US DATA: Atl Fed Business Inflation Expectations Limit Increases

May-21 14:46
  • Atlanta Fed business 1Y inflation expectations dipped back to an average 2.5% in May after the 2.8% in April was the highest since May 2023 (showing expected increases in unit costs).
  • The relative levels chime more closely with levelling off in the increase in consumer expectations in the NY Fed survey for April as opposed to the sharper increases in consumer measures from the Conference Board (Apr) and U.Mich (May prelim).
  • The quarterly survey saw the average firm’s own price inflation of 3.9% over the past twelve months, an acceleration from the 3.5% in the Feb results but apart from that still the lowest since the question started in late 2020.
  • Average expectations for the next twelve months meanwhile accelerated further from 4.0% to 5.0% for the firmest since 4Q22. 
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Historical bullets

US DATA: Weak LEI Reflects Of Weaker Manufacturing, Tighter Financial Conditions

Apr-21 14:28

March's Conference Board leading economic index (LEI) was softer than expected at -0.7% M/M (-0.5% survey, -0.2% prior which is an upward revision from -0.3%). The coincident index rose 0.1% (0.3% prior), with the lagging index -0.1% (+0.3% prior).

  • This was the weakest monthly change in the LEI since October 2023, in keeping with other indicators that appear to have been negatively impact by tariff uncertainty.
  • The Conference Board release notes "the data does not suggest that a recession has begun or is about to start", though the LEI hasn't been a particularly reliable indicator of recession in this cycle, having printed in negative territory for a few years now. On a 6-month basis, the index is actually trending up from the early 2023 lows, but this doesn't offer much confidence in the outlook in and of itself.
  • MNI interprets the LEI more as a manufacturing cycle indicator: it is very heavily weighted toward cyclicality in manufacturing: avg weekly  manufacturing hours (25%) and ISM New Orders (17%) are combined over 40% of the index, when added to core capital goods orders (5%) and manufacturers' new orders (consumer goods and materials, 8%).
  • That being said, the biggest contributor to March's LEI drop was financial conditions (equity prices, leading credit index, spreads) for the weakest such conditions since October 2023. The accompanying chart shows MNI's grouping of contributing sectors to the LEI.
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US TSY FUTURES: BLOCK: Jun'25 10Y Buy

Apr-21 14:25
  • +8,000 TYM5 111-05, buy through 111-04 post time offer at 1016:29ET, DV01 $512,000. The 10Y Contract trades 111-07 last (+1.5) nearing overnight high of 111-07.5

US TSYS: Bonds Bounce, Cuves Steeper on Trump's "Preemptive Cuts" Call

Apr-21 14:14
  • Treasury futures are climbing off morning lows in the minutes after Pres Trump's latest tweet berating Fed Chairman Powell and reiterating a call for "preemptive cuts".
  • Curves maintain steeper profile as short end surges: 2s10s currently at 61.646 +9.400 vs. 62.245 high, 5s30s +8.231 at 94.038. Jun'25 10Y futures -3.5 at 111-02 vs. late overnight high of 111-07.5. Technical resistance above at 111-17.5 (Apr 16 high).
  • In turn, projected rate hike pricing gain momentum vs. morning levels (*) as follows: May'25 at -3.4bp, Jun'25 at -20.3bp (-19bp), Jul'25 at -43.1bp (-40.1bp), Sep'25 -62.9bp (-59.9bp).
  • Stocks reacting negatively, extending lows with SPX eminis slipping to 5207.5 low, Consume Discretionary and IT sectors underperforming.