All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

Latest insights

China advisors share their GDP outlook.

Apr-10 03:32

MNI speaks to ECB sources.

Apr-09 14:19

German Council of Economic Experts member Gabriel Felbermayr speaks to MNI.

Apr-09 11:14

MNI assesses the impact of the Iran war energy price surge on PBOC policy.

Apr-09 07:14

The BCRP is widely expected to leave its benchmark reference rate unchanged at 4.25%.

Apr-08 17:00

A historicaly large increase in gasoline prices is expected to see headline CPI jump but with less impact on core

Apr-08 15:59

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FI Market Analysis

A historicaly large increase in gasoline prices is expected to see headline CPI jump but with less impact on core

April 08, 2026 03:59

Today, Germany will return to the market, Portugal will hold an auction and Austria its non-competitive round.

April 08, 2026 05:40

We look ahead to the data releases that will be important for UK markets through the remainder of the month.

April 07, 2026 06:15

Eurozone March headline HICP printed marginally below consensus at 2.52% Y/Y

April 07, 2026 04:54

FX Market Analysis

Eurozone March headline HICP printed marginally below consensus at 2.52% Y/Y

April 07, 2026 04:54

The RBNZ is unanimously expected on Bloomberg to leave rates at 2.25% when the MPC announces its decision on 8 April.

April 07, 2026 09:42

The RBNZ is unanimously expected on Bloomberg to leave rates at 2.25% when the MPC announces its decision on 8 April.

April 07, 2026 04:13

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_Employment_Report_Apr2026_450bc23a24.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: * March's BLS employment report was undoubtedly strong in the main readings, and will have allayed concerns that February's pullback in payrolls portended a renewed leg of weakness in the labor market. * The 178k headline gains in the Establishment survey was the highest since December 2024, easily beating the 70k MNI dealer median, with private payrolls up 186k vs the 75k expected. And the dip in the unemployment rate to a 9-month low 4.26% (consensus 4.4%, 4.44% prior) in the Household Survey suggested that the headline payroll gains were no fluke. * But while this was a better-than-expected report, it comes in the context of significant volatility in month-to-month figures, including major revisions to February's reading (-113k vs -92k, offset by a +34k upside revision to January). And the rebound, while impressively broad across sectors, was still heavily driven by healthcare employment and other sectors that appeared impacted by one-off factors in February. * Stepping back, the 3-month change in payrolls has been a solid if more modest +68k (an 11-month high), with the 6-month average gains rising to 15k from -2k in Feb for the highest since in 6 months. So, an improvement in trends, but not enough to suggest that employment gains are doing anything but treading water. Payrolls have grown by just 0.2% Y/Y. * Indeed while the unemployment rate drop was suggestive of reduced labor market slack, it was flattered by a decline in the size in the labor force as well as falls in the participation and employment-to-population ratios, as well as the weakest response rate in survey history. * Additionally, growth in average hourly wages continued to decline to fresh post-2021 lows on a Y/Y basis and well off post-pandemic highs. * Taken together, the FOMC will probably be relieved that it has another month to assess the fallout from the Middle East war without being unduly concerned about an imminent collapse in the labor market (for which evidence of near-term war impact is so far scant). * The Committee will continue to see a low-hiring, low-firing labor market that is indicative of being roughly in balance, with the underlying data meaning the debate is set to continue over whether it is weakness in labor supply or demand that has the upper hand. * Indicative of this reinforced wait-and-see stance, market-implied Fed rate cuts were pared in the wake of the report, with Fed funds futures currently seeing just 2bp of cuts in 2026 as we head into the holiday weekend, vs around 6bp pre-report.

April 03, 2026 04:01