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Market Briefing: Sentiment Turns Fragile As Bank of England Sucks and Blows

Nerves are frayed after the Bank of England’s efforts to simultaneously ease and tighten policy continue to sow confusion in bond and currency markets. After stepping up its intervention efforts on Monday, the central bank offered to buy £5 billion in inflation-linked bonds yesterday morning, but instability returned when Governor Andrew Bailey warned pension funds support would end on Friday, saying “You’ve got three days left. You’ve got to get this done”. A later Financial Times article, referencing interviews conducted prior to Bailey’s comments, added to the mixed messaging by suggesting that officials were considering extending relief beyond Friday –...

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Market Briefing: Risk Appetite Remains Depressed, Containing Trading Ranges in Currency Markets

Markets look intent on extending yesterday’s slump, with major equity indices poised for a weaker open and the dollar remaining stable on robust demand for safe-haven assets. Currency traders, bracing for weak corporate earnings, hawkish Fed minutes, and still-firm inflation data, are avoiding taking strongly-directional positions, staying close to home where possible. The pound is weaker after the Bank of England broadened its emergency buying to include index-linked gilts. In a statement setting out the details, the Bank said “The beginning of this week has seen a further significant repricing of UK government debt, particularly index-linked gilts. Dysfunction in this...

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Market Briefing: Markets Flatline Ahead of Non-Farm Payrolls

Currency traders are treading cautiously ahead of a non-farm payrolls report that is expected to show the US job creation engine beginning to cool, but still running far too hot for the Federal Reserve. With high inflation and ever-rising interest rates weighing on economic activity, markets think roughly 250,000 new positions were created last month, down sharply from the 440,000 average in the first half, even as the unemployment rate holds near a historically-low 3.7 percent. Data released yesterday morning showed initial jobless claims jumping to a seasonally-adjusted 219,000 last week from a revised 190,000 in the prior week –...

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Market Briefing: Trading Ranges Shrink Ahead of Non-Farms

Equity futures are weaker and currency market trading volumes are down as investors contemplate higher inflation risks – while bracing for tomorrow’s non-farm payrolls report. Oil prices are stabilizing around higher levels after gaining sharply in the last week. The North American benchmark, West Texas Intermediate, is trading for $87 a barrel while its global equivalent, Brent, is holding near $93 after the OPEC+ group of producing countries agreed to cut output by a larger-than-expected 2 million barrels a day. Because most members are already failing to meet targets, the number of barrels removed is likely to be far smaller,...

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Market Briefing: Markets Tiptoe Into October

With traders and investors suffering from a kind of post-traumatic stress syndrome after a brutal September, markets are cautiously edging higher this morning. North American equity indices are pointing to a stronger open, commodity benchmarks are finding their feet, and economically-sensitive currencies like the Canadian dollar are climbing back from Friday’s selloff. The dollar is slightly softer, but remains strong after the Federal Reserve’s favoured inflation measure showed no evidence of deceleration. According to data released on Friday, the core personal consumption expenditures deflator climbed 0.6 percent in August, suggesting that underlying price pressures continue to grow even as gasoline...

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