
U.S. Treasury yields are more or less unchanged at 4.4%, with investors awaiting several economic releases this week—including GDP and payrolls—as well as the FOMC decision tomorrow. Asia EM $ credit was weak today, with spreads around 2–3bp wider as momentum behind trade tariff talks fades. There were no particular outliers. Asian equities ended mostly in positive territory, with the Hang Seng lagging, down 0.4%.
In the news, the Thai/Cambodian ceasefire is holding, with army commanders from both sides agreeing this morning to uphold the agreement. A trade deal between the U.S. and Thailand is expected soon, as hostilities subside. Indonesia has reportedly agreed to a zero-tariff deal with the EU for palm oil exports, while the Philippines’ BDO Unibank has raised PHP115bn in a recent capital raising—significantly more than originally planned. In new issuance, Li & Fung (Ba2neg/BB/BB) has launched a new $ 3.5Y deal with initial price talk around 9%.

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Treasury reported Friday that as of Jun 25 it had $130B in remaining "extraordinary" measures (of a total $378B available) to ward off an "x-date" of running out of resources before defaulting. That's the highest in 2 weeks.

The Cleveland and Dallas Fed's median PCE metrics showed a notable drop in May. All indices suggest PCE inflation running above 2%, and higher than the actual core and headline PCE measures, but pressures appear to have cooled from a pickup in the early months of the year.


USDCAD has pulled back from its recent highs. The primary downtrend remains intact and short-term gains appear to have been corrective. Key support and the bear trigger has been defined at 1.3540, the Jun 16 low. Clearance of this price point would resume the downtrend. Any reversal higher would instead signal scope for a stronger retracement. Pivot resistance to monitor is at the 50-day EMA, at 1.3803.