US: MNI POLITICAL RISK - Trump Urges Nuclear Option To Reopen Govt

Oct-31 13:26

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  • President Donald Trump will depart the White House for Mar-a-Lago at 10:00 ET 14:00 GMT. He has no public events in his diary for today. He will host a dinner for his MAGA Inc. superPAC on Saturday.
  • The Trump administration has reportedly made the decision to target Venezuelan military sites as part of its anti-cartel operations in Latin America. Secretary of State Marco Rubio will meet Bolivian President-Elect Rodrigo Paz today, as the Trump administration bolsters influence in the region.
  • Day 31 of the US government shutdown. The Senate will return on Monday after leaving town yesterday. The House of Representatives has been out of session for over 40 days. Trump called on Senate Republicans to deploy the so-called ‘nuclear option’ to circumvent the filibuster to reopen the government. A variety of shutdown pressure points are converging in the coming days.
  • Agriculture Secretary Brook Rollins will join House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) for his daily government shutdown press conference ahead of tomorrow's SNAP benefits cliff.
  • European Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic held "in-depth" discussions with US officials on steel and aluminium.
  • Federal Reserve officials are planning to reduce banking supervision staff by 30%.
  • US officials intend to present a plan in the coming weeks for an international force in Gaza.
  • Poll of the Day: Nearly half of Americans say Trump and congressional Republicans are responsible for the shutdown. 33% say congressional Democrats are responsible.

Full Article: US DAILY BRIEF

Historical bullets

EQUITIES: European Equities are edging higher

Oct-01 13:21
  • While Equities may have had a lesser move compared to the Likes of Bond Futures moving higher and some selling of the Dollar post the US ADP miss, the European Estoxx Futures (VGZ5) targets the next resistance of 5575.00, the March high
  • Cash Desks will be paying attention at the record high in SX5E situated at 5568.19.
  • The Banking Index (SX7E) is still short of the August high at 237.32, but the next main resistance is still eyed at 242.85, the 2009 high.

US PREVIEW: ISM Manufacturing: Marginal Improvement Seen Continuing

Oct-01 13:17

Today's ISM Manufacturing survey (1000ET) is expected to see another rise in the headline index in September, to 49.0 from 48.7 prior for a 2nd successive improvement in activity albeit below the 50 mark for a 7th consecutive month.

  • Recall: August's ISM Manufacturing report was weaker than expected on the headline figure, with some sub-components telling a slightly more mixed story, and price pressures unexpectedly diminished. Overall the ISM survey continues to portray a manufacturing sector that is failing to convincingly regain traction after the summer's tariff-related policy uncertainty. Indeed, tariffs were mentioned extensively in the sector-by-sector anecdotes in the report, and not in a positive light.
  • September's flash US PMIs brought a 2-month low for Manufacturing at 52.0 (52.2 consensus, 53.0 prior). That report noted: "Higher output was reported in the manufacturing sector for a fourth consecutive month, but the expansion was much weaker than the strong gain (a 39-month high) seen in August. New order inflows in the goods-producing sector also weakened to only a marginal pace, in part due to an increased rate of loss of exports due to tariffs." The report also reported "lower job gains" in manufacturing in the month, with the sector seeing "more of a focus on job losses due to cost cutting."
  • September saw a very mixed round of regional Fed manufacturing surveys:  The Dallas, NY, and Richmond Feds saw sizeable pullbacks in current activity vs August, while Philadelphia and KC saw big improvements.
  • ISM New Orders are seen slowing to 50.0 (51.4 prior) with Employment up to 44.3 (43.8 prior). For Employment, regional Fed data has held up a little better than the national ISM series (see chart).
  • Meanwhile, the ISM Manufacturing Prices Paid gauge is expected to tick down to 62.7 from 63.7 prior. This would mark a second consecutive monthly dip but still keep the prices gauge around the highest levels since late 2022. The expectation for a slight downtick in roughly accords with the proxy indicators we have seen.
  • September's flash S&P Global PMI report noted "Manufacturing input price inflation remained elevated at one of the highest rates since the pandemic, albeit dipping slightly since August." Regional Fed manufacturing surveys showed pullbacks in NY, Philadelphia, Kansas City, and Dallas (Richmond, which reports % Y/Y changes, was steady).
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MNI EXCLUSIVE: Former SOMA Desk Trader On Long End Rates

Oct-01 13:15

Former New York Fed trader Joseph Wang discusses how the central bank will deal with elevated long end rates -- On MNI Policy MainWire now, for more details please contact sales@marketnews.com.