Tag Archives: ECB
FI Eye-Opener: Finally some inflation somewhere
After some falls earlier in the day and volatility around Dr Yellen’s testimony, 10-year yields ended the day close to unchanged on both sides of the Atlantic.
FI Eye-Opener: Dove hunting
Core bond yields climbed yesterday, more so in the US than in Germany. The German 10-year yield edged higher by less than a bp, while the US 10-year yield rose by around 3bp.
Draghi: Monetary Policy To Remain Accommodative For Extended Period
European Central Bank President Mario Draghi reiterated the Bank’s forward guidance policy and
FI Eye-Opener: Perfect post-World Cup Monday
Markets are roughly unchanged this morning from where they ended Friday. The most interesting event during the weekend seems to have been the soccer World Cup final.
The Week Ahead in FX
In the week ahead, investors will be watching testimony on monetary policy by Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen and
Bonds: On the edge of another summer crisis?
The market reaction from the past few days brings back some memories of the Euro-zone debt crisis,
FI Eye-Opener: Portuguese jitters not the start of another crisis
Core bonds initially rallied in earnest yesterday and curves bull-flattened, supported by weaker risk appetite and flight-to-safety flows as well as disappointing Euro-zone economic data.
FI Eye-Opener: Do you see bubbles, Fed?
US bonds felt some pressure from the 10-year auction, but yields fell back after the release of the Fed minutes.
FI Eye-Opener: 2012 lows, here we come
German bonds rallied yesterday already before the 7-1 massacre Germany delivered vs Brazil in the World Cup.
Euro Not All That “Crazy” To Correct Lower In H2
Despite statements to the contrary, the euro, at current levels around $1.3600, is not all that “crazy” and
ECB Noyer: ECB Actions Needed To Prevent “Perverse Feedback Loop”
European Central Bank Governing Council member Christian Noyer warned on Tuesday that the
The Global Macro Pulse
G10 FX was mixed, with AUD rising to 0.938 on improvement in NAB business survey, while CAD continued to weaken by another 0.2%.
