January 20, 2026 04:40 Forexlive Latest News Market News
New Zealand’s services sector has emerged from a prolonged slump, adding to signs that domestic growth momentum is rebuilding into 2026.
Summary:
Services sector expanded for the first time since February 2024
PSI rose to 51.5, a 4.3-point lift from November
New orders and activity drove the improvement
Employment remained in mild contraction
Combined with PMI, data point to firmer late-2025 growth
New Zealand’s services sector moved back into expansion territory in December for the first time since early 2024, offering a tentative but meaningful signal that domestic activity is stabilising. The latest BNZ – BusinessNZ Performance of Services Index (PSI) rose to 51.5 in December, up sharply from November and above the 50.0 threshold that separates contraction from expansion.
While the headline improvement is encouraging, the index remains below its long-run average of 52.8, underscoring that momentum is still modest. Even so, December’s reading marked the end of the longest sustained downturn in the services sector since the survey began, with contraction persisting for 21 consecutive months.
Details within the report point to a broadening, albeit uneven, recovery. Three of the five sub-indices moved into expansion. New Orders and Business Activity led the improvement, climbing to 52.5 after four months of contraction, while Activity/Sales followed closely at 52.2. Stocks and Inventories also edged higher into expansion at 51.9, suggesting firms are beginning to prepare for improved demand conditions.
Labour market dynamics, however, remain a clear constraint. The Employment sub-index stayed in contraction at 49.6, highlighting ongoing caution among firms when it comes to hiring, despite improved activity indicators.
Sentiment measures continue to reflect lingering challenges. Just over half of respondents reported negative conditions, though this proportion eased compared with previous months. Firms cited weak demand, subdued confidence, and elevated living and operating costs as persistent headwinds, alongside seasonal disruptions linked to Christmas shutdowns.
More positively, businesses also pointed to seasonal summer demand, improving consumer confidence as interest rates fall, stronger tourism flows, and new contracts as emerging supports. BNZ economists noted that when the PSI rebound is combined with the recent surge in manufacturing activity, the data signal firmer GDP growth into the end of 2025 and improving momentum heading into the new year.
The rebound in services activity, alongside a strong manufacturing PMI, supports a more constructive near-term growth outlook for New Zealand and reduces downside GDP risks into early 2026.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
January 20, 2026 04:30 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Markets:
It was a holiday in the USA and that dampened trading and news to start the week. Eyes remained on the fallout from Trump’s treat to put tariffs on several EU countries if the US isn’t given Greenland. The escalation had stock futures worried but after a drop to -1.2% early in US trading, there was some modest recovery.
There was less of an upturn in the US dollar as the market grows increasingly concerned about the large stockpile of USD holdings in Europe and the potential for a real schism. Some once-unthinkingable outcomes are suddenly within the range of possibilities but we will keep watching for developments, particularly from Congress in the hours ahead.
The lone notable news of the day was Canadian CPI. The headline ran hot while the core numbers were cooler. Within the report there were signs of strengthening in airfares and restaurant prices, both good signs for the Canadian consumer but despite that, the loonie still underperformed its commodity peers. No doubt, the US-Canada trade angst is a part of that. USD/CAD did fall after the data though, hitting a six-day low, something I spoke with Reuters about.
The geopolitical drama is undoubtedly leading to the bid in precious metals with gold touching a fresh record today and silver nearing $95/oz. Bitcoin wasn’t able to join in the trade as risk aversion weighed.
Eyes in the session ahead will be on Japan as the rumored election was called and there is already talk of more spending. Japanese yields continue to rise and the yen couldn’t benefit from broader USD weakness today despite the wave of risk aversion.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
January 20, 2026 03:14 Forexlive Latest News Market News
It’s been a rough start to the year for natural gas as prices have fallen back to October levels but help is on the way with a cold forecast for the eastern USA.
That has February natural gas up 15% today, through only to a one-week high. The strong start to the gas withdrawal season has been curbed by higher production, leading to prices fall below $4 for February gas and below $3 from March through May.
In the next three years there is slate to be a large jump in demand due to US LNG facilities coming online but there are fresh questions about whether that will materially tighten the market or be met with more-intense pumping.
The good news for gas is that low oil prices make some oil-weighted wells less economical and that could dampen supply and drilling budgets for 2026, particularly with gas prices depressed once again.
Today is so-called ‘blue Monday’, which is fake ‘day’ but is supposed to be most-depressing day of the year. It’s certainly a cold one where I am in Canada and those cold long-range forecasts don’t help.
In the bigger picture, Europe is suddenly worried about the supply of natural gas from the United States being weaponized in the same way that Russia used its gas exports. That event caused a near-existential crisis in Europe and this one would be doubly so.
Eyes will be on Davos this week as Trump travels to Europe and will meet with European counterparts. The stakes certainly got raised and broader markets are concerned. It’s a US holiday but S&P 500 futures are down 0.9% to start the week and gold hit another fresh record high. The US dollar is under pressure as the market grows concerned about a fresh EU-US trade war.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
January 19, 2026 20:39 Forexlive Latest News Market News
The market has been pricing in a chance of a rate hike this year and those odds just ticked a bit higher after this inflation report. Notably, there is somthing of a technical change with this report as the HST (Canada’s VAT) tax began in Dec 14, 2024 and that fell out of the calculation.
Year over year, higher restaurant prices were the largest contributor to faster growth in the all-items CPI, which echos signs of a strong consumer. Grocery store prices also rose 5.0% y/y.
In November, headline inflation held steady with a modest 0.1% monthly rise, while core inflation metrics signaled cooling. Both CPI median and trim decelerated to 2.8%, coming in slightly below expectations. This downward pressure was primarily driven by lower prices for travel and accommodation, alongside slower growth in rent costs, providing generally positive data for the Bank of Canada.
However, these service-sector declines were offset by rising goods prices, most notably at the grocery store. Food inflation accelerated to 4.7% year-over-year—the steepest rise since late 2023—fueled by sharp spikes in staples like frozen beef (+17.7%) and coffee (+27.8%).
Canadian inflation has followed a dramatic volatility curve since 2021. After surging due to post-pandemic supply shocks, headline CPI peaked at a generational high of 8.1% in June 2022. Aggressive interest rate hikes successfully forced a broad deceleration throughout 2023 and 2024, bringing overall inflation back near the 2% target by 2025.
However, the “last mile” has proven difficult; while headline numbers have stabilized, essential costs like groceries and shelter remain stubbornly elevated entering 2026.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
January 19, 2026 20:15 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Headlines:
Markets:
Once again, it’s another start to the week with Trump making all the headlines. This time around, he delivered a tariffs threat to European countries “meddling” with Greenland affairs as he steps up geopolitical tensions in the region. All this of course before he travels to Davos for the World Economic Forum later this week.
Trump threatened 10% tariffs on all goods starting 1 February, with the potential to escalate that to 25% come 1 June after.
And that’s keeping markets on the defensive with the risk mood looking sour to start the new week. US markets might be closed but equity futures are battered with S&P 500 futures down 1%. In Europe, major indices in the region are also bleeding by over 1% as geopolitical risks now transfer over to economic risks.
In the major currencies space, the dollar is lower across the board as the narrative here just adds to the debasement trade. EUR/USD is up 0.3% to 1.1626 with USD/CHF down 0.6% to 0.7983 with the Swiss franc the most favoured amid the risk-off flows.
USD/JPY had some back and forth but is sitting little changed near 158.00 on the day. That as Japan prime minister Takaichi confirms a snap election for 8 February in order to try and consolidate power after having began her term in October last year.
As traders stick with the currency debasement trade, the big winners are once again precious metals. Gold and silver and rallying strongly after a gap higher with the latter pushing gains of over 3% on the day above $93. The former is also posting solid gains of just under 2% around $4,670 as it remains the preferred option for traders and investors to diversify away from fiat currencies.
This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.
January 19, 2026 20:00 ICMarkets Market News

The post Ex-Dividend 19/01/2026 first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.
January 19, 2026 20:00 ICMarkets Market News

The post Ex-Dividend 20/01/2026 first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.
January 19, 2026 18:30 Forexlive Latest News Market News
As a reminder, the World Economic Forum (WEF) is taking place in Davos this week. The event starts today until Friday but most of what we’ll be seeing on the agenda and on the sidelines are likely to take place from tomorrow onwards. You can check out the highlights of the agenda from earlier here: One last chance to preserve the old world order?
With global leaders set to get together, it’s going to be a bit of an awkward one now after Trump just threatened tariffs against European countries over the Greenland situation. In his words, the tariffs will be on “any and all goods” unless “a deal is reached for the complete and total purchase of Greenland”. 🤪
It will be a 10% levy starting from 1 February with it potentially jumping to 25% come 1 June after.
For now, the EU is still very much planning its retaliatory actions. And von der Leyen has to bring something to the table in any discussions with Trump on the matter. As things stand, Trump wants to play things out such as that he holds all the cards. However, we all know that this is all part of his negotiating tactic. Go big in the first ask and then water things down after.
That being said, the whole matter of Greenland might be a different situation than what we’ve seen before. So, we will have to see how serious this really is as compared to previous TACO episodes. Venezuela now serves as a precedent that anything goes.
The EU is reaffirming that there is no planned meeting yet between von der Leyen and Trump but that “engagement with the US is still continuing on all levels”. Adding that intensive consultations are now taking place among member states on a possible response to the US’ tariffs threat.
This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.
January 19, 2026 17:30 Forexlive Latest News Market News
The key statistic here is core annual inflation, which continues to hold above the 2% threshold for now. As such, that will keep the ECB sidelined in waiting on their next potential policy move. As mentioned before, the main sticking point at this stage is Germany mostly and that will continue to keep policymakers on edge as we get into the new year.
Looking at the breakdown, food price inflation remains elevated as well at around 2.5% with services inflation clearly still the standout at 3.4% in December. In looking at the contributions to the headline inflation number:
This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.
January 19, 2026 17:14 Forexlive Latest News Market News
Earlier, she also commented that she will “ensure sustainability of Japan’s fiscal state by lowering the debt-to-GDP ratio”. That will be tough considering how expansive her fiscal policies are and that is already the main reason why the Japanese yen has been battered for months on end since October.
The Takaichi trade summarised:
As she now calls for a snap election, will it be a case of buy the rumour, sell the fact as outlined here?
It will be interesting to see if this really backfires on Takaichi. But if that were to happen, expect yen shorts to be covered in a massive manner.
For now though, traders remain confident that things will not change in terms of policy heading for Japan. USD/JPY is down 0.1% to 157.93 today and continues to keep around the 158.00 level after a brief dip to 157.42 earlier in the day amid some safety flows.
This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.
January 19, 2026 17:14 ICMarkets Market News
IC Markets Global – Asia Fundamental Forecast | 19 January 2026
What happened in the U.S. session?
President Trump’s tariff threats on Europe over Greenland dominated overnight headlines, absent major U.S. data, fostering caution in futures trading while propelling gold higher; European stocks and U.S. indices faced the sharpest impacts, with safe-havens like gold rallying amid trade war fears.
What does it mean for the Asia Session?
Asian markets open Monday amid optimism from U.S.-Taiwan chip investments and metals rallies, but focus sharpens on China’s Loan Prime Rate for policy clues and UK jobs data for GBP effects, with oil and gold volatility adding layers to trading decisions. Position cautiously for data-driven moves.
The Dollar Index (DXY)
Key news events today
No major news event
What can we expect from DXY today?
The US dollar showed resilience, with the DXY index holding steady around 99.39 amid thin trading due to Martin Luther King Jr. Day closures in US markets. Strong recent economic data, including lower-than-expected jobless claims and positive manufacturing surveys, reduced expectations for near-term Federal Reserve rate cuts, supporting the currency’s third weekly gain
Central Bank Notes:
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bearish
Gold (XAU)
Key news events today
No major news event
What can we expect from Gold today?
Gold (XAU/USD) ended last week near $4,618 in a bullish channel but eyes consolidation between $4,550-$4,650 this week (Jan 19-23), with potential rises to $5,235 if supports hold, or declines below $3,785 on breakdowns; key watch is $4,586 for bullish bias.
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?
The Australian Dollar trades steadily around 0.6700 versus the USD, rebounding from recent corrections driven by softer domestic data like falling consumer confidence and job ads, offset by USD struggles amid US Fed investigations and political risks.
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?
The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) showed modest fluctuations around the 0.5740-0.5780 range against the USD in recent trading sessions leading into January 19, 2026, amid mixed economic signals from New Zealand and broader USD pressures. Positive domestic data, including strong December manufacturing PMI growth for the sixth straight month and rising business confidence, supported a weekly gain toward 0.5750.
Central Bank Notes:
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bearish
The Japanese Yen (JPY)
Key news events today
No major news event
What can we expect from JPY today?
The Japanese Yen faced continued pressure on Monday, trading around the USD/JPY level of approximately 158 amid heightened volatility driven by Bank of Japan (BoJ) policy expectations and intervention risks. Verbal warnings from Japan’s Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama underscored concerns over excessive yen weakness
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 markets show continued volatility driven by geopolitical tensions in Iran, ongoing protests since late December 2025, and US President Donald Trump’s recent announcement of 25% tariffs on goods from countries trading with Iran, which briefly pushed Brent crude above $66 per barrel before a pullback.
Next 24 Hours Bias
Medium Bearish
The post IC Markets Global – Asia Fundamental Forecast | 19 January 2026 first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.
January 19, 2026 17:14 ICMarkets Market News
It looks like it could be a very busy week ahead for traders, with plenty of geopolitical updates likely, as well as key data releases, central bank updates, and earnings reports.
Traders are expecting to see some moves on the Monday open after President Trump threatened several countries, including France, the UK, and Sweden, with tariffs of up to 25% if they go ahead with military exercises in Greenland.
Here is our usual day-by-day breakdown of the major risk events this week:

It is a quiet calendar start to the week on Monday, with little on the schedule for the first two sessions of the day. US markets are closed for Martin Luther King Jr Day; however, there will be a focus on Canadian markets on the North American open when key CPI data is released, as well as the Bank of Canada Business Outlook Survey.

It is a slightly busier day on Tuesday. The initial focus in the Asian session will be on Chinese markets, with key Loan Prime Rate updates due midway through the session. UK markets will feature early in the European session, with employment data due out before Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey testifies before the Treasury Select Committee. We also hear from SNB Chairman Martin Schlegel and Buba President Joachim Nagel when they speak from the World Economic Forum in Davos.

It is a quiet start again to the day in Asia; however, UK markets again feature in the European session, with CPI data due out. The focus swings to Davos again, where we are scheduled to hear from ECB President Christine Lagarde and US President Donald Trump.

Australian markets will be the early focus for Asia-based traders on Thursday, with employment data due out during the Sydney morning. There is little on the agenda in the London session; however, the New York day will see two key US data updates, with the Core PCE Price Index data due out alongside the latest GDP update.

The Asian session should prove to be busy on Friday, with New Zealand CPI data due out early in the day before focus moves north to Japan for the latest rate decision from the Bank of Japan. There is a raft of flash Manufacturing and Services PMI data due out in the London session, while the New York day sees Canadian retail sales numbers, the US PMI data, and the revised University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment update.
The post The Week Ahead – Week Commencing 19th January 2026 first appeared on IC Markets | Official Blog.