All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

Latest insights

The week ahead sees the Spending Review, labour market data, a Saporta speech and a consumer inflation survey.

Jun-09 16:38

UK labour market data is back in focus as annual pay settlements filter into the official data.

Jun-09 15:05

MNI looks at the BOJ's bond purchase operations given recent market volatility.

Jun-09 10:32

June is set to see $315B in nominal Treasury coupon sales.

Jun-06 21:23

The past week delivered another mixed set of data that maintained the theme of weaker momentum, but not dramatically.

Jun-06 19:23

A continuation of only a steady moderation trend provokes a sizeable hawkish reaction after a dovish build-up

Jun-06 16:53

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FI Market Analysis

A continuation of only a steady moderation trend provokes a sizeable hawkish reaction after a dovish build-up

June 06, 2025 04:53

The ESM, Netherlands, Germany, Finland, Portugal and Italy will sell bonds in the week ahead.

June 06, 2025 04:17

A weekly wrap of some of the key themes/data outcomes for the Asia Pac region.

June 06, 2025 05:47

A Better Look At Tariff Impacts As Some Alternate Labor Indicators Soften

June 05, 2025 10:07

FX Market Analysis

A Better Look At Tariff Impacts As Some Alternate Labor Indicators Soften

June 05, 2025 10:07

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_250530_6a23bcc269.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * While the past week may be remembered for court decisions suspending the majority of the White House's tariffs, it also brought further data evidence that the US economy did not fall off a cliff at the start of Q2. * Consumer surveys (UMichigan, Conference Board) showed a downtick in consumer inflation expectations and improved sentiment, reflecting the US-China trade de-escalation on May 12. * And while updated GDP data showed downwardly revised Q1 domestic demand, April personal consumption slowed but remained positive as underlying income growth remained solid. * Likewise, though core durable goods orders retreated from Q1, a clear dropoff at the start of Q2 was not in full evidence. Regional Fed surveys signaled that activity stabilized in April-May, albeit at relatively weak levels, and labor market data pointed to incremental rather than sharp weakness. * The point was underlined by the Atlanta Fed's nowcast for Q2 GDP growth which jumped to 3.84% on Friday from 2.18% in its May 27 update. Even if dramatic upgrade was due to a lower trade deficit in April as tariff front-running reversed, final domestic demand is still expected to be robust overall. * Of course, things can change quickly: note Friday's apparent re-escalation in US-China trade tensions and the temporary nature of the judicial tariff freeze (which in any case looks to be circumvented by the Trump administration), as well as the July "reciprocal" tariff negotiation deadline continuing to loom large. * For the moment though, while uncertainty looks to be a constant, the data aren't (yet) showing the degree of deterioration that had until recently been feared. * Next week's data highlights include key checkpoints for May, including ISM Manufacturing and Services surveys (which look likely to show some recovery versus April) and the US Employment report. * Nonfarm payrolls growth is expected to moderate in May after a surprisingly robust 177k in April, with consensus currently around the 130k mark. The unemployment rate meanwhile is seen holding at 4.2% for what would be a third consecutive month.

May 30, 2025 08:50

A weekly wrap of some of the key macro themes/data outcomes for Asia Pac.

May 30, 2025 05:55

The RBNZ cut rates 25bp to 3.25% following a vote, the first in two years, that included an option to stay on hold.

May 29, 2025 06:35