LONDON, Jan 9 (Reuters) – Markets and the news are certainly up and running again after a brief lull for the holidays, and the pace is now set to pick up even more.
Updates are coming on nearly all the big themes of the year, from AI to the U.S. economy, via Germany’s fiscal transformation, all while speculating about the next surprise in global politics.
Here’s all you need to know about the coming week in financial markets by Karin Strohecker, Sophie Kiderlin in London, Rocky Swift in Tokyo, and Lewis Krauskopf and Saeed Azhar in New York.
1/WHO’S NEXT?
U.S. President Donald Trump’s muscular intervention in Venezuela has set the stage for a year where geopolitical risk will dominate markets and shape economies around the globe.
The impact of Washington rewriting the rules in Latin America has so far mostly stirred energy markets. But it has fired up concerns about U.S. intentions towards other parts of the world – with Greenland topping the list.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio will meet with leaders of Denmark in days to come while European leaders and NATO allies are scrambling to push back.
Domestic U.S. risk events are adding to a febrile mood for markets: The Supreme Court is set to deliver its verdict on the legality of Trump’s tariffs, while a nomination for the chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve is expected imminently.
2/ PRICE POINTS
Speaking of the Fed, a crucial view into U.S. inflation trends will help investors gauge prospects for further near-term interest rate cuts, as the U.S. data flow returns to normal following a 43-day government shutdown that delayed or cancelled a number of key reports.
The U.S. consumer price index for December is due on Tuesday, January 13. The prior report showed consumer prices rose less than expected in the year to November, but households still faced affordability challenges.
Inflation has persistently remained above the Fed’s 2% target, presenting a potential barrier to more monetary easing by the central bank, while some investors are wary of a resurgence of inflation.
The CPI report is among the last key releases ahead of the Fed’s January 27-28 meeting. After cutting rates at each of its last three meetings of 2025, it is expected to hold rates steady, but markets are pricing in at least two more quarter-point cuts by the end of 2026.
3/ AI BELLWETHER
Earnings by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSMC) on January 15 will be closely watched for signals of whether the artificial intelligence investment boom has further to run.
The world’s No. 1 producer of advanced chips pushed global equities higher in October when it raised its annual sales forecast and posted a massive beat on third-quarter profit.
It’s already reported estimate-beating revenue for the fourth quarter, and the supplier to tech heavyweights like Apple and Nvidia is expected to say full-year sales climbed 31% to $120.4 billion, according to the LSEG SmartEstimate.
That would come on the heels of Samsung Electronics projecting a three-fold surge in quarterly operating profit amid tight supply for conventional memory chips.
Reuters reported last month that Nvidia approached TSMC about ramping up production to help it meet soaring Chinese demand for its H200 AI chips.
4/ BANKS KICK OFF Q4
There are also important earnings across the Pacific, as major U.S. bank results kick off a fourth-quarter reporting season that is expected to close out a solid year of corporate profit growth.
The largest U.S. lender, JPMorgan Chase, reports on Tuesday, January 13, followed by Citigroup, Bank of America and Wells Fargo on Wednesday, and Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley on Thursday.
A surge in investment banking revenue as dealmaking accelerates is expected to bolster the banks’ fourth-quarter results, while investors will focus on their commentary related to consumer spending as a crucial read into the broader economy’s health.
Overall S&P 500 earnings are expected to have climbed about 9% in the fourth quarter from the year-earlier period, according to LSEG IBES, with investors anticipating another year of strong U.S. profit growth in 2026.
5/ SHOW ME THE MONEY
Germany stunned markets last March by launching a massive stimulus package, including a huge infrastructure investment fund and historic fiscal reforms.
Then newly elected Chancellor Friedrich Merz further boosted hopes by positioning himself as a pro-business, growth-focused leader who would implement changes quickly for Europe’s largest economy.
The promise of big spending drew huge flows of capital into European markets last year and Germany’s DAX is still hitting record high after record high.
Almost a year on, many are asking what has happened in the real economy. German full-year GDP data, out January 15, could shed some light.
After contracting for two consecutive years, annual GDP is expected to have inched higher in 2025, by 0.3% according to the OECD.
(Graphics by Kripa Jayaram, compiled by Alun John; Editing by Toby Chopra)
