All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

All signal, no noise

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Six countries are scheduled to hold auctions next week, while the EU is likely to hold a syndication.

Feb-06 16:07

Inflation data is due in both Hungary and Poland, providing the highlight across CEEMEA next week.

Feb-06 16:07

The CNB left interest rates unchanged; the Governor said a cut could become possible if core inflation eases.

Feb-06 15:43

President Lagarde stressed that monetary policy remains in a good place amidst heightened but broadly balanced risks

Feb-06 15:04

After an on-hold decision, the Governor signalled that in March the MPC may have sufficient evidence to justify a cut.

Feb-06 14:27

Banxico’s governing board left the overnight rate unchanged at 7.00% in a unanimous decision, as was widely expected.

Feb-06 10:27

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Gold Bull Cycle Extends

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FI Market Analysis

Focus will be on the vote split, the Agents' Pay Survey and individual paragraphs as we look for guidance

February 04, 2026 07:58

Belgium is likely to hold a 30-year OLO syndication and Germany a 7-year Bund auction today.

February 04, 2026 06:39

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: * The RBA raised the cash rate to 3.85%, as expected by the sell-side consensus and which was largely priced by the market (around 75% priced in per OIS markets prior to the decision). The decision was unanimous by the board. The risks appear skewed towards further action to ensure that inflation moves sustainably back into the target band of 2-3%. * RBA-dated OIS pricing is firmer again today across meetings, extending yesterday's post-RBA decision sell-off. That leaves RBA-dated OIS showing tightening across all meetings, with the probability of a 25bp hike rising from 17% for March to 105% by June and 172% by December 2026. FOR THE FULL PUBLICATION PLEASE USE THE FOLLOWING LINK:RBA Review - Feb 2026.pdf: https://media.marketnews.com/RBA_Review_Feb_2026_df58dffe5a.pdf

February 04, 2026 02:22

Download Full Document Here: https://media.marketnews.com/MNI_P03022026_f54a5e3f2b.pdf * The trend of reduced shorts and increased longs across European bond future structural positioning continued into February. * Now just 1 of 7 contracts is in structurally short territory, vs 5 at the start of the year, with 4 longs (3 "very long"). * The latest week (to Monday Feb 2) saw relatively mixed trade: while it was mostly indicative of further long-setting, there was also some long reduction and short-setting. * GERMANY: German positioning remains extremely mixed. Bobl structural positioning has shifted into very long territory from merely "long" previously. Like Schatz (long), it has moved from "short" at the start of 2026. Bund has ticked up to flat after being short in our last update. Buxl remains very short. The latest's week trade showed longs set in each contract except Bund (long reduction). * OAT: OAT structural positioning has moved back to short vs flat in our previous bi-weekly update. The latest week's trade was indicative of long-setting. * GILT: Gilt structural positioning remains very long. However, there was some long reduction evident in the latest week's trade. * BTP: BTP structural positioning remains in very long territory. Trade indicative of further long-setting was seen in the latest week.

February 03, 2026 08:02

FX Market Analysis

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: * The combination of a resilient labour market and stronger than expected Dec/Q4 inflation has the sell-side consensus expecting an RBA rate hike tomorrow. If delivered, focus will be on how much follow up action the central bank sees as needed to ensure inflation returns to target. The trimmed mean CPI y/y has been trending up since mid last year and is now comfortably above the top end of the RBA's 2-3% target band. We expect the RBA to leave the door ajar for another hike, albeit one that remains dependent on data outcomes. * OIS now reflects materially tighter policy expectations across the curve. A 25bp hike tomorrow is priced at a 77% probability (up from 32% pre-jobs data), with cumulative tightening probability of 166% by June (vs 88% pre-jobs) and 229% by December 2026 (vs 152% pre-jobs). FOR THE FULL PUBLICATION PLEASE USE THE FOLLOWING LINK:RBA Preview - Feb 2026.pdf: https://media.marketnews.com/RBA_Preview_Feb_2026_2a2e1b5adc.pdf

February 02, 2026 03:09

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_macro_weekly_260130_5bf343d50d.pdf EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * The largest rate moves of the week surrounded President Trump's selection of former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh as the next Fed chair when Powell's term in the position ends in May. * A next Fed cut is close to being fully priced for the June meeting again (22bp, the first meeting under the new Fed chair) whilst there are two 25bp cuts fully priced by year-end. * While historically more hawkish than most of the other contenders but also favoring economic productivity arguments for expecting inflation to remain in check amid solid growth, there remains high uncertainty on what the Fed might look like under Warsh's leadership. (More from our Policy Team on page 18.) * That includes policy on the balance sheet (preferring a smaller one) and communications, the Fed's reach outside of core monetary policy channels, and even personnel, having previously said "I think what we need is regime change at the Fed, and that's not just about the Chairman, it's about a range of people...it's about breaking some heads, because the way they've been doing business is not working." * Warsh or not, one impetus for consensus on a resumption of Fed easing would be a clear deterioration in the labor market, but here the data evidence remained mixed. Jobless claims remain at a healthy level despite initial claims surprising higher for the first time since Dec 11 after a particularly impressive run but with residual seasonality concerns. Continuing claims pushed lower still however but also with some questions over the role of unemployment insurance eligibility roll-off. * A further acceleration of strong core PPI inflation trends had little impact on Friday against a backdrop of precious metal prices tumbling, whilst details confirmed strong core PCE estimates at ~0.4% M/M for Dec. * Real GDP growth tracking for Q4 has been trimmed from 5.4% to a still very strong 4.2% after latest volatility in monthly trade reports. Capital goods imports are up strongly in tech-led strength but consumer and industrial imports are down heavily in a hangover from tariff front-running in Q1. * Manufacturing firms' sentiment firmed in January but consumer confidence slumped, with the lowest Conference Board metric since 2014 as consumer labor market perceptions softened further. * 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. * Looking ahead, another government shutdown looms, starting Saturday, but with questions over its potential duration and breadth. In the event the BLS isn't impacted, the nonfarm payrolls report for January will highlight the week's economic data on Friday. The report will include benchmark revisions and will continue to see attention on the unemployment rate after its recent stalling around the 4.4% mark. * We also get Treasury's quarterly financing and borrowing updates, with attention on any revisions to its guidance on future increases in auction sizes.

January 30, 2026 09:43

The Riksbank held the policy rate at 1.75% as expected, with key guidance left unchanged.

January 29, 2026 02:54

The Riksbank held the policy rate at 1.75% as expected, with key guidance left unchanged.

January 29, 2026 02:51