All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

Latest insights

EU officials give their outlook for the EU's ETS2 emissions trading scheme whose extension has been delayed by a year.

Nov-13 12:20

We draw together some of our recent coverage on UK funding markets and preview today's STR operation.

Nov-13 09:47

MNI interviews former Fed board division of monetary affairs chief Vincent Reinhart.

Nov-12 19:40

With the policy rate already very close to neutral, the BCRP is widely expected to remain on hold at 4.25%.

Nov-12 17:34

Ex-OBR Chief of Staff Andy King on UK fiscal consolidation and the need for changing major tax rates.

Nov-12 11:49

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FI Market Analysis

We look at sellside and BOE projections for the labour market. We think risks are to the upside for private regular AWE.

November 10, 2025 02:37

We look at how the BOE has changed market drivers and focus in the coming weeks and what to watch going forward.

November 10, 2025 12:00

We look in detail at the new short-term data projections and think that if data comes in line a December cut is likely.

November 10, 2025 07:17

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_251107_a70dd27625.pdf * Our mantra throughout the increasingly lengthy federal government data blackout has been: no "official" data, no problem. There's been enough "alternative" data to get a sense of underlying economic currents even without the touchstone nonfarm payrolls and GDP releases, and overall they continue to suggest solid economic activity but a continued slow cooling in the labor market. * ADP employment was firmer than expected for October and the NFIB jobs report showed little deterioration on the small business front, but most other labor releases have disappointed, most notably a negative Revelio labs nonfarm payrolls estimate and a spike in job cut announcements in the Challenger report. * The ISM mfg survey for October underwhelmed across the board, undershooting regional Fed surveys, the MNI Chicago PMI and what continues to be a much more optimistic S&P Global PMI. New orders disappointed a bounce seen elsewhere and prices paid fell to the lowest since January. * However, the ISM services report was the strongest overall since early in the year, with its headline index rising 2.4pts to 52.4 for an 8-month high. This easily exceeded the expectation and came with improvements in most of the key subcomponents, though employment remained weak and there were signs of continuing acute inflationary pressures. * The preliminary U.Mich consumer survey for November saw a sharp decline in consumer sentiment as the perception of current conditions slid to their lowest on record. We continue to advise caution with these preliminary surveys as they can be more susceptible to a heavier weighting of certain political affiliation. * Growth tracking looks solid on net though, with the Dallas Fed weekly growth indicator continuing to slow but from high levels whilst the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow sees 4.0% annualized Q3 real GDP growth. * US rates head towards the end of the week at their most dovish of the week, paring some of the hawkish shift after Powell drove uncertainty over a December rate cut at the Oct 29 FOMC press conference. * The week ahead sees a quieter data calendar, with focus likely on the second publication of ADP's new NER Pulse on Tuesday before state-level claims on Thursday. The spike in Challenger layoff announcements this week should have further increased sensitivity to higher claims.

November 07, 2025 08:20

FX Market Analysis

We look at sellside and BOE projections for the labour market. We think risks are to the upside for private regular AWE.

November 10, 2025 02:37

We look at how the BOE has changed market drivers and focus in the coming weeks and what to watch going forward.

November 10, 2025 12:00

We look in detail at the new short-term data projections and think that if data comes in line a December cut is likely.

November 10, 2025 07:17

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_251107_a70dd27625.pdf * Our mantra throughout the increasingly lengthy federal government data blackout has been: no "official" data, no problem. There's been enough "alternative" data to get a sense of underlying economic currents even without the touchstone nonfarm payrolls and GDP releases, and overall they continue to suggest solid economic activity but a continued slow cooling in the labor market. * ADP employment was firmer than expected for October and the NFIB jobs report showed little deterioration on the small business front, but most other labor releases have disappointed, most notably a negative Revelio labs nonfarm payrolls estimate and a spike in job cut announcements in the Challenger report. * The ISM mfg survey for October underwhelmed across the board, undershooting regional Fed surveys, the MNI Chicago PMI and what continues to be a much more optimistic S&P Global PMI. New orders disappointed a bounce seen elsewhere and prices paid fell to the lowest since January. * However, the ISM services report was the strongest overall since early in the year, with its headline index rising 2.4pts to 52.4 for an 8-month high. This easily exceeded the expectation and came with improvements in most of the key subcomponents, though employment remained weak and there were signs of continuing acute inflationary pressures. * The preliminary U.Mich consumer survey for November saw a sharp decline in consumer sentiment as the perception of current conditions slid to their lowest on record. We continue to advise caution with these preliminary surveys as they can be more susceptible to a heavier weighting of certain political affiliation. * Growth tracking looks solid on net though, with the Dallas Fed weekly growth indicator continuing to slow but from high levels whilst the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow sees 4.0% annualized Q3 real GDP growth. * US rates head towards the end of the week at their most dovish of the week, paring some of the hawkish shift after Powell drove uncertainty over a December rate cut at the Oct 29 FOMC press conference. * The week ahead sees a quieter data calendar, with focus likely on the second publication of ADP's new NER Pulse on Tuesday before state-level claims on Thursday. The spike in Challenger layoff announcements this week should have further increased sensitivity to higher claims.

November 07, 2025 08:20