News

Economic and event calendar in Asia Wednesday, December 31, 2025 - China PMIs for December

Posted on: Dec 31 2025

China is set to publish a fresh round of Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) data later today, Wednesday, December 31, offering another timely snapshot of economic momentum at the end of a difficult year for the world’s second-largest economy.

China publishes two main PMI surveys, each capturing different parts of the industrial landscape. The official PMI is compiled by the National Bureau of Statistics and focuses primarily on large, state-owned and government-linked enterprises. Alongside this, the private-sector PMI, produced by S&P Global / RatingDog, places greater emphasis on small and medium-sized enterprises, making it a closely watched gauge of conditions in China’s private economy.

The distinction matters. While the official PMI tends to reflect conditions among larger firms with better access to credit and policy support, the private-sector survey is often seen as more sensitive to shifts in domestic demand, pricing power and employment conditions. Methodological differences also play a role, with the Caixin/RatingDog survey drawing from a broader and more diverse sample of companies. Despite these contrasts, the two PMIs often move in the same direction, offering complementary signals on the health of China’s manufacturing sector.

Today’s release includes the official manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs, alongside the private-sector manufacturing PMI. Economists surveyed by Reuters expect China’s official manufacturing PMI to remain at 49.2 in December, unchanged from November and firmly below the 50 threshold that separates expansion from contraction. If confirmed, it would mark a ninth consecutive month of contraction in factory activity.

Persistent weakness reflects a combination of subdued domestic demand, falling industrial profits and ongoing uncertainty around global trade. Chinese manufacturers continue to face the lingering effects of high U.S. tariffs, even as they attempt to diversify export markets. A broader global slowdown has also weighed on orders, complicating Beijing’s efforts to rebalance the economy away from heavy reliance on exports and investment.

Separate data released over the weekend showed China's industrial profits falling 13.1% year-on-year in November, the sharpest decline in more than a year, underlining the pressure on the manufacturing sector. Against that backdrop, analysts expect the private-sector PMI to edge down to 49.8 from 49.9 previously, remaining in contractionary territory.

Taken together, today’s PMI readings are likely to reinforce expectations for further policy support in 2026, as Chinese authorities seek to stabilise growth, shore up confidence and arrest the slide in industrial activity heading into the new year.

Markets are likely to view another sub-50 PMI print as reinforcing the narrative of persistent slack in China’s industrial cycle, with limited immediate upside for risk assets. Chinese equities and broader Asia-Pacific markets may struggle to find traction, while base metals could remain capped on concerns around weak end-demand. In FX, the data should keep the yuan biased to the downside at the margin, particularly if the private-sector PMI confirms ongoing stress among smaller firms. From a policy perspective, soft PMIs strengthen expectations for additional targeted stimulus in early 2026, including fiscal support and incremental monetary easing, which may limit downside risk over the medium term. For global markets, weak China data is likely to reinforce disinflationary impulses, supporting bonds and keeping a lid on global yields, while offering modest support to the US dollar against cyclical and commodity-linked currencies.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
Will 2026 mark the big reset for Big Tech?

Posted on: Dec 30 2025

As we look to wrap up 2025, the AI bubble just about managed to get away unscathed to end the year. That being said, there were rising concerns to deal with especially that on valuation. And in talking about that, it is fair to say that all of this will be a mainstay in the conversation for 2026. So the question is, have markets gotten too optimistic about the impact of AI? And are we going to see a reality check come next year?

Well, it definitely is something worth thinking about and considering.

The simple understanding of AI is that it boosts productivity by making processes more efficient and faster right. Let's take an intelligible example of making orange juice from the fruit itself. Yes, I love fruit examples. It always brings me back to this article here in explaining the whole LIBOR scandal back in the day.

But yes, orange juice.

Let's say you are someone who squeezes orange juice to sell, and one day you make it known that you are going to buy a high-tech and super-quick orange peeler and squeezer to get the juice ready to sell. People get excited about that and throw you $500 even though you only make like $5 in profits at the time.

The people aren't fussed about the money today because they "believe" that with the new technology, you're going to revolutionise the world of selling orange juice.

So, that's pretty much where we were or somewhat still are at in the whole AI bubble. The sense check hasn't quite happened yet but it's only a matter of time until questions are asked about the following:

  • Is the new technology really that good?
  • How has it really improved the efficiency and time cost of getting the orange juice ready for sale?
  • Has it really helped to increase profit margin by a great amount?

If you translate that to companies and firms that are knee deep in AI investment, these are all valid questions at some point. And that could be what investors are demanding next year.

Before this, markets would cheer on AI investment and increased capital expenditure to be revolutionary. Now, doing so isn't anything new but instead it's rather commonplace instead.

It's like having the new PlayStation 5 on release. You're the cool kid and everyone wants to hang out with you when you have it. But then when everyone else also starts to own it, what you have isn't anything different and people hang out at their own homes instead.

And so the question then turns to how do you get the people i.e. investors to stay? What makes yours more "magical" and "special"? That is where the productivity conversation comes in.

For Big Tech, that means the conversation isn't anymore about spending on AI. It's about who can actually use that correctly to reflect a better bottom line.

For the likes of Google and Meta, it's all about translating that to ad revenue with the former also going to be scrutinised on their cloud business. And so far, they are two of the better ones that have an easier time to show how increased productivity and how that translates to earnings in general.

Then you have the likes of Amazon and Microsoft, who both have laid out massive amounts of capital in trying to convince investors that they are keeping up in the AI game.

Now, Amazon has committed the most in terms of capital expenditure on AI as compared to everyone else and one thing they are hiding behind for now is that their revenue stream and productivity gains are spread across multiple points. They have their warehouse technologies, robots, website, and cloud systems all layered with AI advancements. And so, the profits have to keep rolling in to convince investors against their big amount of money spent.

That said, Amazon is also big enough to insulate themselves from risks of having to rely on chipmakers and external data centers. They do work to develop their own chips and are going big in expanding on the latter as well. I spoke about data centers and the importance of the fight for power last week here.

As for Microsoft, it's quite straightforward with Copilot being their biggest push product offering. The proof will be in the numbers, that being how many people actually feel the need to sign up for AI software delivered by the firm. And personally speaking, I'm not a big fan with my own taste preference being to continue using Windows 10.

And we can't talk about Big Tech without talking about the poster boy of the whole AI bubble now, can we? Nvidia has been the biggest name of them all during this run and is it time that the lofty expectations finally catch up to them?

The Blackwell chip release shows that demand is still well outweighing supply. But if backlogs start to reduce and companies like Amazon and Microsoft also start developing their own AI ecosystem, that could be a troubling sign for Nvidia amid the pressure to constantly outperform and deliver well above what they are doing.

Don't get me wrong. Nvidia is still a major cash cow and the biggest earner from the continued focus in the AI bubble. But are investor expectations too high that anything less than perfect will get punished? That will be interesting to see, especially with key risks from the China market that could provide some untimely headlines.

But if all goes well for Jensen Huang and his company, they could be the first ever $5 trillion market cap stock. Or if you want to dream big, maybe even $10 trillion.

This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.
Commodities weekly: The great divergence – metals surge while energy slumps

Posted on: Dec 13 2025

Key Points:

  • The Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOM) is heading for a weekly decline of around 1.5%, trimming the year-to-date gain to just over 16%, with dispersion doing most of the storytelling (energy down, metals up hard).
  • The macro backdrop turned a touch more supportive for metals after the fed delivered another 25 bp cut (despite dissents) driving down the dollar and yields.
  • Energy is still trading the “developing glut” narrative: crude and products softened, while us natural gas took the week’s biggest hit on milder weather.
  • Metals kept running: silver extended its record run, copper pushed to fresh highs, and gold looked re-energised after consolidating around $4,200.
  • Cocoa’s strong week is also a “flows story”: it’s being reintroduced to BCOM in 2026, with the annual reweighting set to reshuffle sector/commodity weights and potentially trigger index-related demand

The Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOM) is heading for a weekly decline of around 1.5%, trimming the year-to-date gain to just over 16%. On the surface, it has been a softer week for the broader complex, but once again the headline number masks an increasingly pronounced divergence beneath. Energy prices continued to weaken, led by a sharp slump in US natural gas, while metals delivered yet another outsized performance, with silver and copper both pushing into fresh record territory and gold showing renewed signs of strength.

This growing gap between sectors is becoming one of the defining features of the commodity landscape as we approach year-end and look ahead to early 2026. While the BCOM All Metals Index is now up around 43% year-to-date, the energy sub-index is down close to 10%, a split that reflects a very different balance of supply, demand and investor conviction across the two complexes.

The big 2025 performance divergence between metals and energy

Looking ahead: Will this year’s losers become next year’s winners?

Ahead of the last full trading week of the year, trading activity will continue to dwindle, potentially supporting prevailing trends with no major appetite to make any major position change into a period of thin liquidity. From a strategic perspective, the widening mentioned divergence between surging metals and faltering energy markets is becoming harder to ignore.

Into early 2026, this sets up an interesting playbook. If global growth stabilises and the dollar continues to soften, metals – both precious and industrial – remain well positioned, supported by structural demand from electrification, AI infrastructure and ongoing investor interest in hard assets. Energy, by contrast, may need clearer evidence of tightening balances or supply discipline before sentiment eventually improves, as we believe it will especially towards the second half of 2026.

Fed rate cuts, softer dollar and yields providing tailwinds

This week’s FOMC meeting provided an important macro backdrop, even if it did not deliver any major surprises. Despite some objections within the committee, the Federal Reserve went ahead with another 25-basis-point rate cut. The immediate market reaction was a modest bull steepening of the US yield curve, with two-year yields moving lower while ten-year yields edged slightly higher.

For commodities, and metals in particular, the more important signal came from the currency and rates complex. The Bloomberg Dollar Index slipped around 0.6% to a two-month low, reinforcing the view that the dollar may be losing momentum. Combined with easing front-end rates, this helped underpin demand for hard assets, especially those already supported by strong physical and structural demand narratives.

At the same time, longer-dated yields remaining relatively firm speaks to persistent concerns around US fiscal dynamics and debt sustainability. That combination – lower policy rates, a softer dollar and unresolved fiscal anxieties – continues to provide a fertile backdrop for precious metals, even during periods when momentum temporarily pauses.

One week Bloomberg Commodity Total Returns

Metals turbocharged by momentum and strong fundamentals

Silver extended its extraordinary run, gaining another 10% on the week and pushing its year-to-date return to 118%. The rally has been driven by a powerful combination of factors: gold-led investor demand, a decisive technical breakout earlier in the year, and growing recognition that silver’s industrial role – particularly in solar energy, electrification and data-centre infrastructure – leaves demand relatively price-inelastic in the short term.

For now, silver continues to lead, with the tail wagging the dog as reflected in the gold–silver ratio sliding to a four-year low below 68, and near its 30-year average. The main risk to the upside is profit-taking in silver given current overbought conditions as seen through an RSI near 80 which last time it happened in October drove a quick and sharp 16% correction to near USD 45. Applying the same retracement mechanics, a correction from current levels is likely to find strong support in the USD 54.50 to 56.50 area. That said, support remains firm amid robust industrial demand, tight conditions in the London cash market where lease rates remain elevated and continued inflows into silver ETFs.

Silver's relentless rally supported by demand for ETFs - Source: Saxo

Copper stockpiles monitored by the three major exchanges rose to a seven-year high this week at 661 kt. Yet despite swelling inventories copper continued to push higher, with LME prices printing fresh all-time highs and year-to-date gains approaching the mid-30% area. One reason being the dramatic shift in the composition of those stocks with a record 405.8 kt, or 61.4% of the total, now held in US COMEX warehouses. This time last year, COMEX stocks stood at just 15.2 kt, equivalent to just 7% of global exchange-monitored inventories.

The looming US tariff threat has upended normal trade flows, effectively stranding a large share of global copper supplies in the United States — a relatively minor consumer in the global copper market — thereby tightening availability elsewhere and underpinning prices. In addition, speculative interest is increasing at a time of persistent supply concerns from the mining sector. Notably, the rally has unfolded despite continued economic softness in China, underlining that the current copper story is increasingly driven by supply constraints and demand tied to energy transition and AI-related infrastructure.

Gold, while less spectacular on a week-to-week basis, resumed its push toward the October record after spending the past couple of weeks consolidating around USD 4,200. The metal added around 3% on the week, supported by the softer dollar, easing front-end yields and ongoing central-bank and institutional demand. Importantly, gold’s ability to hold firm during periods of rising real yields earlier this year has reinforced its role as a hedge against fiscal and geopolitical uncertainty rather than a simple rates trade.

We remain constructive on precious metals into 2026 amid tight conditions in the physical market and continued investor demand for hard assets driven by political and economic uncertainty. After an exceptional run, near-term upside looks more limited. However, any correction is more likely to trigger rotation within the complex rather than outright liquidation, with gold now appearing relatively inexpensive versus silver on a relative basis. Seasonally, gold often strengthens after the December FOMC meeting and into late February, a pattern that this year is reinforced by easier monetary conditions after the Fed announced fresh balance sheet expansion through Treasury bill purchases while President Trump is likely to choose 'easy money man' Kevin Hassett next year as the new Fed chair. 
Gold is pushing higher after consolidating around USD 4200 - Source: Saxo

Energy: supply glut a dominating concern into early 2026

Energy markets were once again the weakest part of the complex. Crude oil prices drifted lower as traders focused on the risk of a developing surplus in the coming months, with demand growth expectations failing to keep pace with rising supply. The sense that the market is well supplied, at least in the near term, continues to outweigh episodic geopolitical risk premiums.

Monthly oil market reports from OPEC and the IEA highlighted a continued divergence in forecasts with OPEC's 2026 forecast pointing to a balanced world market, while the International Energy Agency - while paring its projections - continues to expect a record surplus of more than 4 million barrels a day. Top trader Trafigura Group went further to say the surplus could amount to a "super glut" siting major new oil projects that were planned years ago and which are now coming on stream just as demand growth slows.

However, despite these predictions, Brent continues to trade above USD 60 with the forward curve not yet supporting the so-called carry trade which is required to remove crude from the market and into profitable storage plays for a period of time. In addition, Venezuela and Russian supply remain key wildcards that could suffer further disruptions amid sanctions enforcement and tanker seizures.

Refined products followed crude lower. Diesel, gasoil and gasoline all softened on the week, reinforcing the message that demand is not yet strong enough to tighten balances meaningfully as we move deeper into the winter.

Natural gas: volatility returns with a vengeance

US natural gas stood out as the week’s biggest mover, tumbling close to 18% in its worst weekly decline in nine months. January futures slid to around USD 4.2 per MMBtu as weather forecasts shifted decisively milder, sharply reducing expectations for near-term heating demand.

The speed and scale of the reversal is a timely reminder of just how weather-sensitive the gas market remains. Only weeks ago, prices had surged to multi-year highs near USD 5.5 per MMBtu on colder forecasts and robust LNG export demand. This week’s collapse highlights how quickly sentiment can turn once the weather narrative changes.

The weakness was mirrored in Europe, where gas prices fell to a 20-month low of EUR 26.6 per MWh (USD 9.13 per MMBtu), a year-over-year decline of 42%. Persistent mild weather has continued to suppress heating demand, while traders also keep an eye on any progress toward a potential Russia–Ukraine peace deal. Longer-range seasonal forecasts currently point to above-normal temperatures through the start of next year.

Agriculture: mixed fortunes beneath the surface

The agriculture sector is on track for a modest weekly loss, but here too the aggregate number hides significant variation.

Grains were broadly weaker, with soybeans once again in focus after a sharp tumble. Prices have been pressured by a combination of wrong-footed speculative length and disappointment over the pace of Chinese buying. Expectations earlier in the year that China would return aggressively to the US market have so far not been met, leaving a sizeable amount of speculative positioning exposed as prices roll over. Corn and wheat also struggled, reflecting ample supply and limited near-term demand catalysts.

In contrast, parts of the softs and livestock complex continued to perform well. Sugar and coffee edged higher, while live cattle and feeder cattle extended their strong year-to-date runs, supported by tight supply conditions and firm demand.

Cocoa deserves special mention. Prices surged more than 10% on the week to USD 6,300, thereby continuing its rebound from its recent low at USD 5,0000, and while the market tightness has eased in recent months, there is an additional structural factor at play. Cocoa is set to re-enter the Bloomberg Commodity Index in 2026 as part of the annual reweighting, a change that is already drawing attention to potential index-related flows into a relatively small and illiquid market.

Index reweighting sees the return of cocoa to the BCOM family

The upcoming annual reweighting of the BCOM index adds another layer as we head into year-end, with cocoa set to return and the index expanding to 25 contracts in 2026. While reweightings do not alter fundamentals, they can influence short-term price action, particularly in smaller and tighter markets where passive flows matter.

At the sector level, energy’s weight edges lower to 29.4%, driven by reduced allocations to Natural Gas (7.2%) and WTI (6.6%), while Brent rises to a record 8.4% and becomes the dominant crude benchmark. Precious metals increase slightly to 18.8%, with gold remaining the largest single component at 14.9%. Industrial metals rise to 15.8%, led by a meaningful increase in copper’s weight to 6.4%, reinforcing the index’s tilt toward electrification themes. Grains are reduced to 21.2%, while Livestock rises to 5.6% and Softs to 9.2%, reflecting both cocoa’s return and a broader emphasis on agricultural diversification.

BCOM keeps applying its usual diversification rules: no sector above 33%, no single commodity plus its derivatives above 25%, no single commodity above 15%, and a 2% minimum per commodity where liquidity allows. Weights are derived from liquidity and production data in a roughly 2:1 ratio, so the 2026 shifts are mostly a mechanical response to changing market size and tradability rather than discretionary macro views

A breakdown of the BCOM sector index weights for 2026
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Ole HansenHead of Commodity StrategySaxo Bank
Topics: Commodities Trump Version 2 - Traders Federal Reserve Gold Inflation Copper Industrials Agriculture Silver Crude Oil Gas Oil Heating Oil Oil and Gas Oil Corn Wheat Natural Gas