đ°Â Daily Market Report | Political Markets Continue â Focus on the Davos Speech and UK Inflation Data
The market continues to show a strong âpolitical marketâ character.
President Trumpâs aggressive foreign policy stance and political developments surrounding Prime Minister Takaichi in Japan are intersecting, affecting all asset classes: FX, equities, bonds, and commodities.
Tonightâs biggest event is:
President Trumpâs speech at the Davos Forum (World Economic Forum)
Scheduled for 13:30 UTC
The focus will be on the Greenland issue and relations with Europe:
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Will he maintain a hardline stance?
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Or will this become another âTACO tradeâ (Threaten â then compromise)?
This speech will determine whether the ongoing trend of
âU.S. sellingâ (dollar selling, U.S. bond selling, U.S. equity selling)
continues or begins to fade.
đŻđ” Japan Side: The Yen Focused on Politics and Fiscal Policy
After Prime Minister Takaichiâs announcement of a possible dissolution and general election, markets have priced in:
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Concerns over fiscal deficit expansion
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Selling of Japanese Government Bonds â higher long-term yields
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Yen depreciation pressure
However, today a shift has emerged:
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Reports that major banking groups will double their purchases of JGBs
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Opposition parties also calling for stronger JGB buying
This has pushed Japanese long-term yields lower and eased pressure on the yen.
In addition, the following comment was reported:
Finance Minister Katayama:
âJapan plans to invest more than USD 330 billion in the AI and semiconductor sectors.â
This was interpreted as:
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Strengthening Japanâs industrial competitiveness
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Clarifying its growth strategy
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Supporting medium- to long-term confidence in the yen
As a result, it triggered yen buying based on structural reform expectations, rather than short-term FX intervention rhetoric.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Bessent also commented:
âWe are in close contact with Japanâ and
âWe will respond to stabilize the markets,â
which reinforced expectations of policy coordination.
đȘÂ Safe-Haven Demand Remains Strong
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Gold and platinum have hit record highs
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The Swiss franc has reached record highs against the yen
Risk aversion remains strong, and equity markets continue to face downside pressure.
đŹđ§Â UK Inflation Data Ahead
Before the Davos speech, UK inflation data will be released at:
07:00 UTC
Market expectations:
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UK CPI (December, YoY):Â +3.3%Â (previous: +3.2%)
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Core CPI:Â +3.3%
If data meet or exceed expectations:
Expectations of Bank of England rate cuts may retreat â supportive for GBP.
This makes it a key short-term inflection point for the pound.
đ±Â Early London FX Moves (Updated, in UTC context)
In the early London session, corrective dollar buying has dominated.
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USD/JPY
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Fell to around 157.82,
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then rebounded back into the 158 handle.
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Todayâs range so far:Â 157.82 â 158.28
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EUR/USD
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Extended losses to around 1.1701,
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falling more than 30 pips from the Tokyo high near 1.1734.
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Background:
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Short-covering of âU.S. sellingâ positions ahead of Trumpâs speech
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U.S. Treasury buying â U.S. yields drifting lower
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AÂ temporary corrective dollar rebound
However:
Whether U.S.âEurope relations truly improve remains highly uncertain.
Therefore, current dollar strength should be viewed as a temporary adjustment, not a trend reversal.
đŻÂ Key Themes for Today
| Item | Key Point |
|---|---|
| Market nature | Fully a âpolitical marketâ |
| Biggest event | Trumpâs Davos speech (13:30 UTC) |
| FX core theme | U.S. selling and Japan selling intertwined |
| Yen drivers | Takaichi administration, JGB policy, Katayamaâs USD 330bn AI investment |
| Safe havens | Gold & CHF remain at record levels |
| Short-term focus | UK CPI (07:00 UTC) â GBP reaction |
| London trend | Corrective dollar buying |
The market is currently caught between:
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âFear â flight to safetyâ, and
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âCorrection â dollar short covering.â
Depending on President Trumpâs speech at 13:30 UTC:
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U.S. selling could accelerate again,
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or it could temporarily fade.
This makes today a critical turning point for global market direction.


