Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P.
Measure Level Δ DoD
5yr UST 3.69% +2bp
10yr UST 4.14% +3bp
5s-10s UST 44.6 +1bp
WTI Crude 62.9 -0.7
Gold 3678 +33.3
Bonds (CBBT) Z-Sprd Δ DoD
ARGENT 3 1/2 07/09/41 1659bp +2bp
BRAZIL 6 1/8 03/15/34 226bp +1bp
BRAZIL 7 1/8 05/13/54 315bp -0bp
COLOM 8 11/14/35 322bp -4bp
COLOM 8 3/8 11/07/54 379bp -1bp
ELSALV 7.65 06/15/35 379bp -3bp
MEX 6 7/8 05/13/37 231bp -1bp
MEX 7 3/8 05/13/55 280bp -1bp
CHILE 5.65 01/13/37 131bp -1bp
PANAMA 6.4 02/14/35 235bp +3bp
CSNABZ 5 7/8 04/08/32 511bp -14bp
MRFGBZ 3.95 01/29/31 226bp -2bp
PEMEX 7.69 01/23/50 463bp +2bp
CDEL 6.33 01/13/35 174bp -2bp
SUZANO 3 1/8 01/15/32 162bp -1bp
FX Level Δ DoD
USDBRL 5.32 +0.01
USDCLP 955.42 +1.32
USDMXN 18.4 +0.02
USDCOP 3869.29 -26.34
USDPEN 3.50 +0.01
CDS Level Δ DoD
Mexico 86 0
Brazil 126 0
Colombia 170 1
Chile 46 (0)
CDX EM 98.26 0.02
CDX EM IG 101.68 0.00
CDX EM HY 94.66 (0.01)
Main stories recap:
· Major U.S. equity indexes hit new highs led by technology following through from some positive developments the past few days with the Nvidia investment in Intel, Oracle led consortium acquisition of TikTok’s US operations and the USD20bn Oracle deal with Meta to provide infrastructure for the development of artificial intelligence models.
· Treasury yields rose 1-2bp in technical trading as the expected Fed rate path was not altered by Fed governor Kashkari’s comments that he favored two more Fed cuts this year but sent a message like Fed Chair Powell that the labor market wasn’t bad but should be watched closely.
· EM secondary benchmark bond spread changes ranged from flat to 10bp wider across CEEMEA while in LATAM spreads were generally 1-3bp tighter.
· Brazil’s Braskem underperformed with bonds down 2-3 points after late yesterday’s S&P ratings downgrade to B+, outlook negative.
· Argentina sovereign bonds attempted a rally this morning only to fail and end up lower. The peso continued to be under pressure and the govt reportedly spent USD1bn this week trying to defend it.

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As far as the 7 non-voting FOMC participants, we detect a similar proportional split: 2 likely for a cut; 3 that could go either way, and 2 likely leaning against.
The first two members in the “September cut” column on the FOMC are permanent voters Bowman and Waller, who said that they voted against the central bank's "wait and see" rate policy in July because upside risks to price stability have diminished and it was time to proactively hedge against further weakening in the economy and the risk of damage to the labor market. Bowman said this month she’d support 3 rate cuts through year-end (ie at each remaining meeting).
So among voters, that suggests about 2 will definitely support a cut (Bowman, Waller), 2 are probably opposed (Schmid, Musalem), and the remaining 7 (Goolsbee, Cook, Powell, Barr, Williams, Jefferson, Collins) may not yet be convinced.
Ahead of the Jackson Hole Symposium this weekend, we've published our digest of relevant Fed commentary since the last meeting in July - PDF here.
