Thursday, January 15, 2026

All I want for Xmas is accurate economic data

By Anna Szymanski

Everything Mike Dolan and the ROI team are excited to read, watch and listen to over the weekend.

From the Editor

Hello Morning Bid readers!

The last full trading week of 2025 was a rocky one, but it looks to end on a positive note – just like the year itself – as central bankers, deal makers and some head-scratching U.S. inflation data keep everyone from putting on their out-of-office messages just yet.

Wall Street’s main indexes closed ​higher on Thursday, as Micron Technology soared 16% on a blockbuster profit forecast, and core U.S. CPI inflation in November rose by only 2.6% year-over-year, the slowest pace since March 2021. This soft report increased expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate ‌cuts early next year.

However, almost no economists think this inflation figure is accurate, with some dubbing it a “Swiss Cheese” report, due to data collection issues caused by the government shutdown.

Investors also received U.S. November payrolls numbers this week. The economy added 64,000 jobs, above consensus expectations, after the massive drop in October, and the unemployment ‌rate ticked up to a four-year high of 4.6%. But, again, caveats abound, as the 43-day government shutdown forced the Bureau of Labor Statistics to alter its methodology for this calculation.

Central banks were in the spotlight once again this week. The Bank of Japan on Friday lifted interest rates 25 basis points to 0.75%, the highest level in thirty years, with a hawkish steer from Governor Kazuo Ueda. The yen weakened, however, as it will take far more than modest tightening to guarantee the Japanese currency escapes the intervention “danger zone.”

The Bank of England moved in the opposite direction on Thursday, cutting its policy rate to 3.75% from 4% – the sixth cut since August 2024.

However, with a surprisingly large drop in UK inflation last month and the economy appearing to stagnate, the BoE is arguably behind the curve and may need to play catch-up to offset tightening real rates.

While ⁠the European Central Bank kept rates steady at 2.0% on Thursday, it signalled a likely ‌end to its easing cycle.

Dealmaking certainly doesn’t look to be easing anytime soon. Warner Brothers Discovery on Wednesday rejected Paramount’s $108.4 billion “hostile takeover” bid. Then on Thursday came the announcement of a $6 billion all-stock deal for a merger between Trump Media and Google-backed TAE Technologies. That was followed by news that TikTok’s Chinese owner, ByteDance, has signed binding agreements to give control of U.S. operations to a group of investors, including Oracle.

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