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Morning Bid: Inflation test focuses Fed row

By Thomson Reuters Jan 13, 2026 | 5:58 AM

By Mike Dolan

Jan 13 –

What matters in U.S. and global markets today

By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Finance and Markets

The market’s relatively modest reaction to new threats to Federal Reserve independence this week owes much to the torrent of additional information hitting investors. Inflation and corporate earnings updates are coming down the pike on Tuesday.

A frenetic news overload since the start of the year has failed to shake Wall Street stocks from record highs, while overseas attention on Iran tensions saw crude oil prices hit their highest in almost two months. Japan’s yen and bonds also slid anew on speculation about snap elections there.

I’ll get into all the market-moving news below, but first check out my latest ‍column, where I look at President Trump’s forceful efforts to cut the cost of credit further.

And listen to the latest episode of the Morning Bid daily podcast. Subscribe to hear Reuters journalists discuss the biggest news in markets and finance seven days a week.

Today’s Market Minute

* Global central bank officials are planning to release a coordinated statement of support for U.S. ​Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Tuesday, stressing the need for independent central banking, according to two sources.

* UBS CEO Sergio Ermotti, who oversaw the Swiss bank’s emergency takeover of former rival Credit Suisse, plans to step down in April 2027, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday.

* U.S. President Donald Trump said that any countries that does business with Iran will face a tariff rate of 25% on any trade with the U.S.

* If record-high U.S. stock prices accurately reflect investors’ assessment of Trump 2.0, then it’s a glowing scorecard for the most interventionist government in decades. But ROI Finance Columnist Jamie McGeever asks how long Wall Street can keep looking the other way.

* The post-war system of international laws and norms is on ‌the ropes, but that does not mean the global order is totally dead, argues Hugo Dixon for Reuters Breakingviews. Other countries, especially in Europe, can salvage something of it, ‌particularly if they muscle up.

Inflation test focuses Fed row

A relatively modest market reaction to new threats on Federal Reserve independence this week owes much to the torrent of additional information hitting investors, with inflation and corporate earnings updates coming down the pike on Tuesday.

A frenetic news overload since the start of the year has failed to shake Wall Street stocks from record highs, while overseas attention on Iran tensions saw crude oil prices hit their highest in almost two months and Japan’s yen and bonds slid anew on snap election speculation there.

Monday’s focus on the potential criminal indictment of Fed Chair Jerome Powell knocked the dollar and saw gold hit new records – but the greenback found its feet overnight and gold fell back again.

Three reasons are generally ​cited for the limited market reaction to what Powell himself described as “pretexts” for undermining Fed independence.

The first was the scale of pushback from both Powell and former Fed chiefs, echoed by some Republicans in the U.S. Senate and finance leaders around the world. A second is that markets have been braced for this battle already and want to see how the many moving parts interact before staking new positions. And a third is the sheer difficulty in separating the issue from a ‍welter of other major economic and political developments so far in January.

With U.S. GDP growth running north of 4% into the end of last ​year, Tuesday’s consumer price update for December will show whether that level of heat is being reflected in prices. Core CPI inflation is expected to pick up a notch to 2.7% ​from November’s peculiarly soft reading and still well above the Fed’s target.

While two further rate cuts are still baked into futures markets for 2026, the next cut is not fully priced now until late July – perhaps emboldened by the Fed’s bristling at political ‍interference, at least for as long as Powell remains in the chair until May.

U.S. Treasury yields were calm amid the Fed row on Monday as the week’s heavy debt sale schedule got underway, but yields across the curve are edging higher into the CPI release. Two-year yields hit their highest in almost a month and 10-year yields are stalking their highest since September.

Aggravating the picture was the renewed rise in oil prices, with U.S. crude at the highest since early November on Iran supply disruption concerns amid U.S. military threats due to Tehran’s crackdown on a wave of anti-government protests.

President Donald Trump said on Monday that any country doing business with Iran will be subjected to a tariff rate of 25% in the United States. Iran exports much of its oil to China.

Having recovered early losses on Monday, U.S. stock index futures are a touch lower again into today’s open.

The fourth-quarter earnings season also kicks off later, with reports from JPMorgan ‍and Bank of New York Mellon expected to start a bumper quarter for banks’ fee income amid a pick-up in deal-making activity late last year. Trump’s plans for a credit card rate cap, however, knocked financial stocks on Monday.

In high-flying tech, Alphabet briefly hit $4 ​trillion in market valuation on Monday, as the Google parent’s sharpened artificial intelligence focus allayed ‌doubts about its strategy and thrust it back to the forefront of the high-stakes race.

Alphabet said the next-generation of Apple’s AI models will be ‍based on Google’s Gemini under a multi-year deal.

Overseas, Japan’s markets returned from Monday’s holiday to dwell ‍on the prospect of a snap election there as soon as next month. The yen plunged to its weakest since July 2024 after reports Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has ​told her party’s executive of her intention to dissolve parliament’s lower house when its new session starts on January 23.

Japan’s 20-year government bond yield climbed to record highs, with ​the 10-year yield at ⁠its highest since 1999. Yen weakness, however, helped lift the Nikkei stock index more than 3%.

Chart of the day

As investors await Tuesday’s consumer price report, the latest ‌surveys on households’ inflation expectations have seen the near-term view of the pace of price rises climbing again – even though longer-term expectations remain steady. At about 3% for three- and five-year horizons, these are not far from the pre-pandemic outlooks, although they remain far above the 2% inflation rate the Fed is trying to target.

Today’s events to watch

* US December consumer prices (8:30 AM EDT), US October new home sales (10:00 AM EDT), US December Federal Budget (2:00 PM EDT); Canada November building permits (8:30 AM EDT)

* US corporate earnings: JPMorgan, Bank of New York Mellon, Delta Air Lines

* Richmond Federal Reserve President Tom Barkin and St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem speak

* US Treasury sells $22 billion of 30-year bonds

* Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney visits China

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Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, ⁠and freedom from bias.

(By Mike Dolan; Editing by Hugh Lawson)