A bull cycle in WTI futures remains intact. However, Monday’s impulsive sell-off highlights the beginning of a corrective phase. Attention is on support at the 20-day EMA, at $61.01. The 50-day EMA lies at $59.74. A clear breach of the 50-day average would highlight a stronger reversal and open $58.53, the Jan 20 low. Key resistance and the bull trigger has been defined at $66.48, the Jan 30 high. Gold has recovered from Monday’s low. However, the sharp sell-off from last week’s high still highlights a potential top in the L/T trend and from a S/T perspective, marks an unwinding of the recent extreme overbought condition. The metal has pierced the 50-day EMA, at $4551.2. A clear break of this average would signal scope for a deeper retracement and open $4274.7, the Dec 31 ‘25 low. Initial resistance is 4999.2, a Fibonacci retracement.
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The Dallas Fed's Weekly Economic Index concluded 2026 on a bright note, with the 4-quarter-scaled GDP growth rate ticking up in the Dec 27 week to 2.23% Y/Y from 2.21% prior.

Next Friday's release of the December employment report is the highlight of the week's macro calendar. Our usual preview will be out early next week but early consensus expectations are for relatively steady readings vs November, with 55k nonfarm payroll gains (64k in Nov) and an unemployment rate of 4.5% (4.6% in Nov), with a slight moderation in participation and an uptick in hourly earnings growth.


Germany, Spain, and France are scheduled to kick off auction issuance for the year in the upcoming week. We pencil in issuance of E55.5bln for the week, after this week saw no scheduled operations amid the holiday period. Slovenia will also hold a syndication in the week with syndications also possible from Austria, Belgium, Germany, Ireland, Portugal and the EFSF.
NOMINAL FLOWS: The upcoming week will see no redemptions. Coupon payments for the week total E4.1bln of which E4.0bln are from Germany. This leaves estimated net flows for the week at positive E51.4bln, versus negative E1.4bln this week.