EMISSIONS: UK’s 2030 Clean Energy Ambition Is Unlikely To Be Met

May-28 15:12

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The UK government's ambition for the country to be supplied with clean power by 2030 is unlikely to ...

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OPTIONS: Expiries for Apr29 NY cut 1000ET (Source DTCC)

Apr-28 15:11
  • EUR/USD: $1.1325(E792mln), $1.1470-75(E701mln)
  • USD/JPY: Y141.00($735mln), Y144.00($2.6bln), Y147.00($2.1bln)
  • AUD/USD: $0.6600-15(A$1.1bln)
  • USD/CAD: C$1.3805-20($710mln), C$1.3925($572mln), C$1.3970($633mln)
  • USD/CNY: Cny7.4000($699mln)

US DATA: Texas Manufacturers Turn Even More Pessimistic In April On Tariffs

Apr-28 14:59

The Dallas Fed's Texas Manufacturing Survey for April was the weakest since the start of the Covid pandemic in 2020, as tariff uncertainty weighed heavily on manufacturers in the district while price pressures remained elevated.

  • The headline general activity index printed -35.8 (vs -17.0 survey, and lowest since May 2020), was a 19.5 point drop from March and a 50 point drop since January.
  • That being said, actual factory activity continued to rise, with the production index at 5.1, indicating "modest growth", though shipments went negative for the first time this year.
  • Most of the damage was in "perceptions of broader business conditions", which "continued to worsen notably in April", per the report. New orders collapsed 19.9 points to -20, a 28-month low. And expectations also deteriorated: the index of production 6 months ahead dropped 12.8 points to 14.8, a 16-month low.
  • Summarizing the headline activity findings in the report: "The company outlook index also retreated to a postpandemic low...outlook uncertainty index pushed up...Labor market measures suggested a slight decrease in head counts and shorter workweeks this month...Most other indexes of future manufacturing activity remained positive but slipped further below average."
  • Anecdotes by manufacturers unsurprisingly cited tariff uncertainty, but also noted federal government spending cuts and restrictive monetary policy as factors (link to commentary here).
  • And price pressures remained acute: prices paid rose over 10 points to 48.4, highest since June 2022, with prices received up 8.6 points to 14.9 - just a 10-month high and suggestive of a continued contraction in margins. Forward-looking indicators were a little more benign, with 6-month expected prices paid ticking back 5.6 points to 47.6 (albeit from 3+ year highs in Feb/Mar), and though expected prices received ticked up 2 points to 29.6, this was well below the 34-month high 42.0 in February.
  • A set of special questions in the report showed that while 48% of respondents showed "no change" in firms' ability to pass price increases onto customers, 40+% found it "somewhat/much harder" to do so (just 13.5% somewhat/much easier).
  • 74.3% said they expected tariffs to impact their business negatively this year (when "don't know" respondents were excluded; 59% when they were included). A majority of the "negative" respondents said they were planning on passing cost increases onto customers (and the vast majority of them planned to increase prices within 3 months), 44% said they would absorb cost increases internally, while 29% would find new domestic suppliers and just 5.5% sought to relocate production to the US.
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US TSYS: Extending Highs

Apr-28 14:56
  • No obvious headline driver or block/cross (as yet) to point to for latest bid in Tsys off morning lows.
  • Tsy Jun'25 10Y climbed to 111-23 (+6.5), gains are considered corrective and resistance to watch is 111-25, 50.0% of the Apr 7 - 11 bear leg sell-off. Clearance of this level would undermine the bearish theme, and open 112.12, the 61.8% retracement point.
  • Curves bull steepening with short end rates leading: 2s10s +2.650 at 50.975 (46.905 low), 5s30s +.916 at 85.004.