Group 1: Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy - Goldman Sachs has postponed its expectation for the Federal Reserve's first interest rate cut from March 2026 to June 2026, anticipating rate cuts of 25 basis points in both June and September [1] - The analysis indicates that despite significant progress in inflation, the Fed may act cautiously due to one-time price boosts from tariffs, and the labor market, while stabilizing, still faces risks of further weakness [1] - The possibility of a rate cut in January 2026 has been virtually eliminated due to an unexpected drop in the U.S. unemployment rate, leading to a significant cooling of market expectations for easing [2] Group 2: Employment and Labor Market - Morgan McKinley's report shows a 12% year-on-year increase in job vacancies in the UK financial services sector by 2025, driven by a surge in demand for skills related to artificial intelligence, regulatory compliance, and data reporting [1] - Despite some weakening indicators, overall employment data in the U.S. remains resilient, suggesting that immediate monetary policy intervention is not urgent [2] - Approximately 40% of homes in the U.S. are mortgage-free, with rising home prices attributed more to soaring construction and labor costs than to interest rate factors [3] Group 3: Investment Trends and Market Dynamics - JPMorgan highlights a massive investment surge in AI infrastructure, estimating total investments to reach between $5 trillion and $7 trillion, with the four major U.S. cloud providers expected to invest $480 billion by 2026 [3] - The phenomenon of "locked-in" homeowners with mortgage rates below 4% continues to constrain housing market liquidity, with over half of U.S. homeowners unwilling to sell regardless of interest rates [3]
每日机构分析:1月12日
Sou Hu Cai Jing·2026-01-12 09:39