fxs_header_sponsor_anchor

Analysis

Traders to navigate German debt brake vote

Traders to navigate German debt brake vote

EU mid-market update: Traders to navigate German debt brake vote, Trump/Putin talks and NVIDIA conf ahead of tonight's BOJ decision which kicks off a dozen rate decisions before week end.

Notes/observations

- European equities opened higher, extending gains from Asia, though US futures dipped and now reaching for flat. DAX led charge, up 1% to near-record levels, driven by optimism around Germany’s debt brake reform vote. Autos surged, while defense stocks like Rheinmetall also gained. Real estate and household goods lagged.

- German Bundestag votes today on a €500B debt package to boost defense, infrastructure, and climate initiatives by amending the debt brake. CDU/CSU, SPD, and Greens back the plan, but securing 489 votes may get uncertain due to internal dissent. Key provisions include unlimited defense borrowing, major transport upgrades, and a Green-driven climate neutrality goal. If passed, the Bundesrat votes Friday, with CDU, SPD, and Green-led states likely securing the needed 46 of 69 votes. The result will shape Germany’s fiscal policy and Merz’s coalition prospects.

- Eyes are on US-Russia discussions, with Trump and Putin set to speak today around 09:00ET. Progress could ease geopolitical tensions, pressuring the dollar and supporting risk assets. UK and EU are advancing plans to seize Russian assets to boost defense spending.

- NVIDIA GTC 2025 will spotlight major advancements in AI and GPU technology, with CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote on today around 13:00ET expected to introduce the Blackwell Ultra (B300) GPUs featuring 288GB of memory for AI training. The conference may also preview the next-gen Rubin series, slated for 2026, alongside discussions on Rubin Ultra and post-Rubin architectures. A dedicated “quantum day” will highlight Nvidia’s role in quantum computing. Analysts anticipate a strong emphasis on Blackwell advancements, AI inference, and forward-looking innovations in 3nm chips, AI workstations, and quantum computing, reinforcing Nvidia’s leadership in AI-driven computing.

- Economic data was thin. Spain’s trade deficit widened to €6.19B in Jan, the largest since Oct 2022, on weak exports (-1.2% YoY) and surging imports (+6.2%). Hong Kong’s jobless rate rose to 3.2%, a two-year high.

- UK 10-year gilts rose 4bps to 4.678%, tracking Bunds, as markets await German fiscal plans and Thursday’s BoE decision (rates expected on hold).

- Asia closed higher with Hang Seng outperforming +2.5%. EU indices +0.5-1.3%. US futures 0.0%. Gold +0.7%, DXY -0.1%; Commodity: Brent +1.3%, WTI +1.3%; Crypto: BTC -0.7%, ETH -0.3%.

Asia

- Japan Fin Min Kato noted that bond market should determine yield movements. Govt would respond appropriately while allowing market forces to drive bond price fluctuation.

Global conflict/tensions

- Israeli military confirmed to have carried out 'extensive' strikes on Gaza targets belonging to Hamas; Offensive to continue as long as necessary, and will expand beyond airstrikes.

- Russia President Putin and Trump to speak on Tuesday about the war in Ukraine.

- Pres Trump administration said to discuss recognizing Crimea as part of Russia as sweetener for ending war in Ukraine.

Americas

- Trump confirmed Fed's Bowman is his nominee for Vice Chair of bank supervision (as expected).

- President Trump: China's President Xi would coming to Washington in the not too distant future.

Speakers/Fixed income/FX/commodities/erratum

Equities

Indices [Stoxx600 +0.53% at 553.84, FTSE +0.36% at 8,711.84, DAX +0.92% at 23,343.85, CAC-40 +0.49% at 8,113.70, IBEX-35 +0.73% at 13,224.12, FTSE MIB +0.71% at 39,298.00, SMI +0.14% at 13,076.50, S&P 500 Futures -0.02%].

Market focal points/key themes: European indices open higher across the board and advanced through the early part of the session; markets focused on German debt brake reform; among sectors leading the way higher are energy and industrials; lagging sectors include consumer discretionary and communication services; reportedly BAE systems looking to buy Iveco’s defense unit; German and Euroarea ZEW survey scheduled for later in the day; corporate events expected in the upcoming US session include Adobe Investor summit and investors days at Corning and The Mosaic Group.

Equities

- Energy: SFC Energy [F3C.DE] +11.0% (Receives follow-up order from long-standing Canadian Government customer), Rubis [RUI.FR] -3.0% (analyst downgrade - cut to hold at Kepler) - Financials: Close Brothers [CBG.UK] -14.5% (earnings).

- Industrials: ThyssenKrupp [TKA.DE] +6.5% (Germany's next defense budget said to favor European suppliers - press), Fraport [FRA.DE] -4.0% (FY24 results) - Technology: ASML [ASML.NL] +2.0% (EU chip names higher ahead of NVDA GTC conference), Computacenter [CCC.UK] +11.5% (FY24 results).

Speakers

- ECB's Rehn (Finland) noted that growth in the region was picking up gradually; inflation outlook was two-sided. Monetary policy was becoming meaningfully less restrictive. Reiterated Council not on any pre-determined rate path.

- Norway Stats Agency (SSB) updates its Economic Outlook which cut the 2025 Mainland GDP growth forecast from 1.8% to 1.2% and raised the 2025 Underlying CPI from 2.8% to 3.1%.

- Bank of Korea (BOK) Feb Minutes saw a member call for policy coordination with govt. Member noted that policy should focus more on economic recovery. Economic growth expected to be below forecast.

- China Foreign Min Wang stated that China trade policies with EU were stable; Welcomed Airbus to enhance investment in China.

Currencies/fixed income

- USD was on soft footing as the greenback tested multi-month lows against various European pairs.USD expressing broad weakness ahead of key rate decisions ths week,

- EUR/USD tested 1.0950 ahead of the German Bundestag debate and vote on spending measures. Dealers noted optimism over business sentiment and a historic key parliamentary vote on fiscal expansion. Bundestag poised to approve a change to the constitution, abandoning the fiscal stance Germany has always been known for

- GBP/USD probed the 1.30 level for the 1st time since Nov ahead of BOE rate decision.

- USD/JPY tested the 150 level before consolidating ahead of Wed’s BOJ rate decision.

- 10-year German Bund yield at 2.84% and 10-year Gilt yield at 4.67%. 10-year Treasury yield at 4.31%.

Economic data

- (HK) Hong Kong Feb Unemployment Rate: 3.2% v 3.1%e.

- (IT) Italy Jan Total Trade Balance: -€0.3B v +€5.8B prior; EU Trade Balance: -€0.6B v -€2.0B prior.

Fixed income issuance

- (ZA) South Africa sold total ZAR3.75B vs. ZAR3.75B indicated in 2032, 2037 and 2048 bonds.

Looking ahead

- 06:00 (DE) Germany Mar ZEW Current Situation Survey: -80.5e v -88.5 prior; Expectations Survey: 48.3e v 26.0 prior.

- 06:00 (EU) Euro Zone Mar ZEW Expectations Survey: No est v 24.2 prior.

- 06:00 (EU) Euro Zone Jan Trade Balance: €13.8Be v €14.6B prior; Trade Balance (NSA): No est v €15.5B prior.

- 06:00 (EU) Daily Euribor Fixing.

- 06:00 (UK) DMO to sell £4.25B in 4.375% Mar 2028 Gilts.

- 06:15 (CH) Switzerland to sell 3-month Bills.

- 06:25 (EU) Daily ECB Liquidity Stats.

- 06:30 (HU) Hungary Debt Agency (AKK) to sell 3-Month Bills.

- 06:30 (EU) ECB allotment in 7-Day Main Refinancing Tender (MRO).

- 06:30 (PL) Poland to sell Fixed-rate Bonds.

- 06:30 (TR) Turkey to sell 3-year and 5-year Bonds (2 tranches).

- 07:00 (BR) Brazil Mar FGV Inflation IGP-10 M/M: 0.4%e v 0.9% prior.

- 07:00 (IE) Ireland Jan Trade Balance: No est v €6.5B prior.

- 07:00 (IL) Israel Feb Unemployment Rate: No est v 2.6% prior.

- 07:00 (FI) Finland to sell €1.0-1.5B in 2034 and 2038 RFGB Bonds.

- 07:30 (CL) Chile Q4 GDP Q/Q: 0.4%e v 0.7% prior; Y/Y: 3.7%e v 2.3% prior.

- 07:30 (CL) Chile Q4 Current Account Balance: -$2.5Be v -$3.1B prior.

- 07:30 (CL) Chile Central Bank Traders Survey.

- 07:30 (EU) ESM to sell 6-month bills.

- 08:30 (US) Feb Housing Starts: 1.385Me v 1.367M prior; Building Permits: 1.453Me v 1.473M prior.

- 08:30 (US) Feb Housing Starts M/M: +1.4%e v -9.8% prior Building Permits: M/M: -1.4%e v -0.6% prior.

- 08:30 (US) Feb Import Price Index M/M: -0.1%e v 0.3% prior; Y/Y: 1.6%e v 1.9% prior; Import Price Index (ex-petroleum) M/M: 0.2%e v 0.1% prior.

- 08:30 (US) Feb Export Price Index M/M: -0.2%e v 1.3% prior; Y/Y: No est v 2.7% prior.

- 08:30 (US) Mar New York Fed Services Business Activity: No est v -10.5 prior.

- 08:30 (CA) Canada Feb CPI M/M: 0.6%e v 0.1% prior; Y/Y: 2.2%e v 1.9% prior; CPI Core-Median Y/Y: 2.7%e v 2.7% prior; CPI Core-Trim Y/Y: 2.7%e v 2.7% prior; Consumer Price Index: 162.4e v 161.3 prior.

- 08:55 (US) Weekly Redbook LFL Sales data.

- 09:00 (UK) Daily Baltic Dry Bulk Index.

- 09:00 (RU) Russia announcement on upcoming OFZ bond issuance (held on Wed).

- 09:15 (US) US Feb Industrial Production M/M: 0.2%e v 0.5% prior; Capacity Utilization: 77.8%e v 77.8% prior; Manufacturing Production M/M:+0.3%e v -0.1% prior.

- 11:30 (US) Treasury to sell 52-Week Bills.

- 12:00 (CO) Colombia Jan Economic Activity Index (Monthly GDP) Y/Y: No est v 3.0% prior.

- 13:00 (US) Treasury to sell 20-Year Bond Reopening.

- 16:00 (NZ) New Zealand Q1 Westpac Consumer Confidence: No est v 97.5 prior.

- 16:30 (US) Weekly API Oil Inventories.

- 17:45 (NZ) New Zealand Q4 Current Account Balance (NZD): -6.7Be v -10.6B prior; Current Account GDP Ratio YTD: -6.1%e v -6.4% prior.

- 19:30 (AU) Australia Feb Westpac Leading Index M/M: No est v 0.12% prior.

- 19:50 (JP) Japan Feb Trade Balance: +¥688.3Be v -¥2.736T prior (revised from -¥2.759); Adj Trade Balance: +¥509.3Be v -¥856.6B prior; Exports Y/Y: 12.6%e v 7.3% prior (revised from 7.2%); Imports Y/Y: 0.8%e v 16.2% prior (revised from 16.7%).

- 19:50 (JP) Japan Jan Core Machine Orders M/M: -0.1%e v -1.2% prior; Y/Y: 6.6%e v 4.3% prior.

- 21:10 (KR) Bank of Korea to sell KRW1.0T in 3-year Bonds.

- 23:00 (TH) Thailand to sell THB8.0B indicated in 2050 Bonds.

- (JP) Bank of Japan (BOJ) Interest Rate Decision: Expected to leave Target Rate unchanged at 0.50% (no set time).  

Information on these pages contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. Markets and instruments profiled on this page are for informational purposes only and should not in any way come across as a recommendation to buy or sell in these assets. You should do your own thorough research before making any investment decisions. FXStreet does not in any way guarantee that this information is free from mistakes, errors, or material misstatements. It also does not guarantee that this information is of a timely nature. Investing in Open Markets involves a great deal of risk, including the loss of all or a portion of your investment, as well as emotional distress. All risks, losses and costs associated with investing, including total loss of principal, are your responsibility. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of FXStreet nor its advertisers.


RELATED CONTENT

Loading ...



Copyright © 2025 FOREXSTREET S.L., All rights reserved.