By Marc Jones
LONDON, Dec 10 (Reuters) - By Marc Jones, global markets correspondent
What matters in U.S. and global markets today
Wall Street futures and bond and FX markets are hunkering down as crunch time nears for a divided Federal Reserve policy board, while earnings from Oracle and Broadcom will provide the latest test for sky-high valuations in the AI space.
I’ll get into all the market news below.
But first check out Mike Dolan’s latest column on why next year's market outcome will once again hinge on the fate of the AI story.
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Today's Market Minute
* Today’s Federal Reserve policy meeting is expected to beone of the most contentious in years this week, potentiallyoffering financial markets a glimpse at how U.S. monetary policydebates will shape up in 2026. * U.S. President Donald Trump's Department of GovernmentEfficiency was only "a little bit successful", Tesla CEO ElonMusk said on a podcast on Tuesday, adding that he would not leadthe project again. * Paramount Skydance's addition of three Gulf sovereignwealth funds to the cast of its $108 billion hostile bid forWarner Bros Discovery marks a relatively rare alliance amongthese states as they build their own entertainment industries. * Venezuela is likely to retain its seat in OPEC even ifU.S. President Donald Trump successfully forces a change ofgovernment in the oil-rich country, as the U.S. is seeking tobolster its alliance with the cartel even as it expands its ownsphere of influence, argues ROI Energy Columnist Ron Bousso. * U.S. sanctions against Russian oil majors Lukoil andRosneft could trigger a structural reshaping of the global oilsector over the next year, reversing Moscow's decades-longefforts to expand its international clout through energyinvestment, writes Martin Vladimirov, Director of theGeoeconomics Program of the Center for the Study of Democracy.
It's showtime!
The futures market, at least, is confident the Federal Reserve will cut rates by a quarter point to 3.50-3.75% later in the day, pricing it at an 89% probability. Yet it also assumes the guidance will be hawkish, implying just a 21% chance of a January move.
Much will depend on how many "dot plot" forecasts from Fed members see one, two or no more cuts next year. Analysts also suspect at least two of the 12 voters could dissent against a cut this time around, putting Chair Jerome Powell in a tricky position just as speculation peaks on who will replace him next year.
Lingering inflation concerns and bets on U.S. economic resilience mean investors have already dialed back expectations of how many more cuts there will be from here.
In anxious bond markets, 10-year Treasury yields are steadying at 4.197%, having climbed from a low of 3.962% in just nine sessions. A break of 4.201% chart support would risk a spike toward 4.535%, making the Fed's outlook later all the more important.
Those rises in yields have put a prop under the dollar in recent weeks. It is a touch weaker this morning, although there was also another sudden bout of selling in the yen overnight, which looked to be driven by momentum-tracking funds.
That spill threatened to push the Japanese currency below the 157 yen per dollar level. It also flopped to a record low against the euro and slid nearly 1% against the Aussie before regaining its footing.
There was little to trigger the move, suggesting it was likely some positioning ahead of the Bank of Japan's (BOJ) policy meeting next week where a 25-basis-point hike is widely expected, although what comes next remains a blur.
The weeks leading up to this Fed meeting have been stressful for investors, with little data to parse during a record 43-day U.S. government shutdown, conflicting messages from the central bank's officials and the unrelenting push from President Donald Trump's administration for lower rates.
Data on Tuesday showed U.S. job openings increased marginally in October after surging in September. White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett, the front-runner to be the Federal Reserve's next chair, also told the WSJ CEO Council there was "plenty of room" to cut interest rates further, though he added that if inflation rises the calculation may change.
Back on Wall Street, S&P, Dow and Nasdaq futures are all flat for now as traders await the Fed. There's earnings coming from data server giant Oracle. AI demand is expected to drive a more than 15% jump in revenues, which would be the fastest pace of growth in more than two years. Cloud infrastructure revenue is also expected to have surged over 70% in the September-November period to beat the already-punchy 55% growth seen in the prior quarter.
Silver is again the star in commodities, having cleared the $60 barrier to reach a record $61.45 per ounce. The metal has more than doubled in price this year as inventories have dwindled and amid broad-based bullishness about demand.
Europe's government bond markets meanwhile looked to have steadied having been jolted on Tuesday when one of the European Central Bank's top policymakers, Isabel Schnabel, said the bank's next move was more likely to be a hike than a cut. Traders have lowered the premium between French and German debt, however, after a French social security budget passed a knife-edge vote.
Chart of the day
A Fed rate cut later would be the third consecutive cut since the U.S. central bank's September meeting. At their gathering in late-October, Fed chief Powell said a December cut was “not a foregone conclusion – far from it.” But since then, delayed September payrolls data saw a further uptick in the unemployment rate, to 4.4% and there have been subsequent comments from some policymakers supporting the idea of a so-called insurance cut.
After this, what next though? Rate futures markets imply just a 21% chance of a January move and how inflation behaves, and who takes over the Fed chair after Powell - NEC Director Kevin Hassett is still seen in pole position - and whether Lisa Cook's term gets cut short even before that, is making the normal forecasting process all the harder for economists.
Today's events to watch
* Federal Reserve rate decision * Bank of Canada rate decision * Central Bank of Brazil decision * Oracle and Broadcom earnings * Employment Cost Index
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.
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(By Marc Jones; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)

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