All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

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MNI EM Credit Weekly: Keeps Printing

Jan-23 14:50

MNI's key exclusive stories for this week

Jan-23 10:24

Chinese policy advisors look at EU-China relations in the wake of the spat over Greenland.

Jan-23 09:32

The BOJ held rates unchanged in an eight-to-one vote.

Jan-23 09:26

UK consumers' resilience increases amid political turmoil, GfK say.

Jan-23 06:50

China advisors share their tech equity market outlook.

Jan-23 00:14

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MNI Technical Analysis

Gold Bull Cycle Extends

Technical analysis chart

FI Market Analysis

France is scheduled to hold MT OAT and linker auctions today.

January 22, 2026 08:05

Austria, Cyprus and Finland all announced mandates to hold syndications while Germany is scheduled to hold an auction.

January 21, 2026 06:45

The BOJ is widely expected to keep policy unchanged after December’s 25bp hike

January 21, 2026 01:05

Download Full Document Here: https://media.marketnews.com/MNI_P20012026_b79cc18478.pdf * Trade in early 2026 so far has been indicative of reduced shorts and increased longs across European bond future structural positioning. * Just 2 of 7 contracts are in structurally short territory, vs 5 of 7 in our last update 2 weeks ago, while there are now 3 longs (2 prior). * The latest week's trade through Monday Jan 19 saw longs set across the board in Eurex contracts. * GERMANY: German positioning is mixed. Bobl structural positioning remains erratic, moving back into long territory after being in "short" two weeks ago (it had previously been long through most of November/December). Bund remains in short territory with Buxl remaining very short. Schatz meanwhile has moved to flat after being "very short" previously. The latest's week trade showed longs set in each contract. * OAT: OAT structural positioning has moved to flat from short in our previous bi-weekly update. The latest week's trade was indicative of long-setting. * GILT: Gilt structural positioning remains very long. However bucking the broader trend, he latest week saw some shorts set. * BTP: BTP structural positioning has edged into very long territory after merely "long" prior. Trade indicative of further long-setting was seen in the latest week.

January 20, 2026 04:33

FX Market Analysis

We see downside risks to private regular wage growth and look in depth at expectations for air fares within December CPI

January 19, 2026 06:57

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_260116_759a94a4c1.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * Inflation data this week did little to change market participants' minds over the future path of Fed rates, taking a backseat to non-economic developments. * December's CPI data was softer than expected in most respects, with relatively limited "payback" from the unusually soft (and heavily distorted) October/November report. * Subsequently-released (and delayed) producer price data for October and November pushed up core PCE forecasts for Q4 - and there will be a positive spread for core PCE over its CPI counterpart - but the FOMC's December projection of 3.0% Y/Y still looks to have downside risks. * Even so, there is overwhelming support among Fed speakers for a rate hold at the upcoming meeting. * The Fed's Beige Book for January portrayed a slightly stronger take on economic activity compared with the prior release (November), with a slight improvement in labor market conditions and steady inflationary pressures - likely reinforcing conviction on the FOMC that there is no hurry to cut rates. * The week's main moves in rates markets didn't come from CPI or PPI, but rather a hawkish shift from another surprisingly low jobless claims print before President Trump hinted he'd like Kevin Hassett to stay at the NEC (amid a furore over the DOJ's just-announced investigation into current chair Powell.) * Trump is expected to select his candidate for the next Fed Chair soon, and rates jumped alongside the implied probability that former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh will get the nod given speculation that he won't be as ardent a supporter of lower policy rates as Hassett. * The terminal implied yield of 3.26% has now more clearly exceeded levels seen shortly before the Dec FOMC and last closed higher in July. Increases in 2026 rate expectations are unsurprisingly backloaded with Fed Powell's term expiring in May. The 20bp of cumulative cuts for Jun is little changed since the start of the US session but year-end cuts have been trimmed 3bps to a cumulative 45bp. * The coming holiday-shortened week (Monday is MLK Day) will be highlighted by legal intrigue on Tuesday and Thursday, with the US Supreme Court potentially releasing its ruling on the legality of the White House's IEEPA tariffs on its next scheduled opinion day on Tuesday, and oral arguments on Wednesday over whether President Trump is allowed to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook. * Thursday's monthly personal income and outlays report headlines the weekly US data calendar with another unusual two-month combined release for October and November.

January 16, 2026 09:04

A weekly wrap of some of the key macro themes/data outcomes for the Asia Pac region.

January 16, 2026 05:58

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_Inflation_Insight_Jan2026_e48f62c22e.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * December's CPI data was softer than expected in most respects, with relatively limited "payback" from the unusually soft (and heavily distorted) October/November report. * Stronger-than-expected food prices and energy readings kept headline (0.31% M/M) from "missing" more vs MNI's unrounded consensus (0.37% M/M) than did core which came in at 0.24% M/M (0.35% unrounded consensus). * Headline Y/Y inflation printed its lowest since June and core CPI Y/Y inflation at joint lows since early 2021. There was relatively little change in Y/Ys for core goods and services compared to last month's surprisingly low November print, though food inflation firmed. * Within the core categories, the big surprise was that there was zero inflation in core goods prices despite anticipation that there would be "payback" in particular for unusually low holiday sales-related goods prices in November (along with continued expectations of tariff passthrough). * Core services and overall supercore were also on the soft side though directionally most of the major categories were in order. That included a pickup in housing inflation that was slightly more than had been expected, and while travel-related services jumped as fully anticipated, they wasn't quite as strong as consensus had thought. * Subsequently-released (and delayed) producer price data for October and November pushed up core PCE forecasts for Q4 - and there will be a positive spread for core PCE over its CPI counterpart - but the FOMC's December projection of 3.0% Y/Y still looks to have downside risks. * There were plenty of oddities in this CPI report, with several categories registering multi-year/all-time highs and others lows without much explanation, reinforcing the notion that the "noise" from the October/November collection period continues to reverberate. * By the same token, it will reinforce conviction among FOMC participants that it could be a little longer before there is a cleaner read on underlying inflation dynamics. * Overall while inflation may not have picked up as strongly toward the end of the year as feared following the imposition of tariffs, Fed officials have signalled that they will be waiting to see data early in the New Year for any signs that businesses are finally setting prices higher to offset input inflation pressure. But most are cautiously optimistic that inflation should come down over the course of the year. * In the meantime, the data did nothing to alter expectations for a January Fed hold, with more focus at this point on the labor market. FOMC meeting-dated OIS shows just under 1bp of easing for this month, 6.5bp through March, 11bp through April, 24bp through June, 32bp through July and 53bp through year-end.

January 14, 2026 08:38