• After last week’s Fed decision, investors were happy to use soft/disappointing data to push money market pricing for ever more aggressive font-loading on Fed and ECB interest rate cuts. Fed members and even more ECB policy makers for now kept a balanced communication mostly favoring a gradual approach. Still markets now see a > 50% chance that the ECB will (have to) step up the pace of rate cuts with an ‘interim’ move in October rather than holding its quarterly pace with a next step in December. For the Fed, a cumulative 75+ bps further easing is discounted despite Fed dots suggesting a main scenario of two 25 bps steps. The US 2y yield is testing 3.55% support (low reached in the wake of the SVB crisis). The EMU 2y swap even trades at the lowest level since September 2022. Today, there was no eco news to further build on this front-loading exercise. It would be an exaggeration to call it a real rebound/correction, but US yields ‘rise’ around 3 bps, awaiting more directional impetus. German yields ‘add’ about 2-3 bps. Further out this week, US durable orders and jobless claims (tomorrow) and Friday’s (expected soft) US PC deflators, might keep yields near recent lows. The next real reference for markets and policy makers will come next week with the US ISM’s and next Friday’s payrolls. EMU flash September inflation will be published on Tuesday next week. The positive fall-out from Chinese multiple easing measures on (mostly) European equity markets already stalled (EuroStoxx 50 -0.2%). That also was the case for the impact on some cyclical commodities including Brent oil ($74/b). • In line with global yields’ trends (easing of global financial conditions), the dollar is holding close to recent lows against most other majors (DXY 100.35). The yen underperforms as markets take somewhat of a more wait-and-see approach on the pace and timing of additional BoJ tightening (USD/JPY rises from 143.23 to 144.05). Maybe a bit strange given recent awful EMU data, EUR/USD remains well bid, slightly outperforming and challenging the YTD top at 1.1202. Sterling this morning briefly tested the GBP/USD 1.343 area (highest since end Feb 2022), but sterling outperformance gradually evaporated despite BoE Green advocating a cautious approach to BoE easing and the OECD upwardly revising UK growth this and next year. After testing the 0.8320 area yesterday, EUR/GBP today rebounds to trade in the 0.8365 area. Cyclically sensitive currency (AUD, NZD, CAD, NOK) and smaller currencies (CZK, HUF, PLN) also are ceding marginal ground.
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