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investingLive Americas market news wrap: CPI lower but US stock markets fade late

Posted on: Feb 14 2026

  • US January CPI +2.4% y/y vs +2.5% expected
  • Fed's Goolsbee sees encouraging and concerning parts of the CPI report
  • US Supreme Court says next Friday will be a decision day
  • US Treasury secretary Bessent says that metals tariffs decision will be up to Trump
  • Oil prices dip on report that OPEC+ may resume oil output hikes from April
  • The haven from the AI disruption might be a HALO
  • BoE's Pill: Disinflation is not as rapid or convincing as hoped

Markets:

  • Gold up $112 to $5032
  • WTI crude oil down 24-cents to $62.60
  • US 10-year yields down 5.4 bps to 4.05%
  • Bitcoin up $3000 to $68,815
  • GBP leads, AUD lags
  • S&P 500 flat

US equity futures were deeply negative ahead of the CPI report but rebounded to unchanged afterwards as the numbers mostly cooled. After the open, bids steadily picked up and the S&P rose nearly 50 points at the peak. But late in the day the bears took over again and sent it into negative territory before a last minute bounce to flat. Shares of Amazon fell for the ninth straight day.

The reaction elsewhere to the data was typically dovish as the US dollar slid and bonds rallied. The strength in fixed income is increasingly noticeable as investors look for a safe haven away from the intense volatility.

The pound led the way on the hawkish comments from BOE chief economist Pill. The initial push came in Europe as cable rose a quarter cent to 1.3625 but after some selling into the London fix there was a second wave of bids late and a finish above 1.3650. Elsewhere it was more of a choppy day in FX with small moves.

Gold posted an impressive rebound following the mysterious gap down yesterday. The $150 straight-line drop has almost been completely recovered as it climbed $80 in North American trade.

Note that Monday is a holiday in Canada and the USA; enjoy the long weekend.

This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
Goldman flags substantial downside risk to January jobs report

Posted on: Feb 11 2026

Goldman Sachs expects January U.S. payrolls to undershoot forecasts, citing model effects and subdued hiring signals despite limited layoff pressure.

Earlier:

  • Preview: January non-farm payrolls by the numbers. The consensus is high

Summary:

  • Goldman sees January payrolls at +45k

  • Forecast below market consensus

  • Birth-death model a key downside risk

  • Layoff indicators relatively supportive

  • Labour market cooling gradually

U.S. job growth is expected to slow in January, with hiring likely to undershoot market expectations, according to a new research note from Goldman Sachs.

The bank estimates that nonfarm payrolls rose by around 45,000 in January, below the consensus forecast of roughly 70,000 and under the recent two-month average pace of just over 50,000. Private-sector payrolls are also seen increasing by about 45,000, compared with expectations closer to 75,000.

Goldman points to several factors that could weigh on the official employment tally. A key uncertainty is the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ birth-death model, which will be updated in the January report. The bank estimates this revision could subtract 30,000 to 50,000 jobs from headline payroll growth. In addition, a range of alternative or “big data” employment indicators tracked by Goldman suggest hiring momentum remained subdued, averaging gains of around 40,000 during the month.

Government hiring is also expected to provide little support, with public-sector payrolls forecast to be broadly unchanged. Meanwhile, measures of labour demand have softened. While some alternative indicators showed job openings holding up late last year, the Conference Board’s labour differential fell sharply in January to its lowest level since early 2021, signalling weaker perceptions of job availability.

That said, Goldman notes several offsetting forces that could limit downside risks. Layoff indicators improved modestly, with initial jobless claims declining in January and surveys showing fewer firms reporting employment reductions. Seasonal factors, which typically anticipate large early-year job losses, have also adjusted over time, reducing the scope for a negative seasonal drag.

The bank also expects rebounds in retail and construction employment, following weaker-than-usual holiday hiring and weather-related disruptions in December. In addition, the resolution of labour strikes is expected to add a small boost to January payrolls.

Overall, Goldman argues the balance of evidence points to moderate but softer job growth, reinforcing a narrative of gradual cooling rather than abrupt deterioration in U.S. labour market conditions.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.