All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

Latest insights

Former Fed Board research director David Wilcox discusses a potential Treasury-Fed asset swap.

Mar-05 12:16

MNI looks at the likely trajectory of PBOC policy over the year ahead after the Government Work Report.

Mar-05 11:55

MNI looks at China's downgrade to its GDP growth target.

Mar-05 11:49

Boost seen from continued global growth and higher energy prices.

Mar-05 11:00

A China chemicals expert discusses potential impacts due to the Iran conflict.

Mar-05 05:03

MNI discusses the BOJ's challenges ahead as it navigates an impending oil supply shock.

Mar-05 04:05

Latest insights

Trial MNI

Trial our real time service now

FI Market Analysis

Books for the retail-only BTP Valore remain open while Germany will return to the market today to hold a Green auction.

March 04, 2026 06:54

Today, Austria and Germany are likely to hold syndications, the Netherlands a DDA and Germany a conventional auction.

March 03, 2026 09:38

Today, Austria and Germany are likely to hold syndications, the Netherlands a DDA and Germany a conventional auction.

March 03, 2026 06:52

We look at the market and political implications of the Spring Statement and expectations for the FY26/27 gilt remit.

March 02, 2026 07:04

FX Market Analysis

On balance, the forecasts we have seen point towards a roughly stable/marginally hiigher core figure from January’s 2.2%

February 26, 2026 02:28

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_260220_a4427bd239.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * Friday's announcement of the US Supreme Court decision to strike down the White House's International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) tariffs overshadowed the week's data and Fed developments. * Even if the court's decision wasn't entirely shocking (prediction markets indicated only a 25% probability that the court would uphold the tariffs), it left open questions over whether and when tariff refunds will be paid, and potential impacts on existing trade deals negotiated under the auspices of IEEPA. * One thing that does seem clear is that the sudden drop in tariff rates will be reversed at least partially, muting the longer-run macro impact. The administration was quick to announce a global 10% tariff via Section 122 authority with Section 232 and 301 tariffs to remain and be expanded over time. Treasury Secretary Bessent said that this approach would result in "virtually unchanged tariff revenue in 2026". * Elsewhere, real GDP surprised much lower than expected at 1.4% annualized (cons 2.8) in the Q4 advance release after 4.4% in Q3, although the government sector weighed heavily owing to the shutdown and a very strong deflator. Private demand metrics were close to expectations with PDFP at 2.35%. * Core PCE inflation was in line with unrounded expectations in the delayed December report at 0.355% M/M whilst it ended the year at 3.0% Y/Y (highest since Apr 2024). Core goods inflation accelerated to 2.0% Y/Y (highest since May 2023) whilst supercore PCE inflation at 3.3% Y/Y saw zero disinflationary progress compared to the 3.3% averaged across 2025. * Second tier data saw some sizeable strength with core durable goods accelerating in a positive sign of business investment and with industrial production growth regaining traction and broadening out. * Labor data saw some sequential improvements as well, with weekly ADP rising an average 10.25k per week for its fastest since late November and initial jobless claims surprised notably lower. * Business sentiment indicators were more mixed however, including the flash PMIs for February slipping with the manufacturing index at a seven-month low and services at a ten-month low. It came against a backdrop of strong input and selling cost inflation. * The December trade deficit surprised higher on a pullback in gold net exports. Tech-led capital goods imports continue to surge but are offset by consumer and industrial goods in tariff front-running payback. * The FOMC minutes had a hawkish addition with "several" members wanted to keep open the possibility that the next Fed rate move could be a hike, not necessarily a cut. * Gov. Miran meanwhile pared back his rate cut view, seeing a need for 100bp vs 150bp of cuts this year. * Near-term, last week's NFP-driven hawkish shift has extended further this week, with just 15bp of cuts priced for the June FOMC. There is however still a cumulative 56bp of cuts to year-end and terminal yields are at still the dovish end of recent ranges. * Next week sees data focus on the delayed January PPI for both broader input cost pressures after a strong December update plus the usual PCE readthrough following strong tracking after January CPI.

February 20, 2026 09:10

We look at the details of the CPI and labour releases this week.

February 19, 2026 04:33

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: * The RBNZ left rates on hold, as widely expected. The accompanying statement and updated forecast profile, particularly in terms of the OCR track, were not as hawkish as market pricing. Notably the RBNZ projection for the Q4 OCR (average) is 2.38% against a pre market pricing outcome of around 2.64% (for year end) per OIS markets. * RBNZ Governor Breman stated that with excess capacity, economic growth can be stronger in the near term without generating inflation pressures. She said that policy can stay accommodative before gradually tightening. A hike won't be delivered until the central bank sees stronger growth and firmer core inflation pressures. * The market has 29bps of tightening priced by year-end versus 39bps prior to yesterday's decision. Notably, market pricing remains 12-22bps firmer than levels seen prior to November's RBNZ decision. FOR THE FULL PUBLICATION PLEASE USE THE FOLLOWING LINK:RBNZ Review - Feb 2026.pdf: https://media.marketnews.com/RBNZ_Review_Feb_2026_6c3f7507c1.pdf

February 19, 2026 03:18