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The BOK board will deliver its latest base rate call on Thursday.

Jan-13 04:13

A leading labour market academic shares his view on the RBA's 2026 strategy.

Jan-13 03:41

The focus this week will be on MPC speak, monthly activity data and Chancellor Reeves’ testimony ahead of the TSC.

Jan-12 17:09

MNI interviews former IMF deputy division chief on Fed policy outlook.

Jan-12 12:39

You are invited to join an MNI Webcast with Alberto Musalem, President & CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis.

Jan-12 12:00

MNI interviews PBOC Monetary Policy Committee member Huang Yiping about the yuan.

Jan-12 11:32

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MNI Technical Analysis

Gold Bull Cycle Extends

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FI Market Analysis

Lower unemployment rate counters tepid jobs growth and downward revisions, but quality concerns linger

January 09, 2026 09:14

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_260109_b786cdfe57.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * Jobs growth may have disappointed in December's Employment Situation report, but the drop in the unemployment rate saw near-term rate FOMC cut prospects trimmed further (January cut = no chance) after hawkish shifts throughout the week. * A next Fed cut is still fully priced for June, only just at 25.5bp, the first meeting under a new Chair. * Most labor market data remains concerning but activity is still robust, not least because recent productivity growth was shown this week to be stronger than expected. Additionally while manufacturing activity remains moribund, December's ISM Services report was meaningfully stronger than expected, with the headline PMI index surprisingly jumping to a 14-month high. * A 5+% real GDP handle in Q4 as implied by the Atlanta Fed tracker may be misleadingly high due to distorted October trade data, but domestic final demand looks to have been roughly as strong at the end of the year as it was through its resilient middle. * The top-tier data schedule carries on Tuesday with the December CPI report amid a broader set of inflation prints, including delayed October and November PPI data (Wednesday) and Import/Export Prices for November (Thursday). * Also due to garner attention is the "advance" retail sales report which is likewise on the slightly stale side, being only for November (alternative measures of retail activity have signalled a solid end-of-year). And we should also mention a possible Supreme Court ruling on Wednesday on the legality of the White House's IEEPA tariffs. * Consumer price inflation is set to pick up on a sequential basis from November's suspiciously weak price prints, with early consensus pointing to 0.3 to 0.4% M/M rises in both headline and core CPI after an average increase of 0.1% M/M over November and October. * However, continued data distortions including "payback" effects mean that an inflation acceleration in December shouldn't be taken at face value (more in our week-ahead section) and is unlikely to settle any debates within the FOMC on the outlook for price pressures.

January 09, 2026 08:42

Issuance is expected to remain elevated in the third week of the new year.

January 09, 2026 02:47

We recap this week's issuance and look ahead to next week.

January 09, 2026 06:58

FX Market Analysis

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_260109_b786cdfe57.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * Jobs growth may have disappointed in December's Employment Situation report, but the drop in the unemployment rate saw near-term rate FOMC cut prospects trimmed further (January cut = no chance) after hawkish shifts throughout the week. * A next Fed cut is still fully priced for June, only just at 25.5bp, the first meeting under a new Chair. * Most labor market data remains concerning but activity is still robust, not least because recent productivity growth was shown this week to be stronger than expected. Additionally while manufacturing activity remains moribund, December's ISM Services report was meaningfully stronger than expected, with the headline PMI index surprisingly jumping to a 14-month high. * A 5+% real GDP handle in Q4 as implied by the Atlanta Fed tracker may be misleadingly high due to distorted October trade data, but domestic final demand looks to have been roughly as strong at the end of the year as it was through its resilient middle. * The top-tier data schedule carries on Tuesday with the December CPI report amid a broader set of inflation prints, including delayed October and November PPI data (Wednesday) and Import/Export Prices for November (Thursday). * Also due to garner attention is the "advance" retail sales report which is likewise on the slightly stale side, being only for November (alternative measures of retail activity have signalled a solid end-of-year). And we should also mention a possible Supreme Court ruling on Wednesday on the legality of the White House's IEEPA tariffs. * Consumer price inflation is set to pick up on a sequential basis from November's suspiciously weak price prints, with early consensus pointing to 0.3 to 0.4% M/M rises in both headline and core CPI after an average increase of 0.1% M/M over November and October. * However, continued data distortions including "payback" effects mean that an inflation acceleration in December shouldn't be taken at face value (more in our week-ahead section) and is unlikely to settle any debates within the FOMC on the outlook for price pressures.

January 09, 2026 08:42

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

January 09, 2026 05:57

The December payrolls report should offer a less distorted view of the labor market ahead of the Jan 28 FOMC decision

January 07, 2026 02:44

MNI's Key Central Bank Decision Dates calendar for 2026.

January 06, 2026 11:59