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Five countries are scheduled to hold auctions next week, while the ESM is likely to hold a syndication.
Jan-30 16:32Rate decisions in Poland and Czechia take focus across CEEMEA next week.
Jan-30 15:03Trade tensions and political risk continued to keep
Jan-30 14:46
MNI US Macro Weekly: The Fog Of Warsh

MNI US Macro Weekly: The Fog Of Warsh
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Open CalendarLink to the pagemyMNIhttps://my.mnimarkets.com/dashboard?widget=/events/key-events-calendarHSC on myMNILink to the pageMore CalendarsLink to the page
MNI US Macro Weekly: The Fog Of Warsh

MNI US Macro Weekly: The Fog Of Warsh
Key Events
Calendar
Open CalendarLink to the pagemyMNIhttps://my.mnimarkets.com/dashboard?widget=/events/key-events-calendarHSC on myMNILink to the pageMore CalendarsLink to the pageLatest insights
Five countries are scheduled to hold auctions next week, while the ESM is likely to hold a syndication.
Jan-30 16:32Rate decisions in Poland and Czechia take focus across CEEMEA next week.
Jan-30 15:03Trade tensions and political risk continued to keep
Jan-30 14:46Newsletter
MNI Global Week Ahead - Central Banks, NFP and US Refunding
Jan-30 21:16MNI ASIA MARKETS ANALYSIS: US$ Up, Metals Crushed, Warsh Pick
Jan-30 20:38MNI US MARKETS ANALYSIS - Warsh Incoming
Jan-30 12:08MNI US OPEN - Trump Expected to Announce Warsh as Fed Chair
Jan-30 10:47MNI DAILY TECHNICAL ANALYSIS - Gold Vol Muddies Tech Trend
Jan-30 08:19MNI EUROPEAN MARKETS ANALYSIS: USD Trying To Bounce
Jan-30 05:34MNI EUROPEAN OPEN: Warsh Fed Chair Odds Surge
Jan-30 05:21MNI ASIA OPEN: Rates Sending Risk-Off Signals
Jan-29 20:57MNI Technical Analysis
Gold Bull Cycle Extends

FI Market Analysis
Read moreFI Market AnalysisThe Riksbank held the policy rate at 1.75% as expected, with key guidance left unchanged.
January 29, 2026 02:51Germany and Portugal will look to hold auctions today while Italy will return to the market tomorrow.
January 29, 2026 06:43Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/Fed_Review_Jan2026_b1aa281281.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The FOMC treaded a largely neutral path with its January decision, maintaining its easing bias but sounding slightly more patient in making its next move than it did last month. Markets took a very mildly hawkish interpretation with implied rates rising under 1bp for meetings to July but even less of a move further out, and the dollar remaining largely unmoved. As it stands, there is under 4bp of cuts priced for the next meeting in March. * The Statement leaned marginally more hawkish in tone vs the previous edition but no moreso than was warranted given solid data since the December meeting and the Committee's clear shift to a "wait and see" stance on rates. It was edited to reflect more solid-than-expected economic growth and labor market data since December's meeting, no longer noting that "downside risks to employment rose in recent months". However the more substantive part of the statement - the forward rate guidance - was unchanged, continuing to say the FOMC was "considering the extent and timing of additional adjustments". * While Chair Powell said there was "broad support" on the Committee for holding today, including among non voters, Govs Miran and (in a very mild surprise) Waller dissented in favor of a 25bp cut, with the latter seeing a slight boost in his prediction market-implied probability of being named Fed Chair. * In the press conference, Chair Powell (as expected) refused to answer questions about his own future or the Department of Justice investigation into the Fed. But headlines published during the press conference reported US Tsy Sec Bessent saying that President Trump's Chair pick may come in the next week or so somewhat overshadowed proceedings. * On the monetary policy front, Powell at times sounded very relaxed on the current policy configuration, with the opening statement of the press conference including the line: "we see the current stance of monetary policy as appropriate to promote progress toward both our maximum employment and 2% inflation." When asked whether the Committee's timeline for rate cuts had been pushed back, he pointed out that since December there has been a "clear improvement in the outlook for growth". And multiple times he noted both "the upside risks to inflation and the downside risks to employment" have "diminished". * But Powell also said that current rates were at the "higher end" of the range of plausible estimates of neutral, implying that there was further room to come down. He highlighted "ongoing disinflation" across services, and the expectation of goods disinflation over 2026 as tariff impacts wane. Finally, he emphasized that a rate hike was not any participant's base case for the next move. * Attention turns to a potentially busy schedule next week, which may include the long-awaited announcement of Powell's would-be successor (Blackrock's Rieder and ex-Fed Gov Warsh remain the front-runners). If a federal government shutdown is avoided, we will get January nonfarm payrolls next Friday too. See PDF report for: * MNI View * Market Reaction * MNI Instant Answers * Press Conference Transcript * FOMC Meeting Links * Policy Statement Changes * MNI Policy - Fed Watch
January 28, 2026 09:11Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/BOC_Review_Jan2026_8009f7d9a8.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Bank of Canada accompanied the unanimously-expected overnight rate hold at 2.25% at its January meeting with a largely unchanged appraisal of the economic and policy outlook. There was a very slight dovish tilt to the communications but not enough to sway market pricing of the expected policy path which continues to show no change in rates through 2026. * While the BOC remains uncertain about the "timing or direction of the next change in the policy rate", the opening statement highlighted the "unusually high" degree of uncertainty due in large part to upcoming North American free trade negotiation which the Bank's forecasts assume will result in the status quo, at worst. * And the updated Monetary Policy Report forecasts didn't deviate from expectations that inflation will converge with the 2% target, while maintaining that there remains slack in the economy despite upgraded growth forecasts. * Gov Macklem was asked in the press conference whether elevated uncertainty raises the bar for either cutting or hiking, and offered a little bit more colour on Governing Council's deliberations without revealing any particular lean, noting merely that CUSMA presented "obvious" risks to the outlook. * Markets came out of the meeting expecting largely the same path of rates as seen coming into the day, with modest cuts implied through July (~5bp) but rates ultimately ending the year higher (~9bp) vs current levels. * The next major data points to watch are November GDP on Friday, with January labour force data on Feb 6 and January CPI on Feb 16. The next rate decision will be on March 18. * See PDF report for: * MNI View * MNI Instant Answers * Press Conference Transcript * BOC Meeting Links * Policy Statement Changes * Monetary Policy Report Updates
January 28, 2026 04:45FX Market Analysis
Read moreFX Market AnalysisDownload Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/BOC_Preview_Jan2026_be093f7f2a.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: * The Bank of Canada is overwhelmingly expected by both markets and analysts to maintain its overnight rate at 2.25% at the January meeting (announcement on Jan 28). * This would be a 2nd consecutive pause as part of what is anticipated to be a flat rate path through 2026. The biggest question is, in which direction will the next move be? * The account of the deliberations at the December meeting highlighted that Governing Council debated "whether it was more likely that their next move would be to raise or lower the policy interest rate." * It remains more likely than not that the next move will be a hike, with a downside shock required for cutting again. * The January Monetary Policy Report is likely to show an upgrade to GDP growth projections for 2025 as a whole with a potential slight upgrade to 2026 at a still-soft level. CPI forecasts also look set to be raised slightly due to higher-than-expected headline readings in the latter months of the year, but as we explain, the more important underlying metrics have been subdued.
January 27, 2026 06:55EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: * As widely expected, the BoJ left rates on hold at its January policy meeting. This was the broad sell side consensus along with market pricing, which gave little chance to a hike at the meeting. A move was seen as very low risk, particularly after the December hike at the end of 2025. Much focus was on the outlook in terms of when the next BoJ hike may materialize. * Our sense is that the next window for a BOJ hike will be around mid year, consistent with market pricing of a June hike (see below for more details). Still, there are risks this could be moved forward, potentially to April. Watch points will be fiscal impetus post the election, along with JPY trends (weakness beyond 160 in USD/JPY could prompt an earlier hike), while by April we should also have more information on 2026 wage outcomes. * Market pricing, as at today, gives only a modest chance to a hike at the March policy meeting. April has an implied rate of 0.915%, against a current effective rate of 0.728%, so around 75% chance of a 25bps tightening priced in. A full hike is more than priced in for the June meeting, while by year the implied rate is above 1.40%. FOR THE FULL PUBLICATION PLEASE USE THE FOLLOWING LINK: BOJ Review - Jan 2026.pdf: https://media.marketnews.com/BOJ_Review_Jan_2026_776b9aadbe.pdf
January 27, 2026 04:09Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/Fed_Prev_Jan2026_With_Analysts_22448bf33a.pdf This update of our January 23 Fed preview includes analyst expectations - starting page 26 January 2026 FOMC Analyst Views: See You In March None of the 31 analysts' whose previews MNI read expected a Fed rate cut at the January FOMC meeting. * Statement: Most analysts saw the description of economic conditions as largely "marked to market" at the January meeting rather than changed substantively, with the description of "moderate" growth upgraded slightly. * More substantively, some analysts saw tweaks to the description of the balance of risks, potentially including the previous editions' note that risks to employment had risen in recent months. * There were almost no expectations that forward rate guidance would be changed but JPMorgan sees the removal of the word "additional" in the sentence "In considering the extent and timing of additional adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate" * Dissents: All analysts who expressed an opinion said that it was likely/certain that Gov Miran would again dissent in a dovish direction. Several speculated he could be joined by Gov Bowman and/or Gov Waller, in descending order of probability, * Future action: The MNI analyst median for expected 2026 cuts is 50bp, with a range from zero to 125bp. * The median analyst still sees the next cut coming in March, though several pushed back their easing views to later in the year after the December nonfarm payrolls data released earlier this month. * Several analysts identified June as a logical point of resumption for rate cuts as it would/could reflect the first post-FOMC meeting with a new Fed Chair.
January 26, 2026 09:59We will be watching the gilt and repo markets for any impacts of this week's large redemption
January 26, 2026 08:20





