In this week’s edition:
· U.S. Stocks Closed 2025 in Positive Territory, Capping a Volatile Year Marked by Tariff Uncertainty Under President Trump and Strong AI-Driven Optimism
· Gold Gained 64.58% Last Year on Trade Tensions, Fed Rate-Cut Expectations, Geopolitical Uncertainty, and Central Bank Buying, but Fell 4.43% W/W at the Start of 2026 on Sell-Off Pressure
· Ghana’s Treasury Marks Sixth Consecutive Week of Oversubscription at 5.58%, With Mixed Yield Movements Across the Curve
· Ghanaian Equities End the Year in Green: GSE-CI Up 0.16% w/w to 79.40% FY, while the Financial Index Outperformed at 95.19% FY
Kindly click to view the full report: Global Markets Update - January 5, 2026
AROUND THE GLOBE
· Fed Likely to Reduce Rates This Year
o The minutes from the Fed's December meeting showed that most FOMC members believe rate cuts will likely be suitable this year if inflation gradually declines. However, policymakers were split on whether the bigger risk is persistent inflation or rising unemployment. Some members expressed more concern about entrenched inflation possibly needing higher interest rates, while others favored larger rate cuts to address a weakening labor market. At the December meeting, the federal funds rate was lowered by 25 basis points to a range of 3.5%–3.75%, which matched market expectations and marked the third and final cut of 2025.
· US Jobless Claims Drop to Near-Year Lows
o Initial jobless claims in the US fell by 16,000 to 199,000 in the week ending December 27, a typically volatile period due to the holiday season, and well below market expectations of 220,000. The reading marked the lowest level since January, excluding the seasonally volatile Thanksgiving week, when claims briefly dipped to a three-year low of 192,000. Continuing claims also declined, falling to 1.89 million in the week ending December 20 from a downwardly revised 1.91 million in the prior period.
· Eurozone Manufacturing Contraction Worse Than Expected
o The HCOB Eurozone Manufacturing PMI dropped to 48.8 in December 2025, signalling the fastest contraction since March and falling below previous estimates and November’s reading. Output and new orders declined, especially in Germany. Italy and Spain stayed in contraction, while France saw its strongest expansion since June 2022. Regional employment kept falling; job losses have lasted over two-and-a-half years, with declining backlogs indicating adequate capacity. Sales weakened despite discounts, input cost inflation hit a 16-month high, but firms remain most optimistic about the year ahead since before Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
· China's Services PMI Reaches Highest Level in Four Months
o China’s NBS Non-Manufacturing PMI rose to 50.2 in December 2025 from 49.5 in November, the highest since August and above expectations. This suggests government efforts boosted demand and supported service activity. New orders and employment declined but at a slower pace, while foreign demand remained weak. Supplier delivery times were stable, input costs rose modestly, and selling prices fell further. Overall sentiment hit a nine-month high due to optimism about policy support and domestic demand recovery.
GHANA
· Cryptocurrency Market Readies for Regulation after Presidential Approval
o Ghana’s crypto industry is preparing for formal regulation after the President assented to the VASP Bill 2025, which will introduce the country’s first legal framework for digital assets. Industry players at the WEB3 Accra summit welcomed the move, saying it will boost confidence and growth. The BoG and SEC will regulate the sector, with a two‑year transition period before licensing begins. Experts say regulation will improve security, protect users, and support innovation, while groups like Binance push for public education.
AFRICA
· Nigeria's Private Sector Continues Strong Growth
o Stanbic IBTC Bank Nigeria's PMI slipped slightly to 53.5 in December 2025 from 53.6 in November, yet still indicated strong monthly growth. Increased new orders, output, and purchasing activities pointed to greater customer demand. Although employment rose, job creation remained limited. Inflationary pressures edged up a bit in December but stayed near recent low levels. Importantly, business confidence saw a significant boost, reaching its highest point in six months due to planned investments such as business expansions, new branch openings, and enhanced product exports.
· Kenya's December Inflation Holds at 4.5%
o Kenya's inflation rate stayed at 4.5% in December 2025, unchanged from November and below the central bank’s 5% target midpoint for the 19th straight month. Food and non-alcoholic beverage prices rose by 7.8%. Inflation was influenced by shifts in transport, housing, and utilities, leading to a 0.6% rise in the Consumer Price Index over the previous month. During the festive season, higher demand caused bus, matatu, and flight fares to increase.
Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters, Trading Economics