The policies pursued by US President Trump have the potential to have some long-lasting consequences for the USD.
US steel and aluminium tariffs have already hit the EU, car tariffs will come into effect next week, and more tariffs will probably follow. The EU prefers to negotiate, but will simultaneously start ...
Trade tariffs and a milder winter in Northeast Asia saw LNG demand fall to the lowest since Q2 2023, while strong European demand will keep major price declines at bay.
With April 2nd approaching fast, it’s understandable markets are skittish, with positive sentiment sometimes proving fleeting.
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Yesterday, the Australian government announced its pre-election budget just ahead of the release of softer than expected February CPI inflation data this morning.
It was a good day for risk sentiment as equities, iTraxx and cash bonds were all in the green for the day, and this positive mood was also reflected in primary.
The secured market is being carried aloft by the shining light that is the ABS universe at present. Covered funding appears to have stepped back (for now), unlike ABS.
As discussions over who said what over Signal swirled among US politicians and journalists --on Signal-- US consumer inflation expectations leaped to 6.2% y-o-y, which is hardly the anchored level the ...
We expect Banxico to cut the policy rate 50bp at the March 27 meeting and our view is aligned with that of the majority of Bloomberg surveyed analysts.
Under President Trump, economic policy has shifted to economic statecraft. This means understanding a new US ‘grand macro strategy’ that focuses on national security.
In both the year to date and month to date, GBP is sitting in the middle of the G10 performance table.
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