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 05:12

Advisors share their outlook on China's property market.

Nov-27 03:55

UK debt management office head discusses issuance plans in wake of 2025 budget.

Nov-26 18:22

MNI reports on Banxico's internal debate over the rate differential with the U.S.

Nov-26 16:25

MNI reports on Banxico's internal debate over the rate differential with the U.S.

Nov-26 16:21

Former BOC adviser discusses paper on need for better legal protections of monetary policy independence.

Nov-26 14:52

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FI Market Analysis

The Netherlands, Italy, Germany and Finland will all look to come to the market in the upcoming week.

November 21, 2025 05:33

The UK Budget s the biggest domestic event of 2025. We answer main questions, outline potential measures and impacts.

November 21, 2025 05:00

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

November 21, 2025 06:27

Download 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 08:30

FX Market Analysis

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

November 21, 2025 06:27

Download 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 08:30

Headline 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 08:37

Download 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