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Next year's rate path depends on tariff effect and potential FOMC membership changes.

Dec-08 18:31

The Central Bank of Brazil is set to announce its interest rate decision on Wednesday.

Dec-08 17:15

The Copom is widely expected to leave its Selic rate unchanged at 15.00% for a fourth successive meeting.

Dec-08 17:04

The focus this week will be on MPC speak, monthly activity data and Chancellor Reeves’ testimony ahead of the TSC.

Dec-08 14:55

The SNB are expected to keep policy rates unchanged at 0.00%.

Dec-08 14:22

MNI interviews former St. Louis Fed President James Bullard.

Dec-08 12:56

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FI Market Analysis

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_251205_50daf6eefd.pdf * Real GDP growth tracking has been trimmed after a softer than expected personal income & outlays report for September, although is still seen at a solid 3.5% annualized for Q3 in the last update before the FOMC. * Core PCE inflation was slightly softer than expected in that same delayed September report, still running at above 2% target rates but ruling out a further acceleration. * Headlining a slew of labor market updates this week, ADP confirmed a return to declining payrolls employment having now dropped in three of the past four months, although weekly jobless claims data don't suggest any further deterioration. Initial claims in particular were extremely low but likely down to Thanksgiving adjustment issues. * Major business surveys were mixed, with ISM services firming but also seeing lower new orders and prices paid whilst ISM manufacturing returned to the lower end of its recent range in contractionary territory. * NECs Hassett's probability of being chosen as the next Fed Chair has climbed on the week as a whole although were trimmed modestly on media reports of Wall Street pushback - he's still seen at >70%. Trump says he will probably announce his pick early next year. * US Tsy Sec Bessent meanwhile has gone into further details on his plan to enforce that regional Fed presidents have lived in their district for at least three years. It comes ahead of what could be a more controversial renewing of president five-year terms in Feb 2026. Hassett has given his approval. * Next week is dominated by the FOMC decision, widely expected to deliver a third consecutive 25bp cut after NY Fed Williams' uncharacteristic guidance following the delayed September payrolls report. It's likely to be a contentious meeting though with many FOMC members preferring to have paused. * Being a SEP meeting, the dot plot distribution will be watched keenly whilst we expect the economic projections to show an upward revision for GDP growth and downward revision for core PCE inflation. * The FOMC will see two months of JOLTS data on the first day of their two-day meeting otherwise must wait until the following week for NFP (Dec 16) and CPI (Dec 18) reports for November. A reminder that these will see various degrees of backfilling for missing October values.

December 05, 2025 05:28

Austria and Italy will look to hold conventional auctions in the upcoming week.

December 05, 2025 09:02

A weekly wrap of some of the key macro themes/data outcomes.

December 04, 2025 05:56

HICP inflation was as originally expected but marginally above where consensus likely stood following most country data.

December 03, 2025 12:28

FX Market Analysis

HICP inflation was as originally expected but marginally above where consensus likely stood following most country data.

December 03, 2025 12:28

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_251128_d27ba2f6b9.pdf Executive Summary * The delayed retail sales report for September was softer than expected, with control group sales seeing their first (nominal) decline since April. We estimate a reasonably large decline in retail sale volumes in September, with weak momentum heading into Q4 after a solid Q3. * On the flip side, core durable goods orders continued a string of solid readings in recent months with the preliminary September readings, pointing to decent momentum for production into Q4. * Core PPI inflation was softer than expected back in September and broadly chimes with underlying core goods CPI inflation, with a peak for post-tariff M/M inflation pressures having come earlier in the summer (June for our median estimate on the CPI side, July for core PPI). * Core PCE tracking has been trimmed a little further to ~0.22% M/M after 0.23% M/M in Aug and the 0.24% averaged through May-July, with scope for small upward revisions. * Jobless claims were mixed, with particularly healthy initial claims, and on balance don't suggest any further deterioration in the unemployment rate after September's increase. * The ADP update however saw a third weekly decline, pointing to a weak monthly report ahead. * Consumer confidence saw a sharp decline in the November Conference Board survey although the labor differential at least didn't deteriorate further. * The 2026 fiscal year started with a larger than expected deficit in October, in what had been a wide range of expectations owing to shutdown disruption. The combination with November's data will give a better indication of latest fiscal direction but for now the 12-month trailing deficit remains large at 5.9% GDP. * The week's most notable intraday shift in rates came on a Bloomberg sources piece on Hassett seen as frontrunner for Fed Chair, after Waller had earlier in the week been seen in closer contention. It prompted a sizeable rally for 2H26 contracts and onwards plus steepening in the Treasury curve. * Fedspeak was heavily limited by the Thanksgiving holiday but saw SF Fed's Daly support a December cut. Waller also unsurprisingly did but then warned on the January meeting being "tricky" amidst a flood of data. * The Beige Book meanwhile reported little change in economic activity over the past six weeks whilst there were net dovish developments across employment and inflation on a breadth basis. * Next week would ordinarily have been geared towards a NFP report on Friday but that it now set for Dec 16 as the BLS continues to work its way through the shutdown-induced data backlog. Instead, expect the myriad of labor releases starting Wednesday along with ISM surveys and monthly PCE data to help finalize market expectations ahead of the Dec 9-10 FOMC meeting, where we currently anticipate a hawkish cut.

November 28, 2025 05:20

We look at ten big takeaways from the Budget. Increasing taxes and energy bills into an election looks questionable

November 28, 2025 01:07

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

November 28, 2025 06:09