China’s inflation will likely remain weak in December, as CPI is expected to rise by 0.1-0.2% y/y, compared with November’s 0.2%, the Securities Daily reported citing analysts. PPI may slightly narrow from November’s 2.5% fall, with analysts expecting a decline of 2.2-2.5%, as coking coal prices continued to fall on steelmaking slowdown, a relatively warm winter and a high inventory level while that of iron ore, copper and aluminum all fell on weaken demand, the newspaper said citing analysts. The National Bureau of Statistics is set to release the latest data on Thursday.
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Throughout November’s policy and market volatility, though, Treasury auctions largely impressed, with 5 of 7 nominal coupon sales trading through.

MNI's latest US Treasury Issuance Deep Dive has just been published (PDF link here):
November proved a dramatic month for Treasuries. Yields were volatile before and after the Nov 5 election - after ending October at 4.28%, 10Y yields peaked at five-and-a-half-month high just above 4.50% mid-month before closing November just below 4.18%, as markets attempted to price in the implications of a Republican “sweep”.
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