to boost domestic tech as they compete with the US.
Lastly, Politico published an interview with Trump in which he said that he may consider changes to tariffs to lower prices. He also said that the willingness to lower interest rates would be a litmus test in the choice of a new Fed chair.
Lowering tariffs further would be certainly bullish for the global economy but at this point it could also stoke inflation given that central banks responded to the negative shock from tariffs with lower interest rates. Therefore, it might be bullish in the short-term but if things get hot, central banks will be forced to tighten again, and that would be negative for risk assets.
This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.
December 9, 2025 18:30 Forexlive Latest News Market News
This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.
December 9, 2025 18:14 Forexlive Latest News Market News
An increase in those expecting real sales to be higher contributed most to the rise in the Optimism Index. The Uncertainty Index rose 3 points from October to 91. An increase in owners reporting uncertainty about capital expenditure plans over the next three to six months was the primary driver of the rise in the Uncertainty Index.
NFIB Chief Economist Bill Dunkelberg said: “Although optimism increased, small business owners are still frustrated by the lack of qualified workers. Despite this, more firms still plan to create new jobs in the near future.”
This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.
December 9, 2025 17:14 ICMarkets Market News

The post Ex-Dividend 10/12/2025 first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.
December 9, 2025 16:00 ICMarkets Market News
US Stocks Ease Ahead of the Fed Meeting – Dow off 0.45%
US markets eased lower in the latest session as traders grew increasingly wary ahead of this week’s crucial Federal Reserve decision. With fears rising that the Fed may deliver a less dovish message than markets have priced in, risk appetite faded and equities shifted into reverse. The Dow led the declines, slipping 0.45% to 47,739, while the S&P 500 dipped 0.35% to 6,846, and the Nasdaq edged 0.14% lower to 23,545. The shift in expectations pushed the US dollar and Treasury yields higher once again; the DXY gained 0.12% to 99.10, while yields climbed across the curve, with the US 2-year rising 1.5 bps to 3.575% and the 10-year gaining 2.9 bps to 4.164%. Oil prices fell after reports confirmed Iraq had restored output at one of the world’s largest oilfields. Brent dropped 1.96% to $62.50, and WTI fell 2.05% to $58.65 a barrel. Gold also drifted lower, slipping 0.19% to $4,189.23 as higher yields and a stronger dollar reduced investor demand.
Dollar in Focus for FX Traders This Week
In a week full of interest rate calls from some major central banks, there is no doubt about which one will have the biggest effect on the major currency pairs. The RBA, Bank of Canada, and SNB will clearly have impacts on their respective currencies, and there will be good trading opportunities on the crosses, but for the majors, the Fed is likely to dominate moves into the year end and into 2026. Some market players are calling this one of the most contentious Fed meetings in recent times, with updates from various Fed members over the last few weeks adding much fuel to that fire. If we do get the expected cut, the forward guidance that we get from the Dot Plot, Statement, and Jerome Powell’s subsequent press conference will be key, with the risk probably still sitting with a much less dovish FOMC for 2026 than the market is expecting and stock markets are hoping for.
Event Calendar Kicks into Action
Today marks the start of a busy few days on the macro front, with key updates from central banks and data due across all three trading sessions. The Reserve Bank of Australia kicks off a packed week of central bank activity in the Asian session today; the market is firmly expecting rates to remain on hold, but traders are expecting plenty of volatility around the statement and press conference. Attention then shifts to Europe, where Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda speaks in London, before the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Report Hearings later in the day, both events likely to spark moves in their respective currencies. The New York session sees the first major update out of the US for the week, with the JOLTS job openings data due out for both September and October, with the data offering another key insight into labour market tightness ahead of the Fed.
The post General Market Analysis – 9/12/25 first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.