German exports to both the US and China could continue to struggle in the coming months, as October trade data showed the 6-month moving average in exports to both the US and China decelerating further and showing little sign of bottoming out.
While the trade surplus outperformed expectations at E16.9bln (seasonally-adjusted, vs E15.7bln cons; E15.3bln prior), the increase on a sequential comparison came as exports roughly held their September levels (0.1% M/M vs 0.2% cons; 1.4% prior, revised from 1.5%) amid a contained imports decline (-1.2% M/M vs -0.5% cons; 3.1% prior).

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Indeed NY's Williams has already begun pointing to potential for balance sheet re-expansion to begin again, with "reserve management" purchases intended to keep Fed liabilities rising in line with market demand:


The Fed's latest H.4.1 release on Nov 5 showed reserves picked up from the prior week's post-2020 lows to $2.85T, up $24B in the latest week but still down $182B over the last month.


A few highlights from the Fed's latest Financial Stability report out today (link):