US mortgage market index 277.5vs 292.3 prior
US mortgage purchase index 149.2 vs 149.3 prior
US MBA 30-year mortgage rate 6.36% vs 6.4% prior
This article was written by Arno V Venter at www.forexlive.com.
US mortgage market index 277.5vs 292.3 prior
US mortgage purchase index 149.2 vs 149.3 prior
US MBA 30-year mortgage rate 6.36% vs 6.4% prior
This article was written by Arno V Venter at www.forexlive.com.
Core CPI is projected at 0.26% MM and 3.2% YY
Headline CPI is projected at of 0.09% MM and 2.3 YY
The main components to watch for tomorrow:
Housing inflation is expected to soften, with rents anticipated to decelerate, particularly due to adjustments in the Owner’s Equivalent Rent (OER) calculations and seasonal factors.
In terms of the possible broader economic and Fed policy impact the bank suggests that the disinflation trend aligns with the Fed’s projections, and along with the solid labor market data should support the forecast of two more 25 basis point cuts in November and December.
This article was written by Arno V Venter at www.forexlive.com.
This article was written by Arno V Venter at www.forexlive.com.
ECB: -25 basis points of easing implied for October 17th meeting (100% probability implied for a cut)
BoC: -32 basis points of easing implied for October 23rd meeting (100% probability implied for a cut)
BoJ: 1 basis point of tightening implied for the October 31st meeting (87% probability implied for a hold)
RBA: -2 basis points of easing implied for the November 5th meeting (91% probability implied for a hold)
BoE: -21 basis points of easing implied for the November 7th meeting (84% probability implied for a cut)
Fed: -22 basis points of easing implied for the November 7th meeting (88% probability implied for a cut)
RBNZ: -45 basis points of easing implied for the November 27th meeting (100% probability implied for a cut – almost fully priced for another 50bp move)
SNB: -30 basis points of easing implied for the December 12th meeting (100% probability implied for a cut)
This article was written by Arno V Venter at www.forexlive.com.
It’s been another quiet session in terms of data releases. The only notable data point was the US NFIB Small Business Optimism index which ticked higher compared to the prior month.
We had also many ECB speakers confirming a rate cut in October which the market has already priced in weeks ago. The price action in the FX market remains rangebound as we continue to wait for the US CPI release on Thursday.
In the equity space, the Chinese markets continue to trade around the daily lows while the US and European markets have been grinding higher.
In the commodities space, crude oil is down 1.88% on the day since the peak hit in the overnight session at $78.46 with the pullback in the Chinese equities being the likely culprit. Copper is another big loser as it’s been even more sensitive to the Chinese markets lately. Gold, on the other hand, remains rangebound as the recent rally in real yields continues to weigh on the market.
The American session will be empty in terms of key data releases and the Fedspeak will take the centre stage once again as we get Fed’s Bostic and Fed’s Collins speaking.
This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at www.forexlive.com.
This article was written by Arno V Venter at www.forexlive.com.
This article was written by Arno V Venter at www.forexlive.com.
This article was written by Arno V Venter at www.forexlive.com.
Given the Fed and market’s focus on the labour market, there will be increased focus on the consumer for the Q3 earnings season.
This article was written by Arno V Venter at www.forexlive.com.
It’s been a a quiet session in terms of data releases with the Eurozone retail sales being the only highlight. The data came in better than expected but the market ignored the release.
The most notable movers in the markets have been Treasury yields and crude oil. Regarding the former, the market priced out all the agressive rate cuts expectations and it’s now even leaning on a more hawkish side compared to the Fed’s projections. Speaking of the latter, the tensions in the Middle East remain high and that’s been supporting the price alongside a better macro outlook.
In the FX space, we are seeing a bit of a pullback in the US Dollar given that the market has already priced out the rate cuts. Looking forward, it’s now about the US CPI on Thursday as a hot report could see the market pricing in a pause for the Fed and give the greenback an extra boost.
In the American session, we have some Fedspeak. All of the scheduled speakers are known hawks, so some hawkish comments after the NFP report shouldn’t be surprising.
This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at www.forexlive.com.