Bloomberg reported that US oil inventories fell 4.8mn barrels last week while they were unchanged at Cushing, according to those familiar with the API data. Product stocks were higher with gasoline stocks up 7.0mn and distillate 1.0mn. With the focus returning to supply/demand fundamentals, inventory data are likely to be scrutinised. The official EIA figures are released on Wednesday and will also include product demand.
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NZGBs are unchanged after US tsys finished the NY session modestly cheaper on Friday as early risk-off sentiment moderated.
The Friday night range was 153.01 - 153.59, Asia is currently trading around 153.95, +0.35%. The pair has gapped higher on the Asian open as reports of a potential deal on the US shutdown make the rounds, reversing the short-term negative market sentiment on risk. USD/JPY found solid demand around the 153.00 area on Friday again, any confirmation of the shutdown ending would potentially see a knee-jerk higher in risk. In this scenario the focus would turn again to the resistance around the 154-155 area. A sustained break above here could potentially see the uptrend regain upward momentum as the focus would turn to the 160 area where I would start to become wary of intervention risks.
Fig 1 : USD/JPY Spot Daily Chart

Source: MNI - Market News/Bloomberg Finance L.P
The focus of the week will be Thursday’s October jobs data. After the unemployment rate rose 0.2pp to 4.5% in September, the release will be monitored to see if there is some stabilisation as the data can be volatile on a monthly basis. Bloomberg consensus expects it to fall 0.1pp to 4.4% with new jobs up 20k and the participation rate stable at 67%. RBA Governor Bullock has advised to look at the data on a 3-month average basis.