ECB balance sheet data ahead of Thursday's meeting confirms that excess reserves remain well above levels approaching scarcity across the Eurozone, leaving little pressure on the ECB to act on the structural bond portfolio for now.
The long-term liquidity decline since the peak was initially been driven by a roll-off of the ECB's TLTROs (with the TLTRO III programme starting in 2019 with three-year maturities and with the final maturity in Dec 2024) but mostly comes on the back of the declining ECB's monetary policy positions (PEPP + APP), which are standing at a current €3.753trl combined. Amongst the policy positions, the ECB envisages a further average monthly roll-off of around €13.4bln of the PEPP through Dec-26 and of around €28.6bln of the APP through Jul-26 (respective f'cast horizons).

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Canadian analysts' expectations for October inflation:

Canadian CPI is expected to have pulled back in October from September's 7-month high 2.4% Y/Y. Consensus (Bloomberg median) sees October CPI at 2.2% Y/Y (2.4% prior), with M/M at 0.2% (0.1% prior), while the average Median/Trim measure is seen at 3.05% (3.15% prior).

Equities recovered from a sharp intraday sell-off to close roughly flat Friday, with the Nasdaq and S&P 500 almost unchanged but the the Dow Jones retracing 0.7% after Thursday's outperformance.
