All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

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The major data releases and events scheduled across LatAm next week.

Feb-13 17:32

Google's century bond was the big story this week.

Feb-13 17:23

Slovakia, Germany, Finland, Spain, and France will be looking to hold auctions in the upcoming week.

Feb-13 17:13

Overall secondary spreads were resilient to issuance and only widened marginally driven by LatAm, whilst primary supply

Feb-13 14:03

MNI's key exclusive stories for this week

Feb-13 13:21

Economist and St. Louis Fed research fellow Yongseok Shin discusses the labor market outlook.

Feb-13 12:57

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FI Market Analysis

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/USCPI_Prev_Feb2026_4401ef516e.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * Consensus looks for an acceleration in core CPI following recent soft prints, helped by typical startofyear price resets and the ongoing normalization from the shutdowndistorted Oct/Nov data. Core is seen rising to 0.36% M/M after December's 0.24% (based on unrounded estimates), with headline 0.29% after 0.31%. * Several technical factors mean any acceleration should be interpreted with caution. January is prone to residual seasonality effects and this report brings new relativeimportance CPI weights, both of which may subtly reshape monthly dynamics and make it difficult to make a clean read. * Indeed, shutdown-related distortions from late 2025 are likely to still complicate interpretation, with delayed data collection, atypical sampling windows, and the reversal of holiday discount effects. These could continue to reverberate in January readings, particularly across categories priced on a bimonthly rotation, which include most non-housing core CPI. * While the above factors are probably taken into account in analysts' estimates, on balance they still suggest that an upside surprise in particular is likely to be heavily caveated and downplayed, both by analysts and by policymakers, much in the same way as recent downside surprises have been faded. * Analysts expect firmer goods and services inflation in January, including for supercore, though with wide uncertainty. Used cars, certain core goods categories, and several service components are seen contributing to sequential strength, even as volatile travel categories may moderate. * Housing inflation is expected to remain on its gradual disinflationary path, with rent and OER readings likely close to December's pace but still influenced by the long lag in normalization. * With the next FOMC meeting still several weeks away, this report alone is unlikely to meaningfully shift expectations around nearterm rate cuts, especially with the latest labor market data appearing to eliminate any lingering impetus to stave off labor market risks. Policymakers will have both February CPI and an additional nonfarm payrolls release available before making decisions at the March meeting. * Nevertheless, this release remains a key test of whether tariff-related pressures, earlyyear price adjustments, and lingering categoryspecific normalization are beginning to exert more persistent influence-an issue several FOMC participants have highlighted as central to judging the underlying inflation trajectory.

February 11, 2026 09:55

France and Slovakia are both likely to hold syndications today, while Greece, Germany and Portugal are to hold auctions.

February 11, 2026 06:50

The EU is scheduled to hold a syndication today while the Netherlands, Austria and Germany will hold auctions.

February 10, 2026 06:44

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/USNFP_Jan2026_Preview_26c52a5d47.pdf Executive Summary * Wednesday sees an unusual BLS nonfarm payrolls report after a brief delay following last week's government shutdown, with January details released at 0830ET. * The report will need to be assessed holistically rather than focusing on any single number, although the unemployment rate should offer the cleanest single take. * Consensus looks for a circa 70k increase in nonfarm payrolls coming almost entirely from private payrolls. * Some specific factors beyond more eye-catching calls are Scotiabank warning on a drag from the expiry of ACA subsidies and Morgan Stanley on a potential 35k public sector drag when accounting for a somewhat extended deferred resignation program. * The unemployment rate is expected to hold at 4.4% after last month's surprise drop to 4.38% from 4.54%, leaving a profile of broad stabilization on net since Aug/Sept. In doing so it ruled out a more dovish base case that seven FOMC members had pencilled in at the December SEP. * Along with typical two-month revisions, we will also see annual adjustments from the benchmark revision up to Mar 2025 (a large negative revision in the region of -800k is roughly expected), a new birth/death model from Apr 2025 onwards and seasonal adjustment factors for the past five years. * The household survey population control which would usually come with this month's January report has been delayed to next month's February report due to last year's extensive government shutdown. * We suspect the market is shaping up for a weaker number than the 68k consensus for NFPs after last week's suite of weak labor releases and today's (Monday's) comments from NEC's Hassett on not panicking about lower jobs numbers despite appearing to talk on broader trends. * With Tuesday's retail sales for December still to come, the market currently sees a next Fed cut with the June meeting under a new Fed Chair (former Fed Governor Warsh awaiting nomination proceedings). * In the event of a large surprise, which will presumably see suspicion given ongoing data quality issues, the February payrolls report on Mar 6 will allow the FOMC to see whether those surprises are confirmed before the Mar 17-18 FOMC meeting and its fresh economic forecasts/dot plot.

February 09, 2026 10:40

FX Market Analysis

We look ahead to Mann and Pill's appearances this week and the impacts for SONIA from political risk and data.

February 09, 2026 04:20

Services Y/Y Lower But Drivers Ambiguous - CLICK HERE FOR FULL REPORT : https://media.marketnews.com/Jan2025_EZCPI_Review_fe35ae1f14.pdf Key Eurozone January preliminary HICP prints * Headline 1.69% (1.7% MNI tracking and consensus, 1.97% prior) * Core 2.19% (2.2% MNI median, 2.37% prior) Executive Summary * HICP inflation decelerated in January, closely in line with initial analyst consensus. Core HICP also closely in line with expectations. * Services decelerated more substantially than anticipated on the yearly rate. Details from some countries point towards slower annual repricing behind some of the move but seasonally-adjusted data makes the print look quite firm. * The full January release on Feb 25 will provide an update on exact drivers, especially on services. * By country, trends were mixed: Germany, Italy and Spain surprised to the upside while France was lower than expected. * Methodology updates in January only brought material changes to processed and unprocessed foods categories. * Ongoing rhetoric suggests the ECB Governing Council thinks the bar to a move into either direction is high.

February 06, 2026 09:33

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_260206_b0dac73163.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * January's Employment Report may have been pushed back to Feb 10 due to the brief federal government shutdown, but in the meantime there was plenty of labor market data to chew on this week. * Most of it was weaker than expected, including ADP payrolls and Revelio Labs payrolls, Challenger job cuts and hiring announcements, JOLTS job openings, and the latest weekly initial jobless claims. * There are mitigating explanations (JOLTS doesn't line up with private sector estimates so may bounce in January; jobless claims look impacted by severe weather), but overall theme of a lower hiring and lower firing (with the exception of the Challenger data) labor market easily remains intact. * That remains in divergence with the continued solidity in the latest activity data, with ISM Manufacturing soaring (highest since Aug 2022) and Services putting in another solid print (joint-15 month high). * The flawed UMichigan survey suggested that consumer sentiment has bottomed, while the latest credit indicators appeared to show slight acceleration. Latest retail sales metrics are solid if somewhat mixed. * Rate markets largely tracked the bifurcation in data. Strong ISMs saw Fed easing potential fade early in the week, but there was a reversal in a more dovish direction by week-end alongside the soft labor data and tech-led equity weakness exacerbating negative risk sentiment. * Fed Funds futures at one point implied 63bp of cuts to end-2026. That has since pulled back closer to 55bp with some stabilization in risk assets and a subsequent boost from U.Mich consumer sentiment firming. * FOMC speakers were mostly patient on the next move, including increasingly cautious-sounding Board members Cook and Jefferson, with non-voter Daly one of the few flying the dovish flag. * In general there's a sense that the economy is resilient with downside labor market risks in relative check, with more evidence required that inflation is converging to 2% before declaring victory on inflation. * We'll all be watching the two major releases next week with January reports for nonfarm payrolls (Wed) and CPI (Fri), with Retail Sales on Tuesday also bearing watching (but it's only for December). * Monthly payrolls growth is currently expected at 70k in January for a slight acceleration from the 50k in December. The market likely currently views that to be on the high side considering a swathe of soft labor indicators this past week. The unemployment rate will again be a key component in shaping reaction to the report, with consensus currently looking for 4.4% after the 4.38% in December. * As for CPI inflation, January is always an important month as it begins to capture start-of-year price resets - historically about 20% net price increases for the year come in January and another 20% in February. Consensus currently stands at 0.3% M/M for both headline and core CPI in the early days for the Bloomberg survey.

February 06, 2026 09:19

The MPC voted to maintain Bank Rate at 3.75%, everything else pointed in a dovish direction.

February 06, 2026 04:36