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The Japanese economy could use some Fire Horse energy

Wayne Cole gives us a look at what the markets will be like in Europe and around the world today.

The week has started off quiet in the United States and Asia.

The Nikkei was stung by Japanese data as the GDP missed expectations. The economy only grew 0.2% annually in the fourth quarter of 2012, while analysts expected a rebound to 1.6% following a contraction in Q3.

The GDP also increased by just 0.1% on a year-on-year basis, which is a dramatic drop from the 2% growth rate of mid-2025. The nominal GDP was slightly better, at 3.4% for the year. However, all of that was due to rising prices.

The biggest drags on the growth were government spending and imports, which should support PM Takaichi in his call for aggressive fiscal stimuli. The talk now is about a supplementary budget that will be released sooner rather than later in the year.

The Nikkei, however, could use a break after gaining 5% in the last week. Taiwan's stock price rose 5.7%, while South Korea's was up more than 8%. This is because chipmakers were able to benefit from the massive amounts of money that AI hyperscalers spent.

Analysts worry that tech giants have entered a race to be the first to use AI (whatever it looks like)?without considering returns.

This week there were no major tech companies reporting, so Walmart was the star of the show. Walmart's?sales are expected to increase between 4.8% and 5,1% annually, and the company needs to be at the top of that range in order to justify its P/E ratio of 47.

The first trillion-dollar retailer in the world also uses a lot of 'AI, especially in areas like logistics, robotics and digital advertising. They hope AI will be able to better predict what customers want to purchase, and not purchase, which would be a boon for efficient inventory management.

Market developments on Monday that may have a significant impact

- Euro zone industrial output

ECB President Christine Lagarde, Board Member Piero Cipollone attend Eurogroup Meeting

Michelle Bowman, Fed Vice Chairperson for Supervision, speaks

(source: Reuters)