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Ahead of the US nonfarm payrolls (NFP) release (Friday, 9 January, 8:30 am ET/ Saturday, 10 January, 12:30 am AEDT), major US equity indices have been trading near recent highs (as at 9 January 2026).
Next week, attention is likely to shift to inflation data, any change in expectations for Federal Reserve (Fed) policy, and the start of US earnings season. Together, these may support or challenge current valuations.
Quick facts:
US inflation: The consumer price index (CPI) and producer price index (PPI) releases will test whether inflation is showing signs of persistence.
Earnings season: Major US banks report first, providing an early read on financial conditions and whether current valuations can hold up.
Gold futures: Gold futures remain close to record levels, with US dollar (USD) moves after key data a potential swing factor.
Geopolitics: Ongoing tensions remain on the radar and could influence risk sentiment.
US inflation data: could CPI and PPI shift rate-cut expectations?
Timing:
- CPI: Wednesday 14 January, 12:30 am AEDT
- PPI: Thursday 15 January, 12:30 am AEDT
CPI and PPI are the major scheduled macro events for the week. The updated inflation prints across consumer and producer prices will help markets assess whether disinflation is continuing or whether inflation is showing signs of persistence.
Market impact:
- A softer outcome could support risk sentiment and weigh on Treasury yields and the USD. However, reactions can vary depending on positioning and broader macro headlines, including how confidently markets price a March Fed rate cut.
- A stronger-than-expected reading may pressure equities and reinforce caution in bond markets.

US earnings season begins with the banks
Timing:
- JPMorgan Chase (JPM): Tuesday, 6:35 am ET
US earnings season begins with results from major banks, providing an early snapshot of financial conditions and economic momentum. Investor attention is likely to extend beyond headline earnings to guidance and management commentary.
Market impact
- Strong results versus earnings per share (EPS) and revenue expectations could support sentiment, particularly within financials.
- Cautious forward guidance may pressure share prices and could weigh on broader indices if it becomes a common theme.
- Early bank prints can shape expectations for the wider season. Watch how the first reporters in each sector influence related stocks.

Gold futures to retest record highs?
After a recent pullback, gold futures are trading within striking distance of record highs again. The backdrop remains a mix of geopolitical uncertainty and the potential for data-driven moves in the USD.
Market impact
- Continued strength could support a retest of late December highs around US$4,585.
- The short-term US$4,500 area may act as a short-term technical resistance in determining whether upside momentum can hold.
- Another pullback may occur if yields rise or the USD strengthens following key data releases.

Geopolitics remains in focus
Geopolitics remains a background market consideration, with headlines and broader policy messaging sometimes influencing risk sentiment. Markets have shown resilience to date, but sensitivity may rise if developments escalate.
Market impact
- Escalation could influence energy prices, defence stocks, and hedging assets such as gold.
- A cooling in the narrative may reduce volatility and allow markets to refocus on macro data and earnings.
Economic calendar
All dates and times may be subject to change.

Venezuela commands the world's largest proven oil reserves at 303 billion barrels. Yet political turmoil, global sanctions, and recent US intervention show that being the biggest isn’t always best.
Quick facts:
- Venezuela holds 18% of the world's total proven oil reserves despite producing less than 1% of global consumption.
- Just four countries (Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Canada) control over half the planet's proven reserves.
- Saudi Arabia dominates crude oil production contributing to over 16% of global exports.
- US shale technology has enabled America to lead in production despite ranking ninth in reserves.
Top 10 countries by proven oil reserves
1. Venezuela – 303 billion barrels
- Controls 18% of global reserves, primarily extra-heavy crude in the Orinoco Belt requiring specialised refining.
- Heavy crude trades $15-20 below Brent benchmarks due to high sulphur content and complex processing requirements.
- Output crashed 60% from 2.5 million bpd in 2014 to less than 1.0 million bpd last year.
- Approximately 80% of exports flow to China as loan repayment, with export revenues dwarfed by reserve potential.
2. Saudi Arabia – 267 billion barrels
- Majority light, sweet crude oil requires minimal refining and commands premium prices, contributing to world-leading exports of $191.1 billion in 2024.
- Maintains 2-3 million bpd of spare production capacity, providing market stabilisation capability during supply disruptions.
- Oil comprises roughly 50% of the country’s GDP and 70% of its export earnings.
- Production decisions significantly impact international oil prices due to market dominance.

3. Iran – 209 billion barrels
- Heavy Western sanctions severely limit the country’s ability to monetise and access international markets.
- Production estimates vary significantly (2.5-3.8 million bpd) due to sanctions, limited transparency, and restricted international reporting.
- Significant crude volumes flow to China through discount arrangements and sanctions-evading mechanisms.
- Sanctions relief could rapidly boost production toward 4-5 million bpd, though domestic consumption (12th globally) reduces export potential.
4. Canada – 163 billion barrels
- Approximately 97% of reserves are oil sands (bitumen) requiring steam-assisted extraction and significant upfront capital investment.
- Political stability and regulatory frameworks position Canada as a secure source compared to volatile producers, with direct pipeline access to US refineries.
- Supplied over 60% of U.S. crude oil imports in 2024, making Canada America's top source by far.

5. Iraq – 145 billion barrels
- Decades of war and sanctions have prevented optimal field development and infrastructure modernisation.
- Improved security conditions since 2017 have enabled production recovery, but pipeline attacks and aging facilities continue to constrain output.
- Oil revenue comprises over 90% of government income, creating extreme fiscal vulnerability.
- Exports flow primarily to China, India, and Asian buyers seeking a reliable Middle Eastern supply, with most production from super-giant southern fields near Basra.
6. United Arab Emirates – 113 billion barrels
- Produces primarily medium-to-light sweet crude commanding premium prices, ranking fourth globally in export value at $87.6 billion.
- Has successfully diversified its economy through tourism, finance, and trade, reducing oil's GDP share compared to Gulf peers.
- Strategic location near the Strait of Hormuz and openness to international oil companies help facilitate efficient global distribution.
7. Kuwait – 101.5 billion barrels
- Reserves are concentrated in aging super-giant fields like Burgan, which require enhanced recovery techniques.
- Favourable geology enables extraction costs around $8-10 per barrel, with proven reserves providing 80+ years of supply at current production rates.
- Oil comprises 60% of GDP and over 95% of export revenue.
8. Russia – 80 billion barrels
- World's third-largest producer despite ranking eighth in reserves.
- Post-2022 Western sanctions redirected crude flows from Europe to Asia, with China and India now absorbing the majority at discounted prices.
- Despite export restrictions and G7 price cap at $60/barrel, it posted the second-highest global export value at $169.7 billion in 2024.
- Russian Urals crude typically trades $15-30 below Brent due to quality, sanctions, and logistics, with November 2024 revenues declining to $11 billion.
9. United States – 74.4 billion barrels
- The shale revolution through horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing has made the U.S. the world's #1 oil producer despite holding only the 9th-largest reserves.
- The Permian Basin accounts for nearly 50% of production, with shale/tight oil representing 65% of total output.
- Achieved net petroleum exporter status in 2020 for the first time since 1949, with crude exports growing from near-zero in 2015 to over 4 million bpd in 2024.
- The U.S. government maintains a 375+ million barrel strategic reserve.

10. Libya – 48.4 billion barrels
- Holds Africa's largest proven oil reserves at 48.4 billion barrels, producing light sweet crude commanding premium prices.
- Rival bordering governments compete for oil revenue control, causing production to fluctuate based on political conditions.
- Oil facilities face blockades, militia attacks, and political leverage tactics, preventing consistent returns.
- Favourable geology enables extraction costs around $10-15 per barrel, with geographic proximity making Libya a natural supplier to European refineries.
What does this mean for oil markets?
The concentration of reserves among OPEC members (60% of the global total) ensures the organisation has continued influence over pricing, even as US shale provides a production counterweight.
Venezuela's potential return as a major exporter post-U.S. occupation could eventually ease supply constraints, though most analysts view significant production increases as years away.
Sanctions could create a situation where discounted crude seeks buyers willing to navigate compliance risks. Refiners with heavy crude processing capability may benefit from price differentials if Venezuelan barrels increase.
While reserves appear abundant, economically recoverable volumes depend on sustained high prices. If renewable adoption accelerates and demand peaks sooner than projected, stranded assets become a material risk for reserve-heavy producers.

FX markets enter the month influenced by uncertain growth momentum, inflation dynamics and central bank policy, yield sensitivity, and shifts in how markets are pricing geopolitical risk.
Quick facts:
- USD remains primarily responsive to inflation data, and this may have overtaken growth as the main driver.
- JPY sensitivity to potential Bank of Japan (BOJ) action remains high, creating asymmetric responses to global rate moves and policy communication.
- EUR and AUD continue to trade reactively to global events and commodity price moves.
- Volatility may be episodic, clustering around key data releases rather than a single sustained directional trend.
With central bank expectations still evolving into the first quarter (Q1), key releases and policy communication are likely to stay central to near-term FX pricing. In this environment, moves may cluster around scheduled events and headline risk, rather than build into a single dominant trend.
US dollar (USD)
Key data and events:
- Non-farm payrolls (Employment Situation, Dec 2025): 9 January 2026 Bureau of Labor Statistics
- CPI (Dec 2025): 13 January 2026 Bureau of Labor Statistics
- Fed rate decision: 27-28 January 2026 Federal Reserve
- Advance GDP (Q4): rescheduled (date TBA) U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis
What to watch:
USD performance remains closely tied to inflation data and what it could mean for Federal Reserve policy expectations. Market pricing can shift quickly around CPI and labour-market outcomes, particularly where outcomes affect how investors perceive the timing and pace of any policy changes.
Jobs data and GDP numbers will be watched as gauges of growth momentum. The start of the US earnings season may also influence FX indirectly through its impact on equity performance, risk sentiment, and yield expectations, rather than acting as a direct currency driver.
Key chart: US dollar index (DXY) weekly chart

Periods of market uncertainty can support USD demand around prior support areas near 97, while the 100 region may continue to act as a reference point for resistance, including where it aligns with commonly watched moving averages (noting technical indicators can fail).
A break in either direction may reflect shifting expectations about how different central banks will respond to the next run of inflation and growth data.
Euro (EUR)
Key data and events:
- CPI (Euro area HICP, Dec 2025 reference period): 19 January 2026 European Central Bank
- ECB rate decision: 5 February 2026 European Central Bank
What to watch:
European Central Bank (ECB) messaging on policy direction and inflation remains key. A prolonged hold is one scenario market participants continue to debate, but outcomes are likely to remain data-dependent and sensitive to changes in the growth and inflation backdrop.
The geopolitical situation in Ukraine will also remain in focus.
Key chart: EUR/USD weekly chart

Differences in likely central bank direction could support a test of the top end of the current multi-month range near 1.18. A sustained break above that level would be technically significant.
For now, price may stay range-bound until there is clearer guidance on policy direction on both sides of the Atlantic.
Japanese yen (JPY)
Key data and events:
- BOJ policy decision: 22–23 January 2026 Bank of Japan
- Tokyo core CPI (Ku-area of Tokyo, preliminary; Dec 2025 reference month): 23 January 2026 Statistics Bureau of Japan
What to watch:
Following the BOJ’s December rate rise, markets appear to be weighing the likelihood of further action in Q1. Whether the January meeting delivers another move remains uncertain and may depend on incoming inflation and wage signals, as well as BOJ communication.
Data released ahead of the decision may be important in shaping expectations.
Key chart: GBP/JPY daily chart

As of 7 January 2026, GBPJPY has traded around the 211.50 area, near levels last seen in 2008. Continued consolidation may suggest fresh drivers are needed to extend gains.
If the cross can’t push higher, some traders will start watching for a pullback toward 210.00, where support has shown up before. And if expectations for BOJ action build, selling could accelerate, with price potentially drifting down through those previously tested support zones and toward the more established support near 208.00.
Australian dollar (AUD)
Key data and events:
- CPI (Complete Monthly CPI; Nov 2025 reference month): 7 January 2026 Australian Bureau of Statistics
- Employment (Labour Force; Dec 2025 reference month): 22 January 2026, Australian Bureau of Statistics
- RBA rate decision: 3 February 2026 (Monetary Policy Board meeting 2–3 February) Reserve Bank of Australia
AUD continues to behave as a proxy for global growth sentiment and commodity demand.
Stabilisation in Chinese data, firmer commodity prices, and expectations around the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) policy path may be providing relative support for AUD. Sensitivity to broader risk conditions remains high.
Key chart: EUR/AUD daily chart

Moves in commodity prices have coincided with a sharp fall in EURAUD since the 31 December close, breaking down out of the prior range. The next key level to the downside sits at 1.7305.
The area around 1.7305 may help indicate whether selling pressure is continuing or whether momentum is fading for now. Near-term commodity price moves are likely to remain important.
Bottom line
FX conditions this month may remain reactive, with volatility clustering around key data releases rather than a sustained directional trend. With Q1 central bank expectations still forming, price moves may be sharper around the calendar, policy communication, and geopolitical headlines.