Closing post
Time to recap….
Britain’s construction sector has recorded its worst run since the financial crisis almost two decades ago, with housebuilding mired in the deepest slump since the start of the Covid pandemic in 2020.
UK construction output shrank for the 12th month in a row in December, the longest unbroken run of declines since the global financial crash of 2007-09, although there were signs of optimism among companies, according to a monthly industry survey.
The purchasing managers’ index (PMI) from S&P Global and Cips had a headline reading of 40.1 in December, close to its five-and-a-half-year low of 39.4 in November. Any reading below 50 indicates contraction. Economists had predicted a slight improvement, to 42.5.
Tim Moore, an economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said:
“UK construction companies once again reported challenging business conditions and falling workloads in December, but the speed of the downturn moderated from the five-and-a-half-year record seen in November.”
Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) has again told its shareholders to reject an “inadequate” $108.4bn (£80bn) hostile takeover bid by Paramount Skydance amid an extraordinary corporate battle to control the media conglomerate.
Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, says:
“The blockbuster battle for Warner Bros Discovery continues to provide thrilling entertainment for bystanders. Paramount Skydance had already offered more cash per share than WBD’s favoured suitor, Netflix, but was nonetheless rebuffed by the board. It now seems that the additional protections proffered by Paramount have still failed to pass muster, with Warner Bros preferring the comforting assurances of the Netflix deal.
“One of the deal sweeteners sprinkled by Paramount was a break fee of $5.8 billion. But as Warner Bros points out, that would largely be swallowed up by a termination fee due to Netflix and other deal costs. A personal and irrevocable guarantee for $40.4 billion of equity financing from Larry Ellison has also fallen on deaf ears, presumably partly because pursuing such a large sum through the courts in the event of the deal collapsing isn’t particularly appealing. As Clint Eastwood said, ‘if you want a guarantee, buy a toaster’.
“At the heart of Warner Bros opposition to the Paramount takeover is the eye-watering amount of finance that will be required to complete the deal. The market cap of Paramount is just $14 billion, but it’s offering $108 billion to buy Warner Bros. The sources of that enormous financing, including Larry Ellison, would have to stay the course throughout a period of potentially up to 18 months, with all the possible changes in financial conditions and business performance that could involve. Warner Bros is therefore understandably concerned that some backers may get cold feet.
The US plans to control Venezuela’s oil sales “indefinitely” after laying claim to 50m barrels of blockaded crude and seizing a Russian oil tanker linked to the South American country.
The White House already plans to sell up to $3bn (£2.2bn) worth of Venezuelan crude stranded in tankers and storage facilities into the oversupplied global market after the American military’s capture of Nicolás Maduro.
Stocks have fallen in London, but in Germany the DAX hit a record high over 25,000 points.
Government bond prices have rallied too, pushing down borrowing costs.
Goodnight. GW
Updated
FTSE 100 closes in the red
Britain’s stock market has fallen for the first day this year.
The FTSE 100 has closed down 74.5 points at 10,048, down 0.75%, away from yesterday’s record closing high. It had risen on the first three trading days of 2026.
Precious metals producer Fresnillo (-4.8%) and copper producer Antofagasta (-4.3%), as falling prices of gold, silver and base metals hit the mining sector.
The oil price remains in the red this afternoon, after the US energy secretary said the Trump administration plans to control future sales of oil from Venezuela.
Chris Wright told an energy conference in Maimi that:
“Instead of the oil being blockaded as it is right now, we’re going to let the oil flow.”
US crude is down 1% at $56.49 a barrel, with Brent crude 0.5% lower at $60.37 a barrel.
Back in the US, the number of job vacancies has dropped to a one-year low.
There were around 7.1 million job openings at US companies in November, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has reported, down from 7.4m in October.
The number of job openings decreased by 148,000 at accommodation and food services firms, and also fell in transportation, warehousing, and utilities (-108,000); and wholesale trade (-63,000). Job openings increased in construction (+90,000).
Germany's DAX at record high over 25,000 points
The German stock market is on course to hit a fresh record high today after a 0.8% rise in the DAX index to 25,106, my colleague Phillip Inman writes.
While much of the attention in the UK has been on a recovery of the FTSE 100 to breach the 10,000 point barrier at the start of this year, the DAX has made much bigger strides than either the top 100 London-listed firms or the Paris CAC40 since the recession of 2009.
The DAX has “crushed” both the CAC and the FTSE since 2009, delivering 583% total return versus 475% for the CAC and 435% for the FTSE - and the gap has widened sharply in recent years, says Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG.com.
“Germany’s index is packed with global industrials, autos, chemicals and capital goods that captured the post-crisis recovery in manufacturing and trade, while the FTSE was weighted towards banks, oil majors and miners that spent years delivering weak returns.”
Much of the commentary on Germany in recent years has relied on words like stagnation and torpor as economic growth went sideways. In contrast, the stock market has rallied beyond anything the CAC40 or FTSE100 has achieved.
Beauchamp says Paris is more heavily weighted towards luxury brands, and while they have been very profitable, and delivered “exceptional growth through the 2010s,” more recently they have faced headwinds as Chinese demand weakened.
Meanwhile, in Frankfurt, the value of Germany’s industrial base has benefited from huge investment “while the FTSE’s commodity-heavy composition struggled and the CAC’s luxury concentration hit a ceiling,” said Beauchamp, adding:
“The performance gap is structural - German equities simply had the right sector mix for the past fifteen years.”
Kathleen Brooks, head of research at currency trader XTB, says the FTSE has improved dramatically over the last year, closing the gap.
“If you narrow the scale, then the FTSE 100 caught up with the Cac from 2020 onwards, and in 2025 the FTSE 100 moved in lockstep with the Dax.
“So, while the Dax is a strong outperformer in the long term, in a shorter time scale, the FTSE 100 is comparable.
“It could be a sign that FTSE 100 may start to dominate the European stock market space once more,” she adds.
Both analysts pin some of the blame on the FTSE’s previously poor performance on Brexit.
From 2015, the DAX began to accelerate away from the FTSE 100.
“UK equities were unloved following the Brexit referendum and the turmoil of the next few years, while France has been out of favour since Macron’s misguided election in the summer of 2024,” says Beauchamp.
Brooks says both the Dax and the FTSE are “very international indices that don’t reflect their domestic economies”. About 70-80% of revenues in both indices are generated overseas.
“I don’t have data to back this up, but I assume Brexit triggered a large shift in inflows [from 2015], most of which went to the US, some went to Germany.”
Updated
Shares in some US oil refiners are rallying in early trading.
Phillips 66 have jumped by 4.2%, among the top risers on the S&P 500 share index. It has said it can process Venezuelan crude at two of its US Gulf Coast refineries, so could benefit from Donald Trump’s plan to ship millions of barrels of oil to the US.
S&P 500 and Dow hit intraday record highs
Stocks on Wall Street have hit new record highs at the start of trading.
The Dow Jones industrial average, of 30 large US companies, gained 134 points in early trading to a new intraday high of 49,596 points.
Pharmaceuticals firm Amgen (+3%) are the top riser, followed by DIY chain Home Depot (+1.3%).
The broader S&P 500 share index is also at a new peak, up 0.1%.
UK borrowing costs fall as bond prices rise
Government borrowing cost are falling today, as investors pile into sovereign debt.
With prices rising, the yield (or interest rate) on UK 30-year bonds has dropped to its lowest since last April, at 5.145%, a drop of 8 basis points.
UK 10-year bond yields have dropped by a smilar amount, to just over 4.4%.
European bonds are in demand too, pushing down the yields on German 10 and 30-year bunds.
This may be a risk-off move due to a range of geopolitical tensions. Or it might show that investors are anticipating lower inflation, and thus lower borrowing costs….
Bob Savage, head of markets macro strategy at BNY, says:
Markets are experiencing a pause in risk-taking that reflects positioning and policy uncertainty rather than a wholesale shift away from growth, with bonds bid, the dollar stronger and equities mixed.
Technology optimism remains the core driver, but macro data, geopolitics – especially around energy – and USD-led FX [foreign exchange] dynamics are key swing factors for near-term market momentum.
Updated
The slump in hiring at US companies reversed last month, according to new payroll data.
Payroll operator ADP Research has reported that American firms added 41,000 new staff in December, led by education and health services, leisure and hospitality.
However they fell in professional services and manufacturing.
Small establishments recovered from November job losses with positive end-of-year hiring, even as large employers pulled back,” said Dr Nela Richardson, chief economist at ADP.
A month ago, ADP reported that private employment decreased by 32,000 jobs in November, suggesting the jobs market was deteriorating. That’s now been revised up to a 29,000 fall.
Updated
Shares in Warner Brothers Discovery have dipped by 0.67% in pre-market trading after its board rejected Paramount’s offer.
They’ve fallen to $28.28, away from the $30 per share which Paramount was offering, and back towards Netflix’s $27.75.
Warner Brothers are insisting today that Paramount’s offer is “inferior”, due to significant costs, risks and uncertainties as compared to the Netflix merger.
Under the Netflix merger agreement, WBD shareholders would receive $23.25 in cash plus $4.50 of Netflix shares for each Warner share they own.
They would also still have ownership of Discovery Global – the TV side of the business, which includes CNN, TNT Sports in the U.S., and Discovery.
That’s because Warner Brothers is splitting itself into a Streaming & Studios company (which Netflix has agreed to buy) and a Global Networks one. Paramount wants both parts of the company.
Warner Bros also says that accepting the Paramount offer could lead to costs and loss of value for WBD shareholders, explaining:
WBD would be obligated to pay Netflix a $2.8 billion termination fee for abandoning our existing merger agreement; incur a $1.5 billion fee for failing to complete our debt exchange, which we could not execute under the PSKY offer without PSKY’s consent; and incur incremental interest expense of approximately $350 million.
The total cost to WBD would be approximately $4.7 billion, or $1.79 per share. These costs would, in effect, lower the net amount of the regulatory termination fee that PSKY would pay to WBD from $5.8 billion to $1.1 billion in the event of a failed transaction with PSKY. In comparison, the Netflix transaction imposes none of these costs on WBD.
Netflix cheers Paramount's rejection
Netflix has welcomed Warner Bros’ decision to reject Paramount’s takeover offer, and stick with its bid instead.
Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters, co-CEOs of Netflix, say in a statement:
“The WBD Board remains fully supportive of and continues to recommend Netflix’s merger agreement, recognizing it as the superior proposal that will deliver the greatest value to its stockholders, as well as consumers, creators and the broader entertainment industry.
“Netflix and Warner Bros. will bring together highly complementary strengths and a shared passion for storytelling. By joining forces, we will offer audiences even more of the series and films they love—at home and in theaters—expand opportunities for creators, and help foster a dynamic, competitive, and thriving entertainment industry.”
Warner Bros rejects ‘inferior’ Paramount hostile bid
Warner Brothers Discovery has rejected a hostile takeover offer from Paramount Skydance, and is urging shareholders to back its rival deal with Netflix instead.
Having pondered Paramount’s $108.5bn bid, tabled on December 22, Warner Bros has concluded that it is not in the best interests of WBD and its shareholders and does not meet the criteria of a “Superior Proposal” under the terms of the merger agreement with Netflix, worth $82.7bn.
Warner Brothers says the “extraordinary amount of debt financing” behind Paramount’s bid is a concern, calling it effectively a leveraged buyout.
As a results, Warner Bros “unanimously reiterates” its recommendation in support of the Netflix combination, and recommends that its shareholders reject Paramount’s offer.
Last month Paramount sweetened its offer by saying tech billionaire Larry Ellison would provide a personal guarantee of more than $40bn for the deal.
In response today, Samuel A. Di Piazza Jr, chair of the Warner Bros. Discovery Board of Directors, says:
“The Board unanimously determined that the Paramount’s latest offer remains inferior to our merger agreement with Netflix across multiple key areas.
“Paramount’s offer continues to provide insufficient value, including terms such as an extraordinary amount of debt financing that create risks to close and lack of protections for our shareholders if a transaction is not completed. Our binding agreement with Netflix will offer superior value at greater levels of certainty, without the significant risks and costs Paramount’s offer would impose on our shareholders.”
Paramount is proposing to buy Warner Brothers’ legacy television assets as well as its studio and streaming business, which Netflix has agreed to buy.
UK government debt appears to be in strong demand.
An auction of a £4.25bn government bond attracted offers for three and a half times as much debt as was available – the highest bid-to-cover ratio since last July.
UK government debt has been providing a higher interest rate than rival sovereign debt, making it more attractive to investors.
Updated
Inflation across the eurozone has dropped back to the European Central Bank’s target.
Prices rose at an average annual rate of 2% in the year December, statistics body Destatis estimates, with energy prices 1.9% lower than a year ago.
Euro area #inflation expected to be at 2.0% in December 2025, down from 2.1% in November 2025. Components: services +3.4%, food, alcohol & tobacco +2.6%, other goods +0.4%, energy -1.9% - flash estimate https://t.co/QrrJcilCdT pic.twitter.com/qSUcBk2Xss
— EU_Eurostat (@EU_Eurostat) January 7, 2026
China has denounced the US as a bully following Donald Trump’s announcement that millions of barrels of Venezuela’s oil will be taken to the US and sold.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning told a press conference:
“The United States’ brazen use of force against Venezuela and its demand for ‘America First’ when Venezuela disposes of its own oil resources are typical acts of bullying.
“These actions seriously violate international law, gravely infringe upon Venezuela’s sovereignty, and severely damage the rights of the Venezuelan people.”
Elliott Jordan-Doak, senior UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, says negative sentiment appears to be “entrenched” within the construction sector, as there are “few reasons for builders to be more optimistic in 2026”.
He explains:
The Budget’s prioritisation of higher welfare spending rather than investment will come as a disappointment to many builders, and the boost to activity from falling interest rates will be modest this year.
Meanwhile, the Chancellor’s mansion tax will exert further downward pressure on the housing market. So, we expect only modest growth in construction sector activity in 2026, with risks tilted to the downside.
ING expect next Bank of England rate cut in March
ING predict the Bank of England will cut interest rates in March and June, due to the weakening jobs market and easing inflation pressures.
That would help borrowers, and could provide some stimulus to the UK construction sector.
They say:
There are now only four vacancies for every 10 unemployed workers, below pre-Covid levels. Redundancies tentatively appear to be rising, and unusually, more companies are closing than opening. Unemployment is increasing, data quality issues notwithstanding.
This matters for two reasons. First, wage growth is falling rapidly and has further to go. Private sector pay growth was 6% last January, 3.9% in October, and could conceivably fall to 3% within months. That would be below pre-Covid levels. Real disposable incomes are likely to flatline this year as a result.
Fears of another inflation wave are “overblown”, they argue too:
The 2022 energy price spike fell on an economy with conditions ripe for inflation to take hold in a long-lasting way. That isn’t true today; workers – and companies – lack the power to secure higher wages/prices in response to rising costs. Inflation expectations may have risen in response to a spike in food prices, but we struggle to see inflation responding in the sort of long-lasting way it did three or four years ago.
And anyway, food inflation has started to fall. All the evidence from elsewhere – Western Europe and CEE, which tends to lead the UK – suggests it should drop lower. The UN’s gauge of food input prices is falling.
Construction PMI: what the experts say
Despite December’s stumble, there are hopes that the UK construction sector could revive in 2026.
Brian Smith, head of cost management at consultancy AECOM, says:
“This week’s icy conditions somewhat reflect the mood of the construction industry and could prevent a fast start to the year. But, as today’s figures show, things are starting to improve for contractors and January will all be about positioning themselves to gradually expand capacity and be on the front foot to win new work when it comes.
“Everything points towards a further slowdown in inflation and cuts in interest rates to match this year, which will embolden clients and developers to kickstart schemes left on the back burner. However, if everything starts at once, it’s essential that the planning system is equipped to manage the uptick in projects – embracing AI and digital tools to complement the influx of new planners will prove crucial.”
Max Jones, Director & Head of Construction at Lloyds, also sees reasons for optimism:
“Despite today’s figures, there are some encouraging signs as we head into 2026, including investment in major infrastructure projects which could help accelerate activity, offering a more optimistic outlook for the industry.
“Recent supply chain improvements mean firms are well placed to meet increased demand, although the sector could face renewed pressure on labour availability. While project pipelines expand, competition for specialist skills may intensify and firms that can plan for this now will be best positioned to seize opportunities for the months ahead.”
Britain’s short-term government borrowing costs have fallen, as the City reacts to the downturn in UK construction.
UK two-year gilt yields have fallen to their lowest level since August 2024 – they’re down 4 basis points to 3.661%.
That’s a sign that investors are anticipating cuts to UK interest rates.
Currently the money markets are pricing in one cut by June, and possibly a second by the end of 2026.
But earlier this week Goldman Sachs predicted there will be three quarter-point rate cuts by next Christmas, which would bring Bank Rate down to 3%.
But some
This chart shows how activity in UK housebuilding, and commercial construction, both fell to their lowest in over five years in December:
UK housebuilding in deepest slump since 2020
Newsflash: Britain’s construction sector continued to shrink in December, as housing, commercial and civil engineering activity suffered sharp falls again.
Data provider S&P Global has reported that activity across the UK construction sector, and new orders, both fell again last month.
Housebuilding and commercial construction work both decreased at the fastest rate since May 2020, when the Covid-19 lockdown forced building sites to close, S&P Global’s survey of purchasing managers at UK construction firms shows.
That highlights the government’s struggle to hit its housebuilding targets.
Civil engineering was the weakest-performing category of construction activity in December; it also shrank, but not by as much as in November.
This lifted the UK’s construction PMI index slightly to 40.1 in December, up from 39.4 in November, but still showing a contraction – for the 12th month runnng (50 = stagnation).
The drop extended the sector’s downturn to 12 months, its longest unbroken run of contractions since the global financial crisis of 2007-09, Reuters reports.
S&P Global says there is anecdotal evidence that fragile confidence among clients had hit workloads, and that delayed investment decisions ahead of the Budget in November had hurt sales.
More happily, though, business activity expectations for the year ahead rebounded to a five-month high, which suggests that budget uncertainty has lifted.
Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, says:
“UK construction companies once again reported challenging business conditions and falling workloads in December, but the speed of the downturn moderated from the five-and-a-half-year record seen in November. Many firms cited subdued demand and fragile client confidence. Despite a lifting of Budget-related uncertainty, delayed spending decisions were still cited as contributing to weak sales pipelines at the close of the year.
By sector, latest data indicated the fastest reductions in housing and commercial construction since May 2020, while civil engineering was the only segment to signal a slower pace of decline than in the previous month.
Britain’s blue-chip share index is continuing to slide this morning; the FTSE 100 is now down almost 50 points, or 0.5%, at 10,074.
Precious metals producer Fresnillo (-4.1%) are the top faller, followed by copper producer Antofagasta (-4%), following drops in the price of gold, silver and copper this morning.
Precious metals prices are also dropping this morning, after strong gains in recent sessions.
Silver dropped by over 3% to $78.60 an ounce in early trading, while gold is down 0.75% at $4,460/oz and platinum has lost more than 5%.
Global stock market rally stumbles as geopolitical tensions rise
The stock market rally that had pushed up shares at the end of 2025 and the start of this year is faltering today.
European markets are mixed this morning, after losses in Asia-Pacific markets overnight, as investors fret about rising geopolitical tensions.
There’s plenty to contemplate. Firstly, the White House stated overnight that using US military to acquire Greenland is ‘always an option’, as European leaders try to deter Trump from moving on the island.
Secondly, China’s Ministry of Commerce has announced a ban on exports of all dual-use items-goods with civilian and military applications- to the Japanese military, after Japan’s PM Sanae Takaichi suggested last year that a Chinese invasion of Taiwan could trigger a military response from Tokyo.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 index has fallen 1% today, while China’s markets are flat – as is the pan-European Stoxx 600.
Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB, says:
The global stock market rally that has taken financial markets by storm in recent days has lost momentum as we move through the week. Asian stocks fell by more than 1%, commodities are also lower, with gold, oil and siler all falling.
There are a few themes that are driving price action today, firstly Japan and China tensions weighed on shares in the two countries as China announced new export controls on Japan, after comments from Tokyo about Taiwan, which angered Beijing. This fallout caused the Nikkei to fall more than 1% and the Hang Seng was also lower by a similar amount.
This fallout comes after Asian stocks had their best start to the year ever, so a pullback after four days of strong gains was to be expected, and geopolitics may have been a convenient excuse to book some profits.
Donald Trump’s ambition to supercharge Venezuela’s oil production would damage the climate, and undermine efforts to limit dangerous global heating, experts have warned.
Even raising production to 1.5m barrels of oil a day from current levels of around 1m barrels would produce around 550m tons of carbon dioxide a year when the fuel is burned, according to Paasha Mahdavi, an associate professor of political science at the University of California, Santa Barbara. This is more carbon pollution than what is emitted annually by major economies such as the UK and Brazil.
“If there are millions of barrels a day of new oil, that will add quite a lot of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere and the people of Earth can’t afford that,” says John Sterman, an expert in climate and economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Unicredit on Trump’s 'gunboat diplomacy'
Donald Trump’s “gunboat diplomacy” in Venezuela shows that securing access to critical natural resources such as oil is now a key priority for Washington, say analysts at Unicredit.
They point out, in a note to clients, that the toppling of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro marked a decisive break with the rules‑based international order, ushering in a more assertive, America‑First form of hegemony across the western hemisphere.
It also intensifies the US’s strategic rivalry with China, Unicredit point out:
Given that China was the main buyer of smuggled Venezuelan oil and is Caracas’s principal creditor, the move is clearly intended to send a strong signal to Beijing, which has ambitious plans in South America, particularly in resource‑rich countries such as Peru.
In 2023, China and Venezuela formalised an “all‑weather strategic partnership”. Beijing also used oil trade with Caracas to expand the international footprint of the CNY [the yuan], thereby weakening the effectiveness of US sanctions. Maduro’s removal thus serves as a warning to other authoritarian leaders to exercise caution when deepening diplomatic and economic ties with China at the expense of the US.
Shares in energy companies are dropping at the strat of trading in London.
BP (-2.7%) are the top faller on the FTSE 100, with Shell dropping by 1.8%.
That’s pulling the blue-chip FTSE 100 shares index into the red too; it’s down 28 points or 0.27% at 10,095, having hit a record high yesterday.
Updated
The value of the Venezuelan oil being claimed by Donald Trump could be as much as $2.8bn – if there is as much as 50 million barrels, at the current US crude price of $56 a barrel.
Trump’s move on Venezuela’s oil is attracting criticism.
“This is confiscatory, imperialistic and there is no justification for it,” said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a professor at Yale’s business school, the Financial Times reports.
Sonnenfeld added:
“There is also no need for this oil as we have a global oil glut.”
One theory is that unless the oil is moved, Venezuela’s production could shut down as the country is running out of space to stash crude due to the US blockage.
Introduction: Oil falls after Trump says Venezuela will send supply to US
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
The aftermath of the US intervention in Venezuela is continuing to send ripples through the markets.
The oil price is dropping today, after Donald Trump declared that Venezuela will send the US between 30 million to 50 million barrels of oil, which will then be sold… with the president controlling the proceeds, which could be more than $2bn.
Posting on his Truth Social site, Trump declared:
“This Oil will be sold at its Market Price, and that money will be controlled by me, as President of the United States of America, to ensure it is used to benefit the people of Venezuela and the United States!”
There are currently millions of barrels of Venezuelan oil stashed on tankers and in storage tanks due to the US blockage imposed by Trump. The news that this oil could soon follow president Nicolás Maduro in an unexpected journey to the US had an immediate impact on the oil market.
US crude has dropped by 1.6% to $56.21 a barrel, as traders anticipate more supply hitting the market, adding to Tuesday’s losses.
Brent crude, the international benchmark, has dropped by 1.2% – back below $60 a barrel at $59.97.
The move also has geopolitical implications; two sources have told Reuters that supplying the trapped crude to the US could initially require reallocating cargoes originally bound for China.
Jim Reid, market strategist at Deutsche Bank reports that headlines suggesting that the US was keen to avoid disruption to Venezuela’s oil exports pushed oil down yesterday, telling clients:
Reuters reported that Venezuela was in talks to export oil to the US while Bloomberg reported that Chevron had booked extra tankers to Venezuelan ports this month, so potentially mitigating the decline in oil shipments from the country amid the recent US naval blockade.
Indeed, Brent is trading another -1.65% lower this morning after Trump said last night that Venezuela would turn over “between 30 and 50 MILLION barrels” of oil to the US. There wasn’t much extra detail but this sort of volume is around 30-50 days of pre-US blockade production so this could be the oil that has been sitting around and probably doesn’t mark the start of a trend.
There’s a lot for energy companies to process at the moment; earlier this week Trump suggested US taxpayers could reimburse energy companies for repairing Venezuelan infrastructure for extracting and shipping the country’s heavy oil.
The agenda
9.30am GMT: UK construction PMI for December
10am GMT: Eurozone December inflation flash reading
3pm GMT: US JOLTS job openings stats for November
Updated