All signal, no noise
All signal, no noise
All signal, no noise
Latest insights
The BOK board has delivered its latest base rate decision.
Nov-27 05:12Advisors share their outlook on China's property market.
Nov-27 03:55UK debt management office head discusses issuance plans in wake of 2025 budget.
Nov-26 18:22MNI reports on Banxico's internal debate over the rate differential with the U.S.
Nov-26 16:25MNI reports on Banxico's internal debate over the rate differential with the U.S.
Nov-26 16:21Former BOC adviser discusses paper on need for better legal protections of monetary policy independence.
Nov-26 14:52
MNI INTERVIEW: Budget Shouldn't Prompt BOE Cuts-OBR's Miles

MNI INTERVIEW: Budget Shouldn't Prompt BOE Cuts-OBR's Miles

MNI INTERVIEW: RBNZ Sees Short-Term Hike Highly Unlikely

MNI INTERVIEW: RBNZ Sees Short-Term Hike Highly Unlikely
Key Events
Calendar
Open CalendarLink to the pagemyMNIhttps://my.mnimarkets.com/dashboard?widget=/events/key-events-calendarHSC on myMNILink to the pageMore CalendarsLink to the page
MNI INTERVIEW: Budget Shouldn't Prompt BOE Cuts-OBR's Miles

MNI INTERVIEW: Budget Shouldn't Prompt BOE Cuts-OBR's Miles

MNI INTERVIEW: RBNZ Sees Short-Term Hike Highly Unlikely

MNI INTERVIEW: RBNZ Sees Short-Term Hike Highly Unlikely
Products
See Podcasts
Key Events
Calendar
Open CalendarLink to the pagemyMNIhttps://my.mnimarkets.com/dashboard?widget=/events/key-events-calendarHSC on myMNILink to the pageMore CalendarsLink to the pageLatest insights
The BOK board has delivered its latest base rate decision.
Nov-27 05:12Advisors share their outlook on China's property market.
Nov-27 03:55UK debt management office head discusses issuance plans in wake of 2025 budget.
Nov-26 18:22MNI reports on Banxico's internal debate over the rate differential with the U.S.
Nov-26 16:25MNI reports on Banxico's internal debate over the rate differential with the U.S.
Nov-26 16:21Former BOC adviser discusses paper on need for better legal protections of monetary policy independence.
Nov-26 14:52Newsletter
MNI DAILY TECHNICAL ANALYSIS - Gilts Hold Budget Bounce
Nov-27 08:44MNI EUROPEAN MARKETS ANALYSIS: NZD/USD Rebound Extends
Nov-27 05:53MNI EUROPEAN MARKETS ANALSYIS: NZD/USD Rebound Extends
Nov-27 05:50MNI EUROPEAN OPEN: Australia & NZ Hike Risks Grow
Nov-27 05:22MNI ASIA OPEN: Little Change Latest Beige Book, Jobless Stable
Nov-26 21:12MNI US MARKETS ANALYSIS - GBP Rallies on Early Budget Details
Nov-26 12:03MNI US OPEN - UK Budget the Biggest Domestic Risk Event of '25
Nov-26 10:44MNI DAILY TECHNICAL ANALYSIS - Two-Way Gilt Risk into Budget
Nov-26 08:33MNI Technical Analysis
EUROSTOXX50 Fut. Bull Cycle Extends

FI Market Analysis
Read moreFI Market AnalysisThe Netherlands, Italy, Germany and Finland will all look to come to the market in the upcoming week.
November 21, 2025 05:33The UK Budget s the biggest domestic event of 2025. We answer main questions, outline potential measures and impacts.
November 21, 2025 05:00A weekly wrap of some of the key macro themes/data outcomes for the Asia Pac region
November 21, 2025 06:27Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_Employment_Report_Nov2025_88793f8985.pdf Quick Take: Fed Doves Will Point To Unemployment, Hawks To Job Gains * The long-postponed September Employment Situation report delivered a largely solid if slightly stale snapshot of the US labor market, with an unexpectedly large uptick in the unemployment rate to a 4-year high appearing to outweigh consensus-beating payrolls growth to deliver a slightly dovish market reaction. * The payrolls data in the Establishment Survey were stronger than expected, with gains of 119k (cons 51k), following a downward revised August to -4k (22k initially) after 72k in July (from 79k) and -13k in June. This means trend job growth rates are at the lower end of the range of "breakeven" estimates, rather than pushing more materially below, and a very strong response rate to the survey should give more confidence that September's gains won't be revised away. * While private payrolls were on the weaker side when considering downward revisions, we note September saw the first net job creation for private industries outside of health & social assistance since April. * But to our eye, the Household Survey broadly leaned to a conclusion that the labor market is loosening or at least, not showing material improvement in demand. The 4.44% unemployment rate in September is the highest since October 2021 (4.32% prior) and was above the consensus expectation of 4.3%. * While it could be argued this represented a "healthy" rise, given that it came with a rise in participation, we didn't see it as unambiguously so as other metrics continued to point to continued soft labor demand. * Indeed we don't think the FOMC's doves will see much in this report to change their perception of risks to the labor market as a whole, though by the same token the expectation-beating payroll gains will be taken by hawks as evidence that downside has not materialized to a point that warrants further easing just yet. * With no October or November payrolls data available going into the December 9-10 FOMC, policymakers will have to wade through the data "fog" and ascertain whether the "alternative" measures of labor market health show a trajectory since September that would warrant a further risk-management cut. * While most such data suggests conditions haven't improved since September, neither is the bottom falling out of the labor market. * Post-NFPs, some analysts shifted their views for the December Fed meeting, now seeing a hold whereas they had previously expected a cut, with none that we are aware of doing the converse. * That was slightly at odds with market-implied prospects for a cut at next month's meeting which shifted back to 9-10bp vs 6bp beforehand, though larger moves are seen further out the curve.
November 20, 2025 08:30FX Market Analysis
Read moreFX Market AnalysisA weekly wrap of some of the key macro themes/data outcomes for the Asia Pac region
November 21, 2025 06:27Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_Employment_Report_Nov2025_88793f8985.pdf Quick Take: Fed Doves Will Point To Unemployment, Hawks To Job Gains * The long-postponed September Employment Situation report delivered a largely solid if slightly stale snapshot of the US labor market, with an unexpectedly large uptick in the unemployment rate to a 4-year high appearing to outweigh consensus-beating payrolls growth to deliver a slightly dovish market reaction. * The payrolls data in the Establishment Survey were stronger than expected, with gains of 119k (cons 51k), following a downward revised August to -4k (22k initially) after 72k in July (from 79k) and -13k in June. This means trend job growth rates are at the lower end of the range of "breakeven" estimates, rather than pushing more materially below, and a very strong response rate to the survey should give more confidence that September's gains won't be revised away. * While private payrolls were on the weaker side when considering downward revisions, we note September saw the first net job creation for private industries outside of health & social assistance since April. * But to our eye, the Household Survey broadly leaned to a conclusion that the labor market is loosening or at least, not showing material improvement in demand. The 4.44% unemployment rate in September is the highest since October 2021 (4.32% prior) and was above the consensus expectation of 4.3%. * While it could be argued this represented a "healthy" rise, given that it came with a rise in participation, we didn't see it as unambiguously so as other metrics continued to point to continued soft labor demand. * Indeed we don't think the FOMC's doves will see much in this report to change their perception of risks to the labor market as a whole, though by the same token the expectation-beating payroll gains will be taken by hawks as evidence that downside has not materialized to a point that warrants further easing just yet. * With no October or November payrolls data available going into the December 9-10 FOMC, policymakers will have to wade through the data "fog" and ascertain whether the "alternative" measures of labor market health show a trajectory since September that would warrant a further risk-management cut. * While most such data suggests conditions haven't improved since September, neither is the bottom falling out of the labor market. * Post-NFPs, some analysts shifted their views for the December Fed meeting, now seeing a hold whereas they had previously expected a cut, with none that we are aware of doing the converse. * That was slightly at odds with market-implied prospects for a cut at next month's meeting which shifted back to 9-10bp vs 6bp beforehand, though larger moves are seen further out the curve.
November 20, 2025 08:30Headline CPI was close to the BOE's forecast and we think this is another hurdle for a cut removed ahead of December.
November 20, 2025 08:37Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/Fed_Minutes_Preview_Nov2025_2e5fc3ae40.pdf Our preview of the October FOMC meeting minutes (out Nov 19 at 2pm ET) includes what to watch for upon release; MNI's FOMC Hawk-Dove Spectrum; and key highlights of FOMC participant commentary since the meeting.
November 18, 2025 09:27



