|

French PM faces two votes of no confidence

In focus today

In the UK, August GDP-data is released. After a strong Q1, the economy has slowed, which is bad news for the Labour government ahead of the November budget, where the fiscal wiggle room is very limited.

In France, Premier Lecornu will face two votes of no confidence in parliament starting at 9:00 CET called by the far-right and far-left, respectively. It is expected that he survives due to backing from the Socialists and Republican Party.

Economic and market news

What happened yesterday

In the US, a federal judge temporarily blocked mass layoffs of federal workers during the government shutdown, citing alleged political motivations behind the cuts. The Trump administration had planned to lay off over 10,000 workers, with 4,100 already notified. The case, brought by unions, challenges the legality of such layoffs during the shutdown.

In Sweden, final September inflation data confirmed earlier estimates, with CPIF at 3.1% year-on-year and CPIF excluding energy at 2.7%. Rental car prices and package holidays declined as expected, reflecting seasonal adjustments, while food prices fell by 0.8% month-on-month. The release offers no surprises, aligning with the Riksbank's signal of unchanged policy for now.

In China, credit data indicated aggregate financing beat expectations in September, but the credit impulse weakened, reflecting fading stimulus effects from earlier this year. Government issuance slowed, and private credit demand remained subdued.

In Norway, the government published the fiscal budget for 2026. The government expects to spend 2.8% of the value of the Petroleum Fund, exactly in line with Norges Bank's assumption from the September MPR. The budget effect on the economy is expected to be slightly expansionary, at 0.1% of GDP. Overall, this should be neutral for monetary policy outlook. Keep in mind that the minority government is dependent on four other parties to get the budget through the Parliament.

In Japan, coalition negotiations for forming a new government are ongoing, with no agreement yet on a date for the prime ministerial vote, which is unlikely before next week. Uncertainty remains as discussions continue.

Equities: Equities were mostly higher on Thursday - an impressive performance given that investors are effectively flying blind amid the government shutdown and the resulting lack of macroeconomic data. Nevertheless, markets continue to find alternative sources of information, with banks emphasising continued consumer resilience and generally positive takeaways for ASML. Sector and style trends continue to indicate a solid appetite for risk: cyclicals are outperforming defensives this week and small caps are beating large caps. Yesterday, the Russell 2000 rose 1%, the S&P 500 gained 0.4%, and the Stoxx 600 advanced 0.6%. Notably, performance broadened to include yield-sensitive sectors such as real estate and utilities, while value cyclicals - including materials, industrials, and banks - saw some profit-taking. Futures are little changed this morning.

FI and FX: US equity indices closed in green after a choppy session. European government bond yields continue to decline from the long end while the 10Y OAT-Bund spread tightens as PM Lecornu is seen to survive the vote of confidence. EURUSD adds to gains and trades slightly north on 1.1650. EUR/Scandies have had a wobbly week so far, though EURNOK and EURSEK remain within familiar ranges after they edged higher yesterday.

Author

Danske Research Team

Danske Research Team

Danske Bank A/S

Research is part of Danske Bank Markets and operate as Danske Bank's research department. The department monitors financial markets and economic trends of relevance to Danske Bank Markets and its clients.

More from Danske Research Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD flat lines below 1.1900; divergent Fed-ECB expectations offer support

The EUR/USD pair struggles to capitalize on the overnight bounce from the 1.1835-1.1830 region and oscillates in a narrow band during the Asian session on Thursday. Spot prices currently trade around the 1.1875 area, remaining nearly unchanged for the day and staying within striking distance of an over one-week high, reached on Tuesday, amid mixed cues.

GBP/USD slips heading into the Thursday trading window

The Pound Sterling pulled back from four-year highs on Wednesday, weighed down by a combination of Bank of England dovishness and UK political uncertainty, even as the US Dollar weakened on soft labor market revisions. 

Gold posts modest gains above $5,050 as US-Iran tensions persist despite strong labor data

Gold price trades in positive territory near $5,060 during the early Asian session on Thursday. The precious metal edges higher despite stronger-than-expected US employment data. The release of the US Consumer Price Index inflation report will take center stage later on Friday. 

Bitcoin holds steady despite strong US labour market

Bitcoin briefly bounced from $66,000 to above $68,000 but slightly reversed those gains following Wednesday's US January jobs report. The top crypto is hovering around $67,000, down 2% over the past 24 hours as of writing on Wednesday.

The market trades the path not the past

The payroll number did not just beat. It reset the tone. 130,000 vs. 65,000 expected, with a 35,000 whisper. 79 of 80 economists leaning the wrong way. Unemployment and underemployment are edging lower. For all the statistical fog around birth-death adjustments and seasonal quirks, the core message was unmistakable. The labour market is not cracking.

XRP sell-off deepens amid weak retail interest, risk-off sentiment

Ripple (XRP) is edging lower around $1.36 at the time of writing on Wednesday, weighed down by low retail interest and macroeconomic uncertainty, which is accelerating risk-off sentiment.