|

Nasdaq gives up some gains after Google sinks in after hours trade, Oil falls on supply build and Venezuelan optimism

Financial markets yielded many moves that lacked conviction.  The US dollar slightly rallied against most of its major trading partners as US stocks continued to rally, and global yields moved higher across the board.  Both an emphasis on central bank rate decisions and corporate earnings will be a key theme for the week.  Several Fed members are also due to speak this week and they are widely expected to maintain the dovish pivot that Fed Chair Powell delivered last month.  President Trump’s State of the Union Address is also on the docket for Tuesday and he could signal key areas where progress has been made on trade talks.  The government is funded through February 15th and Trump’s battle with Democrats for border wall funding could be coming to an end with the Democrats possibly compromising by accepting an enhanced barrier that is not a border wall.

STOCKS

US stocks gains were driven by the Nasdaq as both optimism on the trade front supported the rally and M&A activity signaled the tech sector could see further deals, a good sign for the broader market.  Technology stocks have been one of the best sectors over the past month and today’s gains were driven by both optimism trade talks between China and US will not fall apart and by a private equity deal in the CRM software space.  Ultimate Software will go private after accepting an $11 billion cash offer from an investor group led by Hellman & Friedman.  If M&A activity picks up, it is viewed as a positive sign that companies are confident to move forward on deals despite uncertainty with trade wars and geo-political risks.

GOOGLE

Alphabet reported strong earning results after the close with a beat on both the top and bottom line.  Paid clicks on Google properties rose 66% while cost per click fell 29% annually.  Shares reversed their initial surge higher as traders focused on Google’s reduction on cost per clicks by 29%, possibly reflecting a deceleration in revenue growth.    The Nasdaq gave up some gains in after hours trade following Alphabet’s results.

OIL

Oil prices pulled back after Genscape reported US crude supplies at Cushing climbed 944,000 barrels last week.  While the recent run up for crude has been supported by the shortfall of Venezuela’s dense crude oil from sanctions, global support is growing for opposition leader Juan Guaido and that could spell the end for Maduro if he is successful in winning over China’s support.  Maduro is also speculated to have attempted funds to Uruguay, a potential sign he is getting desperate in liquidating government assets before conceding to having fresh elections.

BREXIT

A steady flow of Brexit headlines filtered throughout the day, but nothing of substance that will provide any insight as to how PM May will try to win concessions from the EU for a new Brexit deal.  She will need new a new plan to be voted on by February 13th, if she fails Parliament will vote the next day on what to do next.

Gold 

Gold remained vulnerable as the strong dollar kept the precious metal heavy for a second consecutive day.  The yellow metal could see a further pullback here as optimism grew the US would avoid a recession as US yields rose across the board and the spread between 10-year and 2-year Treasury yields widened to 18.7 basis points.  Continued upbeat news for the US economy could put a dent for traders looking for further upside with the precious metal.

Author

Ed Moya

Ed Moya

MarketPulse

With more than 20 years’ trading experience, Ed Moya is a market analyst with OANDA, producing up-to-the-minute fundamental analysis of geo-political events and monetary policies in the US, Europe, the Middle East and North Africa.

More from Ed Moya
Share:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD bounces toward 1.1750 as US Dollar loses strength

EUR/USD returned to the 1.1750 price zone in the American session on Friday, despite falling Wall Street, which indicates risk aversion. Trading conditions remain thin following the New Year holiday and ahead of the weekend, with the focus shifting to US employment and European data scheduled for next week.

GBP/USD nears 1.3500, holds within familiar levels

After testing 1.3400 on the last day of 2025, GBP/USD managed to stage a rebound. Nevertheless, the pair finds it difficult to gather momentum and trades with modest intraday gains at around 1.3490 as market participants remain in holiday mood.

Gold trims intraday gains, approaches $4,300

Gold retreated sharply from the $4,400  area and trades flat for the day in the $4,320 price zone. Choppy trading conditions exacerbated the intraday decline, although XAU/USD bearish case is out of the picture, considering growing expectations for a dovish Fed and persistent geopolitical tensions.

Cardano gains early New Year momentum, bulls target falling wedge breakout

Cardano kicks off the New Year on a positive note and is extending gains, trading above $0.36 at the time of writing on Friday. Improving on-chain and derivatives data point to growing bullish interest, while the technical outlook keeps an upside breakout in focus.

Economic outlook 2026-2027 in advanced countries: Solidity test

After a year marked by global economic resilience and ending on a note of optimism, 2026 looks promising and could be a year of solid economic performance. In our baseline scenario, we expect most of the supportive factors at work in 2025 to continue to play a role in 2026.

Crypto market outlook for 2026

Year 2025 was volatile, as crypto often is.  Among positive catalysts were favourable regulatory changes in the U.S., rise of Digital Asset Treasuries (DAT), adoption of AI and tokenization of Real-World-Assets (RWA).