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Here’s your quick read to start the day: a chatty, no-fuss look at overnight moves, the big story, what’s on the docket, and the tickers you need to watch.

Richard is an independent financial journalist who tracks financial markets and macroeconomic developments
February 18, 2026 at 1:45 AM IST
GLOBAL MOOD: Risk On
Asian markets posted modest gains in light Lunar New Year trading, reflecting a tentative risk-on tone after a volatile Wall Street session. Japan and Australia led advances, lifting the regional benchmark following three days of declines, even as US equities finished little changed.
Sentiment remains measured. Softer US inflation and steady Treasury yields have reinforced expectations of rate cuts later this year, though Federal Reserve officials continue to signal patience. Meanwhile, easing tensions in US–Iran nuclear talks have trimmed the geopolitical premium in oil, with crude sliding to a two-week low.
Investors are also weighing ongoing AI-related volatility, particularly given Asia’s central role in global chip manufacturing. Strong Japanese export data offered a constructive counterpoint to softer US housing indicators.
TODAY’S WATCHLIST
THE BIG STORY
At the same time, US-brokered peace talks between Ukraine and Russia resumed in Geneva, though Russia launched fresh airstrikes on Ukraine ahead of negotiations, underscoring fragile conditions around diplomacy.
On the monetary policy front, Federal Reserve officials struck a measured tone. Governor Michael Barr said it would likely be appropriate to hold rates steady for some time, seeking clearer evidence that goods inflation is sustainably easing. Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee added that several rate cuts this year remain possible if inflation continues to move toward the 2% target, though recent data show uneven price pressures.
Data Spotlight
The NY Empire State Manufacturing Index maintained expansion at 7.1—slightly down from 7.7 and consistent with forecasts—indicating modest growth optimism despite weaker new orders (5.8 compared to 6.6) and shipments (-1 versus 16.3). Employment prospects are being closely monitored.
Japan's exports increased by 16.8% year-on-year to ¥9,187.5 billion, marking the fastest growth since November 2022 and surpassing forecasts of 12%. This performance was driven by strong Lunar New Year demand from China (+32%), other Asian markets (Hong Kong +73.1%, Vietnam +30.6%), the European Union (+29.6%), and Russia (+53.4%). However, shipments to the United States declined by 5% due to weaker exports of pharmaceutical products, machinery, and automobiles.
Takeaway:
WHAT HAPPENED OVERNIGHT
Day’s Ledger
Economic Data
Corporate Actions
Policy Events
Tickers to Watch
Must Read
See you tomorrow with another edition of The Morning Edge.
Have a great trading day
Is India finally on the cusp of a private capex revival — or are the “green shoots” still fragile?
For years, public investment has carried the growth story, with government capex rising sharply while private investment lagged. There are tentative signs of improvement: stronger corporate balance sheets, healthier banks, policy rate cuts, and improved trade clarity. Yet capacity utilisation remains around 75%, below the levels that typically trigger broad-based expansion, and fresh investment is still concentrated in select sectors like renewables, electronics and defence.
Sharmila Kantha writes, Can Public Spending Finally Crowd In Private Capex?
The real question is whether demand will rise enough to justify large new capacity creation. Until utilisation moves decisively above critical thresholds, public spending is likely to remain the primary engine of growth. Crowding-in is possible. But it is not automatic.