We know that this is slightly contrary to the consensus views but we think it needs to be said. The communication from the RBA (Reserve Bank of Australia) is unusually unclear, confusing and conflicted. The view conveyed in statement, press conference and minutes currently we would argue counter each other.
And the reason for this we believe is because the RBA is a reluctant hawk and is frightened to act. Let us now present why we think this and what it will mean for FX and yields in particular. The RBA has just completed a mass review of its operations and one of the key changes was to improve transparency.
This included press conferences, extended meetings, and more public discussions from members. The catch with this has been the mixed communications. Take for example the statement which was extremely ambiguous.
It was filled with terms like uncertainty, mixed signals, and complexity. It explains why the statement has this line: ‘the path of interest rates that will best ensure that inflation returns to target in a reasonable timeframe remains uncertain and the Board is not ruling anything in or out.’ That’s fair – things are complex and we understand why the board is waiting for more data. That was countered with this: ‘ The Board remains resolute in its determination to return inflation to target and will do what is necessary to achieve that outcome.’ Historically, whenever the Board has included such a resolute statement in its communications, they followed up with a cut or a hike in the preceding meetings – the frightened hawk is there and strongly suggests that a rate hike is likely.
The initial AUD reaction to the statement we think shows why the communication is mixed. Then take the press conference – Governor Bullock’s were much stronger than the statement, indicating a significant stance, not really clear in the statement. As mentioned, the Board stated they are not ruling anything in or out, but in reality, they have dismissed the possibility of rate cuts.
That was confirmed when Bullock was asked on this exact point and confirmed that rate hikes were the only things discussed. There was no ongoing discussion about cuts in the near or medium term as they do not expect inflation to reach their target by mid-2026. The Board’s concern is that inflation is notably higher than expected, employment is solid and that overall demand is still generating inflation.
The reaction to all this was clear here: The next notable reaction was the interbank market. All though it doesn’t appear like much in this chart. Please understand this change is actually from a ‘cut’ to ‘hike’ so yes there is a 10% chance of a hike, that is from a 10% chance of a cut.
July will be crucial with substantial data releases, including the second quarter CPI (July 31), GDP figures, and the wage price index. Current forecasts suggest that inflation and employment are performing better than expected, raising concerns about the need for a potential harder landing in the economy to return inflation back to target. The focus is now shifting towards slowing down the economy further despite the per capita recession because in the RBA’s view the impact on the household’s price power in the future from high inflation is still too high.
Future Rate Decisions All things being equal – with the RBA turning itself in knots and trying so hard to stay the course the RBA's commentary suggests it still has preference to hold rates if possible. The big issue as it acknowledges is the possible need for near term tightening due to a lack of progress towards inflation targets. Here is the market’s forecast for rates post the meeting on Tuesday Which probably explains the AUD/USD reactions in the following 24 hours It flatlined – thus the market is telling us that it needs a catalyst, and those catalysts are clearly coming in July.
So to finish what’s the key? A significant upside surprise in the RBA's core inflation measure could lead to a rate hike, despite slowing demand and labour market conditions. We get the monthly inflation data next week, this will be the first strike then the July 31 quarterly read.
This will be huge and will be the biggest AUD mover outside of an RBA meeting. We will be providing as much information on this release the closer we get to the release. However as shown the RBA is a terrified hawk and without this inflation beat, the risk of further tightening diminishes, with expectations for the RBA to remain on hold until potentially the first rate cut in February 2025.
The next RBA meeting on August 6 it’s going to be an interesting 6 weeks for AUD traders ahead of what is a likely live event.
By
Evan Lucas
Los artículos son elaborados por analistas y colaboradores de GO Markets y se basan en su propio análisis independiente o en sus experiencias personales. Las opiniones, puntos de vista o estilos de trading expresados son propios de los autores y no deben considerarse como representativos de, ni compartidos por, GO Markets. Cualquier consejo proporcionado es de carácter “general” y no tiene en cuenta tus objetivos, situación financiera ni necesidades personales. Considera si dicho consejo es adecuado para tus objetivos, situación financiera y necesidades antes de actuar sobre él. Si el consejo se refiere a la adquisición de un producto financiero en particular, debes obtener nuestra Declaración de Divulgación (Disclosure Statement, DS) y otros documentos legales disponibles en nuestro sitio web antes de tomar cualquier decisión.
Your complete day-by-day guide to Australian medal chances and market-moving moments during the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics.
Quick Facts
Opening Ceremony: 6:00 am, 7 February AEDT (8:00 pm, 6 February Milan).
Prime viewing window: 4:00 am to 2:00 pm AEDT daily coincides with pre-market and ASX trading hours.
Medal ceremonies: Typically run from 6:00 am to 7:00 am AEDT. Perfect for pre-market position adjustments.
53 Australian athletescompeting: The second-largest Australian Winter Olympic team ever, with 10 genuine medal contenders.
GO Markets Olympic Schedule
GO Markets Olympic Schedule
Olympic Schedule
All times shown in AEDT
= Australian competing
🏅 = AUS medal chance
🔥 = Potential volatility
Feb 7
06:00
Opening Ceremony
Live from Milano
🔥
21:30
Men's Downhill Final
Harry Laidlaw
🔥
23:00
Women's 10km+10km Skiathlon
Rosie Fordham, Phoebe Cridland
🔥
Feb 8
05:30
Men's Snowboard Big Air Final
Valentino Guseli
🏅🔥
05:57
Women's NH Individual Final
Global Superstars (Ski Jumping)
🔥
Feb 10
05:30
Women's Snowboard Big Air Final
Tess Coady, Ally Hickman
🏅
Feb 12
00:15
Women’s Moguls Final
Jakara Anthony, Emma Bosco, Charlotte Wilson
🏅🔥
22:15
Men’s Moguls Final
Matt Graham, Jackson Harvey, George Murphy
🏅
Feb 13
00:56
Men's Snowboard Cross Finals
Adam Lambert, Cam Bolton, Jarryd Hughes
🏅
19:30
Women's Snowboard Cross Finals
Josie Baff, Abbey Wilson, Mia Clift
🏅
Feb 14
21:46
Women’s Dual Moguls Final
Jakara Anthony, Charlotte Wilson
🏅
Feb 15
08:42
Short Track (1500m Final)
Brendan Corey
21:46
Men’s Dual Moguls Final
Matt Graham, George Murphy
🏅
Feb 16
23:00
Alpine Skiing (Men's Slalom)
Harry Laidlaw
Feb 17
06:00
Pairs Figure Skating Final
A. Golubeva & H. Giotopoulos Moore
07:06
Women’s Monobob Final
Bree Walker
🏅
Feb 18
21:30
Women’s Aerials Final
Laura Peel, Danielle Scott, Abbey Willcox
🏅
23:30
Women’s Slalom Final
Madison Hoffman, Phoebe Heaydon
Feb 19
21:30
Men’s Aerials Final
Reilly Flanagan
Feb 21
05:30
Men’s Halfpipe Final
Scotty James, Valentino Guseli
🏅🔥
23:30
SkiMo Mixed Relay
Phil Bellingham & Lara Hamilton
Feb 22
05:30
Women’s Freeski Halfpipe Final
Indra Brown
🏅
07:05
Two-Woman Bobsleigh Final
Walker/Reddingius & Blizzard/Johnson
Feb 23
00:10
Men’s Ice Hockey Final
NHL Superstars
🔥
06:00
Closing Ceremony
Live from Milano
🔥
Opening Ceremony + first medals - Saturday, February 7
Opening Ceremony at breakfast time, then the first gold medal awarded in primetime on Saturday.
Harry Laidlaw represents Australia in the Men's Downhill, the Games' first Gold medal event, while cross-country skiers Rosie Fordham and Phoebe Cridland compete late Saturday night.
This same-day pairing of ceremony and first medals creates maximum media saturation, with a full weekend news cycle processing before Monday's ASX open.
Key events
Opening Ceremony: 6:00 am AEDT
Men's Downhill Final (first gold medal of the games): 9:30 pm AEDT
Women's 10km + 10km Skiathlon: 11:00 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC (Nine Entertainment): Double viewership event. Opening Ceremony 6:00 am Saturday, lines up for the peak morning TV audience. First medals at 9:30 pm are a primetime Saturday night.
Italian equities (FTSE MIB): Historically underperform during domestic Olympics. Turin 2006 saw -2.1% during the Games.
STLA (Stellantis): ESG headline risk if environmental groups target the ceremony.
Apparel sponsor arbitrage: If a non-favourite wins Men's Downhill, their sponsor sees average +2.3% pop (PyeongChang 2018, Beijing 2022 data).
First medals continue - Sunday, February 8
The medal rush continues on Sunday as 19-year-old Valentino Guseli takes flight in Men's Snowboard Big Air, offering Australia an early podium chance in one of the Games' most visually spectacular events.
With the ceremony glow still fresh, Guseli's performance sets the tone for Australia's snowboard campaign and could influence Monday's ASX open positioning for action sports stocks.
Key events
Men's Snowboard Big Air Final(Valentino Guseli): 5:30 am AEDT
Women's Normal Hill Individual Final: 5:57 am AEDT
FL (Foot Locker), ZUMZ (Zumiez): Youth retail action sports exposure. Guseli gold could create a temporary buzz.
Monday, February 9
A rare quiet day in Australia's Olympic calendar. No Australian medal events are scheduled, making this a pure observation day for traders.
Monitor how Guseli's weekend result is processed through Monday's ASX open, and position ahead of Tuesday's Coady showdown.
Tuesday, February 10
Tess Coady attempts to upgrade her 2022 bronze to gold in Women's Snowboard Big Air. The Tuesday morning timing offers traders a potential pre-market positioning window, though Coady's modest mainstream profile limits exposure compared to the moguls stars on the following day.
Key events
Women's Snowboard Big Air Final: 5:30 am AEDT
For traders
FL (Foot Locker), ZUMZ (Zumiez): Youth retail. Coady gold could create a temporary buzz.
MNST (Monster Beverage): Less volatile, general action sports sponsor.
Wednesday, February 11
The calm before Jakara Anthony. No Australian events on Wednesday means traders spend the day positioning for the biggest moment of the Games: Anthony's moguls final just past midnight.
Moguls Finals - Thursday, February 12
The biggest moment of the Games for Australia arrives just after midnight on Wednesday with Jakara Anthony defending her Olympic crown in the Women's Moguls Final.
As the nation's brightest gold medal hope with 26 World Cup victories, Anthony's 12:15 am performance is the single highest-impact potential event for NEC and VFC stocks across the entire Olympic fortnight.
Matt Graham also chases his first Olympic gold at 10:15 pm Thursday night. Both events carry high NEC and VFC volatility potential.
Key events
Women's Moguls Final (Jakara Anthony): 12:15 am AEDT
Men's Moguls Final (Matt Graham): 10:15 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC (Nine Entertainment): Monitor overnight results and viewership for Thursday open direction.
VFC (VF Corp/North Face): Sponsors both athletes. A double medal could bring a larger impact.
Defending champion volatility: An Anthony loss could create higher emotional swings.
Social sentiment: Track Twitter/Google Trends Thursday morning to gauge the magnitude of Anthony’s performance.
Friday, February 13
Snowboard cross takes centre stage with two Australian medal chances bookending Friday's trading day.
Adam Lambert's overnight final sets the morning open, while Josie Baff's evening showdown takes the Aus prime time slot.
Key events
Men's Snowboard Cross Finals: 12:56 am AEDT
Women's Snowboard Cross Finals: 7:30 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC sentiment gauge: If Lambert medals Fri morning and Graham medaled Thu night, it could create positive momentum.
Jakara Anthony competes - Saturday, February 14
Jakara Anthony goes for the double in Saturday night's Women's Dual Moguls Final.
If she claims gold Thursday and again here, the "double gold Jakara" narrative writes itself, offering geometric rather than linear media value.
Key events
Women's Dual Moguls Final (Jakara Anthony): 9:46 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC narrative power: "Double gold Jakara" could draw in more casual viewers.
If Anthony silver/bronze Thu: Redemption story potential.
Weekend timing: Saturday night result = Monday ASX gap.
Format risk: Monitor qualifying rounds; if margins are greater than 1 second (blowouts), engagement could drop.
Sunday, February 15
A quiet Sunday offers redemption arcs and low-impact action. Brendan Corey's morning short track effort carries minimal stock relevance, while Matt Graham's late-night dual moguls final provides a second medal chance after Friday's traditional event.
Key events
Short Track Speed Skating 1500m Final: 8:42 am AEDT
Men's Dual Moguls Final: 9:46 pm AEDT
For traders
VFC second opportunity: If Graham misses on Friday’s moguls, dual moguls redemption is possible.
Monday, February 16
Harry Laidlaw returns to the slopes for late Monday night slalom action, but alpine skiing holds minimal sway over Australian audiences.
This is a placeholder day in the trading calendar, with markets more focused on digesting the weekend moguls results and positioning for Tuesday's monobob final.
Key events
Men's Slalom: 11:00 pm AEDT
Bree Walker competes - Tuesday, February 17
Bree Walker could make Olympic history as she competes in the Women's Monobob Final, chasing Australia's first-ever bobsleigh medal.
While the narrative is powerful, the commercial reality is that bobsleigh has no retail sponsor footprint, limiting direct stock plays.
Key events
Pairs Figure Skating Final: 6:00 am AEDT
Women's Monobob Final: 7:06 am AEDT
For traders
NEC: Bobsleigh historically gets low ratings, but a Walker gold could provide value as an Australian-first.
Wednesday, February 18
Veterans Laura Peel and Danielle Scott take centre stage on Wednesday night in an event with proud Australian history (2 golds since 2002). However, aerials' niche appeal and late-night timing may limit market impact.
Key events
Women's Aerials Final: 9:30 pm AEDT
Women's Slalom Final: 11:30 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC: If either medals, potential for a small sentiment boost.
VFC exposure: Limited potential as aerials athletes are less commercially developed.
Thursday, February 19
Thursday night aerials effort is a low-impact finale event with minimal medal expectation for Australian Reilly Flanagan, and even less market relevance.
Scotty James' Saturday halfpipe showdown is the real conversation as the games begin winding down, although a medal run from Flanagan could create an underdog narrative.
Key events
Men's Aerials Final: 9:30 pm AEDT
Friday, February 20
The final calm before Scotty James' legacy-defining Saturday. Set up day for James' 5:30 am Saturday halfpipe final, the Games' last major potential volatility event for an Aussie athlete.
Scotty James competes - Saturday, February 21
Scotty James' legacy moment arrives Saturday morning. He’s represented Australia at five Olympics, with two medals and zero golds. This is his final chance and brings with it the Games' most emotionally charged event, and the last major trading catalyst before Monday's Closing Ceremony.
Key events
Men's Snowboard Halfpipe Final (Scotty James): 5:30 am AEDT
SkiMo Mixed Relay: 11:30 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC: Potential weekend delays on price discovery. If James gold Saturday.
NKE (Nike): Potential halo effect from gold via action sports lift.
Guseli wildcard: Valentino is also competing (his second event after Big Air, Feb 8). A dual medal could create narrative amplification.
Sunday, February 22
Sixteen-year-old Indra Brown takes the Sunday morning spotlight in Women's Freeski Halfpipe, facing off against favourite Eileen Gu (CHN) in what could become a Gen-Z brand inflection point.
Key events
Women's Freeski Halfpipe Final(Indra Brown): 5:30 am AEDT
Two-Woman Bobsleigh Final: 7:05 am
For traders
Mon-Tue watch: Monitor which brands announce Brown signings.
MILN (Global X Millennials ETF): Action sports retailers, social platforms exposure for Gen Z.
Closing Ceremony - Monday, February 23
The curtain falls on Milano Cortina 2026 with Monday morning's Closing Ceremony, and history says this is where euphoria dies.
Men's Ice Hockey Final (NHL Superstars): 12:10 am AEDT
Closing Ceremony: 6:00 am AEDT
Markets to watch:
French Alps 2030 rotation: Closing features handover to France.
Australian medal count: If greater than 4 medals (Beijing total), the government may increase 2030 winter sports funding.
Ice Hockey Final: NHL players compete for the first time since 2014. Major US/Canada viewership means a potential CMCSA boost.
Los mercados mundiales avanzan hacia la nueva semana con una serie de catalizadores potencialmente de alto impacto. Las elecciones generales de Japón aterrizan primero el domingo, seguidas por la inflación estadounidense y los datos del mercado laboral que continúan dando forma a las expectativas de tasas de interés.
Elecciones de Japón: La continuidad de las políticas y la estabilidad política se ven generalmente como un apoyo para los mercados regionales.
Inflación y mercado laboral de Estados Unidos: El índice de precios al consumidor (IPC) y el informe Situación del Empleo (nóminas no agrícolas, PNB) son los puntos macro focales inmediatos de la semana.
Medidor de riesgo de Bitcoin: Bitcoin vuelve a estar cerca de los niveles vistos por última vez a finales de 2024 y se mantiene muy por debajo de su pico de octubre de 2025.
Reloj de rotación sectorial: La tecnología ha tenido un desempeño inferior recientemente, mientras que los segmentos de valor y defensivos se han estabilizado, y la temporada de ganancias continúa influyendo en los flujos.
Elecciones de Japón
Las elecciones generales en Japón se ven principalmente a través de la lente de la certeza política. Los mercados suelen favorecer un resultado claro y una continuidad en los entornos fiscales y monetarios.
Los resultados inesperados o la incertidumbre de la coalición pueden aumentar la volatilidad a corto plazo en el JPY y los índices regionales al inicio de la semana.
Fechas clave
Elecciones generales (Japón): Domingo, 8 Febrero
Resultados a través de Asian trade el lunes
Impacto en el mercado
El JPY puede ser sensible a los resultados, la incertidumbre o los posibles cambios en la dirección de la política
Las renta variable de Asia podrían ver volatilidad a principios de semana hasta que los resultados sean claros
Inflación y mercado laboral de Estados Unidos
La inflación sigue siendo el insumo más directo a las expectativas de tasas de interés, mientras que el informe mensual del PNP proporciona una lectura amplia sobre las condiciones de empleo y las presiones salariales.
Los rendimientos del Tesoro y el USD a menudo reaccionan rápidamente a estas liberaciones, con efectos colaterales en las renta variable, el oro y los activos en crecimiento.
Los precios actuales indican que los mercados asignan menos de un 30% de probabilidad de un recorte para la reunión de abril, con probabilidades de alza de la reunión de junio por encima del 50%.
Fechas clave
Situación de empleo: Miércoles, 11 Febrero 08:30 (ET) | Jueves, 12 Febrero 00:30 (AEDT)
IPC (enero 2026): Viernes, 13 Febrero 08:30 (ET) Sábado, 14 Febrero 00:30 (AEDT)
Impacto en el mercado
Los rendimientos a menudo se mueven primero, seguidos por el USD y luego los activos de riesgo
Las expectativas para el tiempo de recorte de tasas pueden ajustarse rápidamente
Las cuotas de crecimiento y tecnología siguen siendo más sensibles a las tasas
Bitcoin ha disminuido a niveles vistos por última vez antes de las elecciones estadounidenses en noviembre de 2024 y está cerca de 50% por debajo de su pico de octubre de 2025.
Si bien no es un indicador macro tradicional, los cripto mercados podrían verse como una lectura en tiempo real sobre la tolerancia al riesgo de los inversores. La debilidad sostenida puede coincidir con un posicionamiento más cauteloso en los activos beta más altos, incluidas las acciones de tecnología.
Impacto en el mercado
El sentimiento criptográfico más suave puede coincidir con la reducción de los flujos especulativos
El apetito de riesgo puede seguir siendo más selectivo
Durante la semana pasada, el Promedio Industrial Dow Jones ha tenido un desempeño superior, cotizando justo por debajo de la neutral, mientras que el Nasdaq-100 ha disminuido más de 4%, lo que refleja la sensibilidad en la tecnología de gran capitalización a rendimientos más firmes.
Lo que la mudanza puede reflejar
Presión impulsada por las tasas sobre las acciones en crecimiento
Toma de ganancias después de un sólido desempeño tecnológico
Temporada de ganancias que favorece una mayor participación del sector
Un tono generalmente más cauteloso en los activos beta más altos
Por lo general, los mercados buscan un desempeño superior sostenido durante varias semanas en los sectores financiero, industrial o defensivo antes de tildar el cambio como rotación estructural.
Impacto en el mercado
La tecnología sigue siendo más sensible a los movimientos de rendimiento
Los sectores de valor y defensivos pueden ver un apoyo relativo
La orientación de ganancias continúa influyendo en el liderazgo
February’s FX landscape is likely to be driven by inflation persistence, labour resilience, and central bank communications. With several high-impact data releases across the US, Europe, Japan and Australia, near-term moves may be more event-driven and repricing-led, rather than trend-led.
Quick facts
USD remains the key reference point, with US data driving repricing in yields and the broader FX market.
EUR sensitivity remains high around European Central Bank (ECB) messaging and incoming inflation and activity signals.
JPY remains tightly linked to domestic data and Bank of Japan (BOJ) communication, with USD/JPY often reacting sharply to shifts in yield expectations.
AUD remains policy sensitive, with domestic inflation and labour data likely to matter most, alongside global risk tone and metals.
US dollar (USD)
Key events
Nonfarm payrolls (NFP) and unemployment: 8:30 am, 11 February (ET) | 12:30 am, 12 February (AEDT)
Consumer Price Index (CPI), headline and core: 8:30 am, 13 February (ET) | 12:30, 13 February (AEDT)
Personal income and outlays (includes the PCE price index): 8:30, 20 February (ET) | 12:30, 21 February (AEDT)
What to watch
The USD is likely to remain primarily driven by shifts in inflation and labour data and their implications for Federal Reserve rate expectations. Recent headlines surrounding Federal Reserve independence have also added volatility to USD positioning.
Stronger inflation or labour resilience is often associated with firmer USD support via higher yield expectations. Softer outcomes could reduce rate support and allow pairs like EUR/USD and AUD/USD to stabilise.
ECB flash estimates for GDP and employment: 8:00 pm, 13 February (AEDT)
What to watch
EUR direction remains linked to whether the ECB can maintain its stance without a material deterioration in activity, or whether inflation and growth data pull forward easing expectations.
Resilient growth and firm inflation could support the “higher for longer” pricing bias. Weaker growth or softer inflation could weigh on the currency, particularly if they bring forward easing expectations.
Japan preliminary GDP (Q4 2025, first preliminary): 6:50 pm, 15 February (ET) | 10:50 am, 16 February (AEDT)
National CPI (Japan): 20 February (Japan)
What to watch
JPY remains sensitive to domestic yield shifts and BOJ communication. Even modest adjustments to policy expectations could generate outsized moves in USD/JPY.
Firm growth or inflation outcomes could support JPY via higher domestic yields and shifting BOJ expectations. Softer outcomes or cautious policy messaging could keep USD/JPY supported.
Consumer Price Index (CPI): 11:30 am, 25 February (AEDT)
What to watch
AUD remains sensitive to policy, responding quickly to domestic inflation and labour data, as well as global risk sentiment and its impact on metal pricing.
Persistent wages or inflation pressures could support AUD via firmer policy expectations. Softening data could reduce rate support and weigh on AUD performance, particularly versus USD and JPY.
Your complete day-by-day guide to Australian medal chances and market-moving moments during the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics.
Quick Facts
Opening Ceremony: 6:00 am, 7 February AEDT (8:00 pm, 6 February Milan).
Prime viewing window: 4:00 am to 2:00 pm AEDT daily coincides with pre-market and ASX trading hours.
Medal ceremonies: Typically run from 6:00 am to 7:00 am AEDT. Perfect for pre-market position adjustments.
53 Australian athletescompeting: The second-largest Australian Winter Olympic team ever, with 10 genuine medal contenders.
GO Markets Olympic Schedule
GO Markets Olympic Schedule
Olympic Schedule
All times shown in AEDT
= Australian competing
🏅 = AUS medal chance
🔥 = Potential volatility
Feb 7
06:00
Opening Ceremony
Live from Milano
🔥
21:30
Men's Downhill Final
Harry Laidlaw
🔥
23:00
Women's 10km+10km Skiathlon
Rosie Fordham, Phoebe Cridland
🔥
Feb 8
05:30
Men's Snowboard Big Air Final
Valentino Guseli
🏅🔥
05:57
Women's NH Individual Final
Global Superstars (Ski Jumping)
🔥
Feb 10
05:30
Women's Snowboard Big Air Final
Tess Coady, Ally Hickman
🏅
Feb 12
00:15
Women’s Moguls Final
Jakara Anthony, Emma Bosco, Charlotte Wilson
🏅🔥
22:15
Men’s Moguls Final
Matt Graham, Jackson Harvey, George Murphy
🏅
Feb 13
00:56
Men's Snowboard Cross Finals
Adam Lambert, Cam Bolton, Jarryd Hughes
🏅
19:30
Women's Snowboard Cross Finals
Josie Baff, Abbey Wilson, Mia Clift
🏅
Feb 14
21:46
Women’s Dual Moguls Final
Jakara Anthony, Charlotte Wilson
🏅
Feb 15
08:42
Short Track (1500m Final)
Brendan Corey
21:46
Men’s Dual Moguls Final
Matt Graham, George Murphy
🏅
Feb 16
23:00
Alpine Skiing (Men's Slalom)
Harry Laidlaw
Feb 17
06:00
Pairs Figure Skating Final
A. Golubeva & H. Giotopoulos Moore
07:06
Women’s Monobob Final
Bree Walker
🏅
Feb 18
21:30
Women’s Aerials Final
Laura Peel, Danielle Scott, Abbey Willcox
🏅
23:30
Women’s Slalom Final
Madison Hoffman, Phoebe Heaydon
Feb 19
21:30
Men’s Aerials Final
Reilly Flanagan
Feb 21
05:30
Men’s Halfpipe Final
Scotty James, Valentino Guseli
🏅🔥
23:30
SkiMo Mixed Relay
Phil Bellingham & Lara Hamilton
Feb 22
05:30
Women’s Freeski Halfpipe Final
Indra Brown
🏅
07:05
Two-Woman Bobsleigh Final
Walker/Reddingius & Blizzard/Johnson
Feb 23
00:10
Men’s Ice Hockey Final
NHL Superstars
🔥
06:00
Closing Ceremony
Live from Milano
🔥
Opening Ceremony + first medals - Saturday, February 7
Opening Ceremony at breakfast time, then the first gold medal awarded in primetime on Saturday.
Harry Laidlaw represents Australia in the Men's Downhill, the Games' first Gold medal event, while cross-country skiers Rosie Fordham and Phoebe Cridland compete late Saturday night.
This same-day pairing of ceremony and first medals creates maximum media saturation, with a full weekend news cycle processing before Monday's ASX open.
Key events
Opening Ceremony: 6:00 am AEDT
Men's Downhill Final (first gold medal of the games): 9:30 pm AEDT
Women's 10km + 10km Skiathlon: 11:00 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC (Nine Entertainment): Double viewership event. Opening Ceremony 6:00 am Saturday, lines up for the peak morning TV audience. First medals at 9:30 pm are a primetime Saturday night.
Italian equities (FTSE MIB): Historically underperform during domestic Olympics. Turin 2006 saw -2.1% during the Games.
STLA (Stellantis): ESG headline risk if environmental groups target the ceremony.
Apparel sponsor arbitrage: If a non-favourite wins Men's Downhill, their sponsor sees average +2.3% pop (PyeongChang 2018, Beijing 2022 data).
First medals continue - Sunday, February 8
The medal rush continues on Sunday as 19-year-old Valentino Guseli takes flight in Men's Snowboard Big Air, offering Australia an early podium chance in one of the Games' most visually spectacular events.
With the ceremony glow still fresh, Guseli's performance sets the tone for Australia's snowboard campaign and could influence Monday's ASX open positioning for action sports stocks.
Key events
Men's Snowboard Big Air Final(Valentino Guseli): 5:30 am AEDT
Women's Normal Hill Individual Final: 5:57 am AEDT
FL (Foot Locker), ZUMZ (Zumiez): Youth retail action sports exposure. Guseli gold could create a temporary buzz.
Monday, February 9
A rare quiet day in Australia's Olympic calendar. No Australian medal events are scheduled, making this a pure observation day for traders.
Monitor how Guseli's weekend result is processed through Monday's ASX open, and position ahead of Tuesday's Coady showdown.
Tuesday, February 10
Tess Coady attempts to upgrade her 2022 bronze to gold in Women's Snowboard Big Air. The Tuesday morning timing offers traders a potential pre-market positioning window, though Coady's modest mainstream profile limits exposure compared to the moguls stars on the following day.
Key events
Women's Snowboard Big Air Final: 5:30 am AEDT
For traders
FL (Foot Locker), ZUMZ (Zumiez): Youth retail. Coady gold could create a temporary buzz.
MNST (Monster Beverage): Less volatile, general action sports sponsor.
Wednesday, February 11
The calm before Jakara Anthony. No Australian events on Wednesday means traders spend the day positioning for the biggest moment of the Games: Anthony's moguls final just past midnight.
Moguls Finals - Thursday, February 12
The biggest moment of the Games for Australia arrives just after midnight on Wednesday with Jakara Anthony defending her Olympic crown in the Women's Moguls Final.
As the nation's brightest gold medal hope with 26 World Cup victories, Anthony's 12:15 am performance is the single highest-impact potential event for NEC and VFC stocks across the entire Olympic fortnight.
Matt Graham also chases his first Olympic gold at 10:15 pm Thursday night. Both events carry high NEC and VFC volatility potential.
Key events
Women's Moguls Final (Jakara Anthony): 12:15 am AEDT
Men's Moguls Final (Matt Graham): 10:15 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC (Nine Entertainment): Monitor overnight results and viewership for Thursday open direction.
VFC (VF Corp/North Face): Sponsors both athletes. A double medal could bring a larger impact.
Defending champion volatility: An Anthony loss could create higher emotional swings.
Social sentiment: Track Twitter/Google Trends Thursday morning to gauge the magnitude of Anthony’s performance.
Friday, February 13
Snowboard cross takes centre stage with two Australian medal chances bookending Friday's trading day.
Adam Lambert's overnight final sets the morning open, while Josie Baff's evening showdown takes the Aus prime time slot.
Key events
Men's Snowboard Cross Finals: 12:56 am AEDT
Women's Snowboard Cross Finals: 7:30 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC sentiment gauge: If Lambert medals Fri morning and Graham medaled Thu night, it could create positive momentum.
Jakara Anthony competes - Saturday, February 14
Jakara Anthony goes for the double in Saturday night's Women's Dual Moguls Final.
If she claims gold Thursday and again here, the "double gold Jakara" narrative writes itself, offering geometric rather than linear media value.
Key events
Women's Dual Moguls Final (Jakara Anthony): 9:46 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC narrative power: "Double gold Jakara" could draw in more casual viewers.
If Anthony silver/bronze Thu: Redemption story potential.
Weekend timing: Saturday night result = Monday ASX gap.
Format risk: Monitor qualifying rounds; if margins are greater than 1 second (blowouts), engagement could drop.
Sunday, February 15
A quiet Sunday offers redemption arcs and low-impact action. Brendan Corey's morning short track effort carries minimal stock relevance, while Matt Graham's late-night dual moguls final provides a second medal chance after Friday's traditional event.
Key events
Short Track Speed Skating 1500m Final: 8:42 am AEDT
Men's Dual Moguls Final: 9:46 pm AEDT
For traders
VFC second opportunity: If Graham misses on Friday’s moguls, dual moguls redemption is possible.
Monday, February 16
Harry Laidlaw returns to the slopes for late Monday night slalom action, but alpine skiing holds minimal sway over Australian audiences.
This is a placeholder day in the trading calendar, with markets more focused on digesting the weekend moguls results and positioning for Tuesday's monobob final.
Key events
Men's Slalom: 11:00 pm AEDT
Bree Walker competes - Tuesday, February 17
Bree Walker could make Olympic history as she competes in the Women's Monobob Final, chasing Australia's first-ever bobsleigh medal.
While the narrative is powerful, the commercial reality is that bobsleigh has no retail sponsor footprint, limiting direct stock plays.
Key events
Pairs Figure Skating Final: 6:00 am AEDT
Women's Monobob Final: 7:06 am AEDT
For traders
NEC: Bobsleigh historically gets low ratings, but a Walker gold could provide value as an Australian-first.
Wednesday, February 18
Veterans Laura Peel and Danielle Scott take centre stage on Wednesday night in an event with proud Australian history (2 golds since 2002). However, aerials' niche appeal and late-night timing may limit market impact.
Key events
Women's Aerials Final: 9:30 pm AEDT
Women's Slalom Final: 11:30 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC: If either medals, potential for a small sentiment boost.
VFC exposure: Limited potential as aerials athletes are less commercially developed.
Thursday, February 19
Thursday night aerials effort is a low-impact finale event with minimal medal expectation for Australian Reilly Flanagan, and even less market relevance.
Scotty James' Saturday halfpipe showdown is the real conversation as the games begin winding down, although a medal run from Flanagan could create an underdog narrative.
Key events
Men's Aerials Final: 9:30 pm AEDT
Friday, February 20
The final calm before Scotty James' legacy-defining Saturday. Set up day for James' 5:30 am Saturday halfpipe final, the Games' last major potential volatility event for an Aussie athlete.
Scotty James competes - Saturday, February 21
Scotty James' legacy moment arrives Saturday morning. He’s represented Australia at five Olympics, with two medals and zero golds. This is his final chance and brings with it the Games' most emotionally charged event, and the last major trading catalyst before Monday's Closing Ceremony.
Key events
Men's Snowboard Halfpipe Final (Scotty James): 5:30 am AEDT
SkiMo Mixed Relay: 11:30 pm AEDT
For traders
NEC: Potential weekend delays on price discovery. If James gold Saturday.
NKE (Nike): Potential halo effect from gold via action sports lift.
Guseli wildcard: Valentino is also competing (his second event after Big Air, Feb 8). A dual medal could create narrative amplification.
Sunday, February 22
Sixteen-year-old Indra Brown takes the Sunday morning spotlight in Women's Freeski Halfpipe, facing off against favourite Eileen Gu (CHN) in what could become a Gen-Z brand inflection point.
Key events
Women's Freeski Halfpipe Final(Indra Brown): 5:30 am AEDT
Two-Woman Bobsleigh Final: 7:05 am
For traders
Mon-Tue watch: Monitor which brands announce Brown signings.
MILN (Global X Millennials ETF): Action sports retailers, social platforms exposure for Gen Z.
Closing Ceremony - Monday, February 23
The curtain falls on Milano Cortina 2026 with Monday morning's Closing Ceremony, and history says this is where euphoria dies.
Men's Ice Hockey Final (NHL Superstars): 12:10 am AEDT
Closing Ceremony: 6:00 am AEDT
Markets to watch:
French Alps 2030 rotation: Closing features handover to France.
Australian medal count: If greater than 4 medals (Beijing total), the government may increase 2030 winter sports funding.
Ice Hockey Final: NHL players compete for the first time since 2014. Major US/Canada viewership means a potential CMCSA boost.
Los mercados mundiales avanzan hacia la nueva semana con una serie de catalizadores potencialmente de alto impacto. Las elecciones generales de Japón aterrizan primero el domingo, seguidas por la inflación estadounidense y los datos del mercado laboral que continúan dando forma a las expectativas de tasas de interés.
Elecciones de Japón: La continuidad de las políticas y la estabilidad política se ven generalmente como un apoyo para los mercados regionales.
Inflación y mercado laboral de Estados Unidos: El índice de precios al consumidor (IPC) y el informe Situación del Empleo (nóminas no agrícolas, PNB) son los puntos macro focales inmediatos de la semana.
Medidor de riesgo de Bitcoin: Bitcoin vuelve a estar cerca de los niveles vistos por última vez a finales de 2024 y se mantiene muy por debajo de su pico de octubre de 2025.
Reloj de rotación sectorial: La tecnología ha tenido un desempeño inferior recientemente, mientras que los segmentos de valor y defensivos se han estabilizado, y la temporada de ganancias continúa influyendo en los flujos.
Elecciones de Japón
Las elecciones generales en Japón se ven principalmente a través de la lente de la certeza política. Los mercados suelen favorecer un resultado claro y una continuidad en los entornos fiscales y monetarios.
Los resultados inesperados o la incertidumbre de la coalición pueden aumentar la volatilidad a corto plazo en el JPY y los índices regionales al inicio de la semana.
Fechas clave
Elecciones generales (Japón): Domingo, 8 Febrero
Resultados a través de Asian trade el lunes
Impacto en el mercado
El JPY puede ser sensible a los resultados, la incertidumbre o los posibles cambios en la dirección de la política
Las renta variable de Asia podrían ver volatilidad a principios de semana hasta que los resultados sean claros
Inflación y mercado laboral de Estados Unidos
La inflación sigue siendo el insumo más directo a las expectativas de tasas de interés, mientras que el informe mensual del PNP proporciona una lectura amplia sobre las condiciones de empleo y las presiones salariales.
Los rendimientos del Tesoro y el USD a menudo reaccionan rápidamente a estas liberaciones, con efectos colaterales en las renta variable, el oro y los activos en crecimiento.
Los precios actuales indican que los mercados asignan menos de un 30% de probabilidad de un recorte para la reunión de abril, con probabilidades de alza de la reunión de junio por encima del 50%.
Fechas clave
Situación de empleo: Miércoles, 11 Febrero 08:30 (ET) | Jueves, 12 Febrero 00:30 (AEDT)
IPC (enero 2026): Viernes, 13 Febrero 08:30 (ET) Sábado, 14 Febrero 00:30 (AEDT)
Impacto en el mercado
Los rendimientos a menudo se mueven primero, seguidos por el USD y luego los activos de riesgo
Las expectativas para el tiempo de recorte de tasas pueden ajustarse rápidamente
Las cuotas de crecimiento y tecnología siguen siendo más sensibles a las tasas
Bitcoin ha disminuido a niveles vistos por última vez antes de las elecciones estadounidenses en noviembre de 2024 y está cerca de 50% por debajo de su pico de octubre de 2025.
Si bien no es un indicador macro tradicional, los cripto mercados podrían verse como una lectura en tiempo real sobre la tolerancia al riesgo de los inversores. La debilidad sostenida puede coincidir con un posicionamiento más cauteloso en los activos beta más altos, incluidas las acciones de tecnología.
Impacto en el mercado
El sentimiento criptográfico más suave puede coincidir con la reducción de los flujos especulativos
El apetito de riesgo puede seguir siendo más selectivo
Durante la semana pasada, el Promedio Industrial Dow Jones ha tenido un desempeño superior, cotizando justo por debajo de la neutral, mientras que el Nasdaq-100 ha disminuido más de 4%, lo que refleja la sensibilidad en la tecnología de gran capitalización a rendimientos más firmes.
Lo que la mudanza puede reflejar
Presión impulsada por las tasas sobre las acciones en crecimiento
Toma de ganancias después de un sólido desempeño tecnológico
Temporada de ganancias que favorece una mayor participación del sector
Un tono generalmente más cauteloso en los activos beta más altos
Por lo general, los mercados buscan un desempeño superior sostenido durante varias semanas en los sectores financiero, industrial o defensivo antes de tildar el cambio como rotación estructural.
Impacto en el mercado
La tecnología sigue siendo más sensible a los movimientos de rendimiento
Los sectores de valor y defensivos pueden ver un apoyo relativo
La orientación de ganancias continúa influyendo en el liderazgo
February’s FX landscape is likely to be driven by inflation persistence, labour resilience, and central bank communications. With several high-impact data releases across the US, Europe, Japan and Australia, near-term moves may be more event-driven and repricing-led, rather than trend-led.
Quick facts
USD remains the key reference point, with US data driving repricing in yields and the broader FX market.
EUR sensitivity remains high around European Central Bank (ECB) messaging and incoming inflation and activity signals.
JPY remains tightly linked to domestic data and Bank of Japan (BOJ) communication, with USD/JPY often reacting sharply to shifts in yield expectations.
AUD remains policy sensitive, with domestic inflation and labour data likely to matter most, alongside global risk tone and metals.
US dollar (USD)
Key events
Nonfarm payrolls (NFP) and unemployment: 8:30 am, 11 February (ET) | 12:30 am, 12 February (AEDT)
Consumer Price Index (CPI), headline and core: 8:30 am, 13 February (ET) | 12:30, 13 February (AEDT)
Personal income and outlays (includes the PCE price index): 8:30, 20 February (ET) | 12:30, 21 February (AEDT)
What to watch
The USD is likely to remain primarily driven by shifts in inflation and labour data and their implications for Federal Reserve rate expectations. Recent headlines surrounding Federal Reserve independence have also added volatility to USD positioning.
Stronger inflation or labour resilience is often associated with firmer USD support via higher yield expectations. Softer outcomes could reduce rate support and allow pairs like EUR/USD and AUD/USD to stabilise.
ECB flash estimates for GDP and employment: 8:00 pm, 13 February (AEDT)
What to watch
EUR direction remains linked to whether the ECB can maintain its stance without a material deterioration in activity, or whether inflation and growth data pull forward easing expectations.
Resilient growth and firm inflation could support the “higher for longer” pricing bias. Weaker growth or softer inflation could weigh on the currency, particularly if they bring forward easing expectations.
Japan preliminary GDP (Q4 2025, first preliminary): 6:50 pm, 15 February (ET) | 10:50 am, 16 February (AEDT)
National CPI (Japan): 20 February (Japan)
What to watch
JPY remains sensitive to domestic yield shifts and BOJ communication. Even modest adjustments to policy expectations could generate outsized moves in USD/JPY.
Firm growth or inflation outcomes could support JPY via higher domestic yields and shifting BOJ expectations. Softer outcomes or cautious policy messaging could keep USD/JPY supported.
Consumer Price Index (CPI): 11:30 am, 25 February (AEDT)
What to watch
AUD remains sensitive to policy, responding quickly to domestic inflation and labour data, as well as global risk sentiment and its impact on metal pricing.
Persistent wages or inflation pressures could support AUD via firmer policy expectations. Softening data could reduce rate support and weigh on AUD performance, particularly versus USD and JPY.