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市場資訊與分析

Market insights
Markets steady as US–Venezuela geopolitics lift energy, defence, and materials stocks

Global markets are calm but alert in response to the US–Venezuela situation, with US and European equities holding near or testing record levels.

Gains in energy, defence and materials suggest selective positioning. Modest strength in gold and lower yields is indicative of hedging rather than market fear, with oil prices remaining muted.

Quick facts

  • US and European equity indices are holding near record highs despite geopolitical headlines. Volatility remains low through the trading session.
  • Energy and defence stocks are leading gains, with materials stocks responding to mild gains in previous metals, reflecting selective risk positioning.
  • Gold is edging higher, and government bond yields have dipped slightly, signalling mild hedging.
  • Oil prices remain range-bound, suggesting no immediate supply shock is being priced in.
  • Markets could be sensitive to further geopolitical developments, with any escalation a major potential risk to sentiment.

US–Venezuela tensions escalation has prompted heightened geopolitical scrutiny across the globe, not only related to this action itself but other geopolitical longer-term implications. 

There has been a muted and measured response across global financial markets so far, with little significant negative impact evident for now. 

Some sectors have had noteworthy gains, whilst the impact on other asset classes has again been calm.

 

US equities 

What’s happening:

US equity markets are showing resilience, with the S&P 500 holding near recent highs and the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 1.23%, pushing into fresh record territory.

What to watch:

  • If US indices continue to hold above recent breakout levels, then markets are reinforcing the view that geopolitical risk remains manageable.
  • Rising volatility, if seen in the VIX index, may indicate that sentiment may be shifting from selective risk-taking to broader caution.

European equities

What’s happening:

European markets are modestly higher, with the DAX trading at record levels and the FTSE 100 closing over 10,000 for the first time.

What to watch:

  • For now, European indices appear to be tracking US strength, suggesting investors are viewing the event as externally contained. Similar sectors are performing well, as seen in overnight US equity performance. 
  • It is unlikely that we will see any specific regional response, though tensions related to the US administration's narrative around Greenland is noteworthy.

Specific sector moves

Energy stocks

What’s happening:

Energy stocks are leading equity gains across the US (e.g. Chevron Corp – CVX up 5.1%), and European markets, with the potential for increased influence in Venezuela of US oil companies.

What to watch:

  • While energy equities outperform while oil prices remain range-bound, then markets are pricing geopolitical caution rather than immediate disruption. If this is accompanied by a rise in crude prices rise together, then it may be indicative of supply risk

Defence stocks

What’s happening:

Defence stocks are attracting some investor interest. (E.g. Lockheed Martin – LMT up 2.92%, General Dynamics – GD up  3.54%).

What to watch:

  • Continued outperformance with other sector equity drawdowns may be indicative of some escalation concerns.

Materials & miners

What’s happening:

Materials and mining stocks are finding support alongside modest gains in precious metals and record highs in copper. The S&P Metals & Mining ETF – XME closed 3.28% up.

What to watch:

  • Ongoing materials strength alongside stable growth indicators, then the current move may reflect real-asset demand rather than simply a hedging approach. If gold accelerates higher while base metals fail to follow, then investor defensive positioning may be overtaking confidence in growth.

Crude oil

What’s happening:

Oil prices remain subdued, with the futures trading at $58.40, within recent ranges, despite the unfolding geopolitical situation. 

What to watch:

  • Venezuelan influence on global oil production is not substantial enough on its own to create any major issues in the short term with global oil supply at high levels.
  • As a result, the impact is more likely to remain muted, but any significant rises in oil price across multiple sessions may be indicative of some market concerns related to increases in geopolitical-influenced supply expectations.

Gold

What’s happening:

Gold prices are currently edging higher towards all-time highs, reflecting a modest safe-haven play. The closing price for Gold futures is $4454, breaching the psychologically important $4400.

What to watch:

  • If gold continues to rise gradually while equities remain firm, then the move reflects a standard hedging approach to assets rather than fear. 
  • A spike in gold price alongside falling equities and rising volatility, maybe a signal that market risk may be increasing.

Treasury yields

What’s happening:

Yields have eased slightly, indicating a potential selective defensive positioning in asset choice by institutional investors. (10-year Treasury yields at 4.153%, down 0.36%)

What to watch:

  • If yields should fall sharply alongside equity weakness, then markets may be shifting toward a risk-off approach.

What to watch next

  • If asset-class correlations remain contained, then markets are maintaining confidence in the broader macro backdrop. 
  • If tensions escalate into broader regional instability or prolonged policy responses, Sharp movements across equities, bonds, and commodities may signify a reassessment of risk.
  • If geopolitical developments fail to translate into sustained price dislocation, then the current response is likely to fade.

(All prices quoted correct as of 4.30pm NY time after market close).

Mike Smith
January 6, 2026
Market insights
US market drivers for January 2026

January’s market action often matters more than simply marking the opening of the calendar year. Institutional positioning resets, testing of economic assumptions, and early price moves reflect how market participants interpret the first meaningful signals of the year.

While January rarely determines full-year outcomes, it frequently shapes the narratives markets carry into the first quarter (Q1).

Four critical levers: growth, labour, inflation, and policy, can provide an early indication of how markets are processing and prioritising incoming information.

Growth: manufacturing PMIs

January’s first growth test comes from the manufacturing surveys, with markets watching whether signals from S&P Global Manufacturing PMI and ISM Manufacturing PMI tell a consistent story.

Key dates:

  • ISM Manufacturing PMI: 5 January, 10:00 AM (ET)/ 6 January, 1:00 AM (AEDT)

What markets look for:

Attention often centres on new orders as a forward-looking indicator of demand, alongside prices paid for early insight into cost pressures.

Broad strength across both surveys would support the narrative that the growth momentum seen toward the end of 2025 may extend into early 2026, easing some concerns about a sharper slowdown. Weaker or conflicting readings would keep the growth outlook uncertain, rather than decisively negative.

How it tends to show up in markets:

Firmer growth signals often appear first in higher short-dated Treasury yields. Rising yields can tighten financial conditions, weigh on equity valuations, and support the USD, with spillover effects across foreign exchange (FX) and commodity markets.

Labour: job openings and payrolls

While early-January Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) often drive short-term volatility, JOLTS job openings may be more influential in shaping January’s policy narrative.

Key dates:

  • JOLTS Job Openings: 7 January, 10:00 AM (ET)/ 8 January, 1:00 AM (AEDT)
  • Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP): 9 January, 8:30 AM (ET)/ 10 January, 12:30 AM (AEDT)

What markets look for:

Markets often treat JOLTS as a clearer indicator of underlying labour demand than month-to-month hiring flows.

A continued drift lower in openings would support the view that labour demand is easing in an orderly way, reinforcing confidence that inflation pressures can continue to moderate. A rebound or stalled decline would suggest labour conditions remain firmer than expected.

Market sensitivities:

For markets, easing labour demand typically supports lower short-dated yields and a softer USD, while persistent tightness can push yields higher, strengthen the USD, and increase volatility across rate-sensitive assets.

Inflation: PPI and CPI

Key Dates:

  • PPI: 14 January, 8:30 AM (ET)/ 15 January, 12:30 AM (AEDT)
  • CPI (December 2025 data): 15 January, 8:30 AM (ET)/ 16 January, 12:30 AM (AEDT)

The inflation signal can be read as a pipeline from producer prices to consumer inflation. Markets are watching whether producer-level cost pressures continue to fade or begin to re-emerge.

What markets look for:

Core PPI, particularly services-linked components, provides an early indication of cost momentum. Core CPI breadth may help determine whether inflation is continuing to cool or showing signs of persistence.

A softer pipeline would reinforce confidence that disinflation can extend into early 2026, increasing the scope for a potential March policy adjustment. Stickier CPI readings above 3% would raise questions about the durability of recent progress.

How rates and the USD often react

Market reaction tends to be led by yields. Cooling inflation pressure usually pulls short-dated yields lower and softens the USD, while persistent inflation risks can push yields higher and tighten financial conditions.

Policy: January FOMC meeting

By the time the Federal Reserve meets at the end of January, markets will have processed the early growth, labour, and inflation signals of the year.

Key Dates:

  • FOMC rate decision: 29 January, 2:00 PM (ET)/ 30 January, 6:00 AM (AEDT)

What markets look for:

A policy change is unlikely this month, but how those signals are framed in the statement and press conference still matters. With January cut expectations priced well below 20%, attention is on whether expectations for a March move, currently around 50%, begin to shift.

Confidence that inflation and labour pressures are easing would typically support lower yields and a softer USD. A more cautious tone could lift yields, strengthen the USD, and tighten global financial conditions.

Putting it all together

January’s data acts as condition-setters rather than decision points. The practical takeaway lies in how markets respond as those conditions become clearer:

If growth and labour soften while inflation continues to ease, markets may lean toward a more constructive risk backdrop, with Treasury yields remaining the key guide and expectations for policy easing later in Q1 firming.

If growth holds up and inflation proves sticky, a more cautious posture may be warranted, with heightened sensitivity to Treasury yields, USD strength, and pressure on equity valuations and rate-sensitive commodities.

GO Markets
January 5, 2026
Source: Adobe Images
Technical analysis
Market insights
Is the S&P 500 uptrend intact? January watchpoints + FX levels

In 2025, the S&P 500 traded around 6,835 and was up approximately 16% year to date (YTD). Market direction remained most sensitive to Federal Reserve expectations, inflation data and the earnings outlook, with returns also shaped by mega-cap tech leadership and the broader AI narrative. The index pulled back from earlier December highs, but it has so far held above key major moving averages (MA).

Key 2025 drivers included:

  • Fed expectations and inflation: Inflation cooled through the year but remained sticky around 2.5% to 3%. A Fed easing bias likely supported price to earnings (P/E) multiples and “risk-on” positioning. More recently, markets appeared increasingly rate-sensitive, with the decreased likelihood of an additional rate cut until March 2026.
  • Earnings and guidance: Corporate earnings remained strong quarter on quarter. Recent Q3 results reportedly saw over 80% of the S&P 500 beat earnings per share (EPS) expectations. For Q4, the estimated year-over-year earnings growth rate is 8.1%, despite ongoing concerns around import tariffs and potential margin pressure.
  • Index leadership and breadth: Returns were heavily influenced by mega-cap tech and AI beneficiaries, even as broader market breadth appeared less consistent at points through the year.
  • Policy headlines and volatility: Trade and tariff headlines drove sharp moves, particularly earlier in the year. Some investors pointed to the “TACO” trade, with rapid recoveries after policy proposals were softened. Over time, similar shocks appeared to have less impact as the market became somewhat desensitised.
  • Valuations and sensitivity: The forward 12-month P/E ratio for the S&P 500 is 22, above the 5-year average (20.0) and above the 10-year average (18.7). That gap kept valuation sensitivity, especially in AI-linked names, firmly in focus.

Current state

The S&P 500 is about 1% below record highs hit earlier in December. That could indicate the broader uptrend remains in place, with a move back toward the recent highs one possible scenario if momentum improves. Despite the recent retracement, the index remains above all key major moving averages (MA). The latest bounce followed lower than expected CPI numbers earlier this week, alongside continued, and to some, surprising optimism about what may come next.

What to watch in January

  • Q4 earnings from mid-January: Results and guidance may help clarify whether valuations are being supported by forward expectations.
  • AI narrative and positioning: With AI-linked mega-caps carrying a large share of market capitalisation, changes in sentiment or expectations could have an outsized impact on index performance.
  • US jobs and CPI data: The latest US jobs report reportedly points to the highest headline unemployment rate since 2021. Cooling inflation this week may keep markets alert to shifts in rate cut timing, particularly around the March decision.
S&P 500 daily chart
Source: TradingView

Major FX pairs

Source: Adobe Images
Source: Adobe Images

AUD/USD

AUD/USD has been choppy in 2025. Since the “redemption day” drop in April, the move has looked more like a steady grind higher than a clean upside trend.

Key levels
Recent peaks in early September and mid-December highlight resistance near 0.6625. Support has been evident around 0.6425, where price bounced over the last month.

What is supporting the bounce
That support test coincided with stronger than expected jobs and inflation data, lifting expectations that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) may raise rates during 2026 rather than cut again. The latest pullback looks contained so far, with buying interest already visible and price still above key longer-term moving averages.

What could drive a breakout
The pair remains range-bound, but the tilt is still constructive. If Chinese data stays firm, metals prices hold up, and the central bank outlook remains relatively hawkish, a break above resistance could gain more traction.

AUD/USD daily chart

EUR/USD

After early 2025 euro strength, EUR/USD has mostly consolidated since June in a roughly 270 pip range. This month tested 1.18 resistance, reaching highs not seen since September.

What price is doing now
The recent pullback still lacks strong downside conviction. Some technical analysts refer to the 1.17 area as a near-term reference level.

What could come next
If price holds 1.17 and buyers step back in, another push toward 1.18 is possible. One view is that the European Central Bank (ECB) could be less inclined to ease in 2026, which could be consistent with a firmer EUR/USD scenario. Broader analyst commentary also suggests the euro may stall rather than collapse against the US dollar, although outcomes remain data and policy dependent.

EUR/USD daily chart

USD/JPY

Year-to-date picture
USD/JPY is close to flat overall for the year. After US dollar weakness in Q1, the pair reversed higher and now sits just below resistance near 158.

Rates remain the main driver
Rate differentials still favour the US dollar. The Bank of Japan (BOJ) held steady for much of the period despite expectations it might act, and the recent rate increase was modest. Policy has only moved marginally away from zero.

What could shift the balance
Rate differentials remain a key influence. Without a clearer shift in BOJ policy, the JPY may find it difficult to sustain a rebound. Some market commentators cite 154.20 as a chart reference level.

USD/JPY daily chart
Mike Smith
December 23, 2025
Market insights
Week ahead
The Crucial Data is Finally Here | GO Markets Week Ahead

Markets have bounced back strongly this week. The S&P 500 is now just 1.5% from record highs, and the Nasdaq is recovering well following its pullback.

Rate Cut Expectations

The main driver behind this rally was a shift in Federal Reserve rate cut expectations. Markets are currently pricing in a quarter-point rate cut for December, with only a 25% chance of another reduction in January. This week's economic data will be crucial in shaping expectations going into 2026.

Key Economic Data This Week

Several important data releases are scheduled for this week.  The PCE inflation data — the Fed's preferred inflation measure — for September will finally be released on Friday and could have the biggest impact on December and January rate decisions. The ADP jobs report and weekly jobless claims will also be released, while the non-farm payrolls report has been delayed again.

Global Manufacturing Snapshot

Today also kicks off a busy week of manufacturing data releases. Global PMI numbers are due across the board, including figures from the Eurozone, UK, Germany, and the US this evening. These reports will provide a critical snapshot of global economic health and could help reveal the impact of the US trade tariffs.

Gold Breaks Higher

Gold made a significant move on Friday, breaching the key $4,200 level after consolidating last week. The precious metal has followed through today, and the $4,400 level now looks achievable if buying pressure continues.

Bitcoin Under Pressure

Bitcoin has given up last week's modest gains and seen substantial selling pressure. A significant drop of about $4,000 occurred during Asian trading this morning — a notable decline for an Asia session. The key level to watch is $84,000, with potential support at $80,000 (the lowest level since March).

Market Insights

Watch Mike Smith's analysis of the week ahead in markets.

Key Economic Events

Stay up to date with the key economic events for the week.

Times in AEDT (GMT+11).
GO Markets
December 1, 2025
Market insights
All too easy - vigilance is the key

If you look at equity markets in particular, you'd think everything smelled of roses. For the 47th time this calendar year US indices have made record all-time highs and 46 times at record closing highs. Earning season is underway and so far, it is doing what it always does, which is beating the Street 75 percent of the time.

Banking, Tech and industrials are the standouts. And even when you look at the 493 non magnificent 7 stocks on the S&P 500 the gap between the seven and the rest is finally starting to close up. So all is well at least that's how it appears.

However over the next 20 days the risks that are facing global markets cannot be understated. First and foremost is the US presidential election. As we point out in our US 2024 election specials, the margin between Trump and Harris has never been closer.

In fact, most probability markets now have Trump ahead. Predictit for example, Trump leads by three points and on RealClearPolitics it's even larger sitting at 10.8 points. Most of the key states or swing states are statistical dead heat but on average Trump is now ahead by 0.2 at 47.7 to 47.5.

Whichever way you look at it, whoever wins on Election Day, it will lead to disputes and the other side is unlikely to accept the result. The political upheaval will filter through into markets, and we need to be ready for that. What has also been lost in geopolitics and the incredible run in equities is movements in the bond market and the risks around US inflation.

And it is this that we need to take a closer look at. Trends and Key Drivers in US Inflation Blink and you will have missed it, the back end of the USU curve is back above 4%. This is down to several risk factors, The US presidential election being one, employment being another, and then the big one inflation rearing its head in September.

There was an unexpectedly strong rise in CPI inflation for September. So is there some going on here or is it just a false flag? First things first - Core PCE inflation continues to trend at a consistent pace of approximately 2 per cent on an annualised basis.

This suggests that inflationary pressures, while present in some sectors, remain largely in check but risks remain. So what are the keys here? Key Factors on the Inflation Outlook: 1.

Core CPI Outperformance and PCE Expectations: September's core CPI surprised with a 0.31per cent month-on-month (MoM) increase, surpassing consensus forecast of 0.25 per cent. While this unexpected rise is noteworthy, the details of the PPI (Producer Price Index) data suggest a more moderate increase in core PCE inflation, estimated at 0.21per cent MoM for the same period. The issues in the inflation figures however remain in components such as shelter and insurance, which had been driving much of the previous increases, with weather events and housing price volatility expect inflation fluctuations here to persist in the near term.

The upward surprises in the headline CPI data were concentrated in volatile categories like apparel and airfares. Airfares, for instance, rose by approximately 3 per cent MoM on a seasonally adjusted basis. 2. Wage Growth and Labor Market Dynamics: The Atlanta Fed’s wage tracker indicated that wages picked up in September, with the unsmoothed year-on-year (YoY) measure reaching 4.9 per cent, up from 4.7 per cent in August.

Additionally, the 3-month smoothed measure and the overall weighted average both rose to 4.7 per cent, compared to 4.6 per cent in the previous month. Whichever measure you want to use, real wages in the US are growing at about 2.5 per cent. While this wage growth exceeds the rate typically consistent with a 2 percent inflation target (in the absence of significant productivity gains), it remains only modestly stronger and isn't a concern, yet.

It’s worth noting that wage growth may take longer to cool off, particularly given seasonal patterns in early 2024 and the effects of recent labour strikes in sectors like port operations and aircraft manufacturing, both of which have underscored the potential for more persistent wage inflation. Interestingly, the Atlanta Fed wage data revealed a sharp deceleration in wage growth for job switchers compared to job stayers. Normally, job switchers see higher wage increases, but over the past few months, the growth rates for both groups have converged.

This shift may signal weaker demand for labour and could be a key indicator of wage trends in the coming months. However, wages for current employees may lag behind, requiring time to adjust downward, much like how rental prices for new leases often move ahead of existing rents in shelter inflation. This dynamic suggests that wage pressures might remain elevated for a time, particularly if companies raise wages for existing employees to catch up with the now-slowing wage increases for new hires.

The ongoing wage growth for current employees could also keep hiring demand subdued, as firms may focus on managing costs rather than expanding their workforce only time will tell here. 3. Potential Impact of Hurricanes Helene and Milton: The inflationary impact from Hurricanes Helene and Milton are yet to be factored into most forecasts and thus it is important to acknowledge the potential for volatility in certain inflation components. Historically, hurricanes have primarily affected gas prices by disrupting supply chains.

However, there has been only minimal upward pressure on retail gas prices so far. Demand led cost in infrastructure and construction supplies also tend to increase post hurricanes as the clean-up and rebuild takes precedence. Another major CPI component that has historically shown sensitivity to hurricane-related disruptions is "lodging away from home." For example, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, lodging prices initially dropped before rebounding the following month.

It remains unclear whether the recent hurricanes will affect hotel or recreational service prices in Florida, which were among the areas impacted. September CPI already showed weaker-than-expected data for lodging, and with discretionary spending on services potentially declining, this component could face further downside risks. However, if there is an unusually sharp drop in lodging prices for October, any hurricane-related distortions might result in a bounce-back in November CPI.

This is why we think the market needs to remain cautious on core PCE inflation. Will it stay modestly higher than the Fed’s 2% target over the near term? It's clearly possible.

Then there is the ongoing volatility in certain sectors and potential risks from external shocks like hurricanes mean inflation forecasts could still see adjustments. All in all we remain vigilant that despite the enthusiasm and bullishness in indices risks are building and traders need to be vigilant.

Evan Lucas
January 30, 2025
Market insights
2024 – Where did that go?

As we sit here and review the last weeks of 2024, it has dawned on us that 2024 was the year of wanting everything and getting nothing. Now that might sound like a ridiculous statement considering equities across the MSCI world are averaging double digit returns for 2024. In fact in the US they are on track for two consecutive years of 20% gains or more.

So we certainly gained something, but what we have come to realise is that 2024 was a year of anticipation and more anticipation and more anticipation but nothing being delivered particularly here in Australia. So let us put forward our reasoning. 1. RBA Rates – Pricing v the reality At the start of 2024 it's hard to believe that three rate cuts were fully priced into the cash right by December this year.

The pricing versus the reality facing the RBA in 2024 was one reason that we have probably seen muted movements in currencies and bond markets. We do need to commend the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) for navigating what has been a perplexing year in 2024. As mentioned, we start the year influenced by global central banks for multiple rates, driven in particular by the U.S.

Federal Reserve. However, by mid-year, pricing shifted so dramatically it moved through 189 basis points to be factoring in not one but up to four rate increases as inflation remained in a state of suspension as sticky components slow the rate of change and has seen underlying inflation holding at 3.5% and above. Despite this the RBA held rates steady throughout the year and has now adopted a dovish tone at its December meeting.

This is key – its 2024 cautious approach is seeing a 2025 pivotal shift and the board is now making it clear that its focus of managing inflation risks is starting to switch to addressing growth concerns. Market forecasting has easing beginning at the April meeting, the range from economists is February through to May 2025. Whenever it starts, the consensus between the market and the theoretical world is the same – one cut will bring several and come December 2025 the belief is the cash rate will be as low as 3.6%. 2.

Labour Market The other factor that has kept the RBA on the sidelines has been employment. IF we were to look at employment in isolation it should be championed. Underemployment, underutilisation and unemployment as a whole is – strong.

It has completely defied expectations in 2024, with employment levels reaching record highs and participation levels for the population and women in particular also at records. It should be noted that part of the reasoning for this is robust immigration, cautious corporate behaviour toward redundancies and then the big one public sector hiring. Surges in hires for education, healthcare, and hospitality, drove public sector resilience, offsetting weakness in private sectors like manufacturing, mining, and financial services.

What could force a change here is the 2025 Federal election – a minority government or even a change of government could lead to fiscal restraint and dampen employment growth, while a surprising downturn in job data could prompt the RBA to expedite rate cuts and increase the amount of cuts as well. Something traders will need to have their fingers on. 3. Record level Wage Growth Wage growth, a key concern earlier in the tightening cycle, moderated in 2024, easing pressure on policymakers both on the fiscal and monetary side.

At one point their wages were growing at levels not seen since record began. However, it did coincide with an inflation level of a similar rate meaning real wages were flat. Looking into 2025, wages remain a concern for rate watches for the following reasons: Minimum wage has consistently followed the inflation rate with a premium suggesting the will increase exceeding 3.5%.

Industrial relations reforms over the past 2 years have embedded wage rigidity. Finally accelerating wage increases in Enterprise Bargaining Agreements are now averaging 4%. Without corresponding productivity gains, these dynamics could challenge the RBA’s assumptions, complicating the path to rate cuts. 4.

Gravity defying markets Earnings multiples of the ASX 200 and its sector have soared in 2024. It’s a reflection of the optimism bordering on exuberance about peak interest rates and an imminent easing cycle. The forward P/E ratio of 17.9x is well above the 10-year average of 16.0x and significantly above its historical average of 14.2x.

Looking into 2025 – yes, these multiples are stretched, but when put into a global context it is understandable and even defendable. For example - Australian equities trade at a 21% discount to the S&P 500’s multiples and expectation for the US market in 2025 is one of further expansion. Thus to sustain these levels robust earnings growth are needed to close the P/E gap.

A 17.0x multiple down from 17.9, would meet expectations. 5. Banks being banks? One area that we note has not just defied expectations but also logic is Australian banks.

The banking sector was the standout performer in 2024. The sector outpaced the broader market by 25%, not hard when you look at CBA which has surged 40% in the past 12 months. It’s even more remarkable when you compare it to the material sector, it has outperformed its cycle peer by 50.2%.

The surge in passive investment flows (exchange traded funds and the like) which is growing at record levels, alongside superannuation sector contributions, fuelled this robust performance considering the Big 4 and Macquarie sit inside the top 20 and make up 45% of the ASX 20. However, this dominance is likely to face challenges in 2025. Key factors to watch include China’s commodity and economic outlook, shifts in risk asset performance, and potential regulatory scrutiny of superannuation’s ties to bank equity.

Coupled with stretched bordering in snapping valuations – the risks underscore the sector’s sensitivity to macroeconomic and policy developments going forward and overdone investment. 6. Iron Ore – heavy lifting Iron ore defied the forecasts in 2024. The expected collapse never truly eventuated, buoyed by cost-curve dynamics and stronger-than-expected demand in the latter half of the year.

Prices exceeded consensus estimates by upward of US$20 a tonne and provided a tailwind for materials. But, and it is a major but, China remains a pivotal factor. Broad-based policy stimulus announcements in late 2024 lifted sentiment, but execution and clarity remain uncertain.

China is looking to stimulate itself in 2025 and that will determine whether materials can close the performance gap with commodity prices in 2025. The other big unknown for Iron Ore – Trump 2.0 and his future tariffs on Australia’s largest trading partner. Signing off 2024 was a year defined by shifting dynamics across monetary policy, sector performance, and macroeconomic trends.

As we move into 2025, investors and traders will face a complex landscape shaped by earnings growth challenges, election-related uncertainties, and potential shifts in global economic momentum and policy. Successfully navigating these factors will come from understanding the macroeconomic signals and sector-specific opportunities they will present.

Evan Lucas
January 1, 2025