The other Swedish data released this morning was less dovish than the very weak retail sales report. However, there’s not yet enough strength to call into question the recent dovish Riksbank guidance tilt:
Household and corporate lending growth continued to accelerate in May, with the former rising to 2.4% Y/Y (vs 2.3% prior) and the latter climbing to 1.9% Y/Y (vs 1.5% prior), the highest since September 2023. Although near term growth prospects appear soft due to heightened uncertainty, an improving credit impulse should support activity in the coming years. The Riksbank projects calendar adjusted GDP growth at 1.4% in 2025, 2.2% in 2026 and 2.1% in 2027.
April Wages: Non-manual workers wages reported by BBG fell notably to 2.5% Y/Y (vs 3.3% prior), but the more closely followed series from the National Mediation Office saw whole economy wages tick up to 3.5% Y/Y (vs 3.4% prior). Private sector pay rose two tenths to 3.5% Y/Y. The Riksbank has noted that the recent union wage agreement should support real incomes, but not threaten the inflation target.

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Aussie 10-yr futures rallied well on the RBA rate decision last week, reversing a small part of recent weakness. Recent price action pressured prices through to new pullback lows last week. Next support undercuts at 95.420 (pierced), the Feb 13 low, ahead of 95.275, the Nov 14 low and a key support. Clearance of this level would strengthen a bearish condition. To the upside, a recovery of recent losses would shift attention to resistance at 96.207, a Fibonacci retracement point.
US President Donald Trump is shortly due to deliver remarks in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he is expected to endorse Nippon Steel's takeover of US Steel. LIVESTREAM The announcement comes as the US and Japan remain far apart on a new bilateral trade deal.
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While the past week may be remembered for court decisions suspending the majority of the White House’s tariffs, it also brought further data evidence that the US economy did not fall off a cliff at the start of Q2.
