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FXTRADING Economic Data Summary (Asia-Pacific | 02/05)
Abstract:Eurozone Services Continue to ExpandThe Eurozones final January services PMI remained above 51, indicating that economic activity is still in expansion territory, though the pace has eased compared wi

Eurozone Services Continue to Expand
The Eurozones final January services PMI remained above 51, indicating that economic activity is still in expansion territory, though the pace has eased compared with the end of last year. The composite PMI also edged slightly lower, suggesting that services continue to support overall growth, but with diminishing momentum. As the year begins, companies have become noticeably more cautious in their assessment of new orders and future demand, with expansion increasingly reliant on existing business rather than fresh growth.
Across member states, internal divergence remains evident. Spain continues to outperform, while Germany and Italy showed modest improvement, indicating that core economies have not deteriorated further. France, however, remains stuck in contraction, weighing on overall sentiment. Corporate feedback points to weak new business growth and restrained hiring intentions, implying that the current recovery reflects resilience rather than a broad-based rebound. FXTRADING analysis suggests that while the Eurozone services sector retains a degree of shock resistance, growth quality remains weak, with cost pressures coexisting alongside insufficient demand, leaving the European Central Bank with limited room to pivot quickly toward easing.

Japans Services Recovery Spreads Toward Manufacturing
Japans services sector showed a marked improvement in January, with the PMI rising sharply and lifting the composite index back into a more robust expansion range. Business activity accelerated to a multi-year high, indicating that operating conditions are improving at the start of the year, with services continuing to serve as the primary growth engine.
More notably, signs of recovery have begun to emerge in manufacturing as well. After a prolonged period of structural divergence, both manufacturing and services demand improved simultaneously for the first time, prompting firms to increase hiring in response to rising orders and to show greater willingness to expand capacity. This more balanced recovery reduces reliance on any single sector and enhances sustainability. FXTRADING analysis believes Japans economy is moving from a partial repair phase toward a broader-based upswing, and if demand improvement persists, the policy environment may face a renewed need for recalibration.

New Zealand Employment Shows Mixed Signals
New Zealands fourth-quarter employment data delivered a relatively complex picture. Employment growth exceeded expectations and the employment rate edged higher, indicating that firms are still creating jobs and that labor demand has not yet contracted materially. This performance partially offsets earlier concerns about economic slowdown.
At the same time, the unemployment rate continued to rise, reaching a multi-year high. A concurrent increase in the labor force participation rate suggests that more people are re-entering the job market, causing labor supply growth to outpace job absorption and pushing unemployment higher. Wage growth remained moderate, with neither private nor public sector pay showing signs of overheating, indicating that labor market tightness is easing. FXTRADING analysis suggests that while employment growth in New Zealand remains resilient, signs of marginal weakening are becoming clearer, with the labor market entering a cooling phase that will provide greater room for future policy adjustments.

Inflation Remains the Core Focus of US Policy
The Federal Reserves assessment of the economic outlook has become clearer. Multiple policies are providing support to demand, including improved fiscal cash flows, lower energy prices, and the cumulative effects of earlier monetary policy adjustments. Together, these factors have helped prevent a sharp slowdown, allowing employment and consumption to remain stable.
Inflation, however, remains the most difficult variable for policymakers to ignore. While some price pressures can be viewed as transitory, inflation running above target for an extended period prevents the policy stance from relaxing too easily. The persistence of inflation is seen as amplifying its impact on expectations, thereby influencing policy credibility and market pricing. FXTRADING analysis believes that while the US economy remains resilient in the near term, uncertainty surrounding the inflation trajectory will continue to constrain the speed and scale of any policy pivot, leaving markets to operate in a highly sensitive environment for an extended period.
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