Tag Archives: USTB
Eye-Opener: the US dollar takes a breather, ECB purchases on track, Greece gets more ELA liquidity
The EUR/USD hit 1.05 yesterday triggered profit-taking and
Eye-Opener: Factors as strong as gravity holding rates low and is parity close by for EURUSD?
EURUSD briefly traded below 1.05 this morning. At the same time, US yields can’t seem to break higher. The reason is strong demand, especially from non-US investors. Yesterday’s 10Y auction in the US had almost 59% allotted to indirect bidders, predominantly non-US investors. On the Euro side, we can see easily see both bunds below […]
Eye-Opener: No stopping the dollar, nor the ECB, we’ll see about Swedish inflation
The dollar continues to strengthen and this morning hit 1.0666 against the euro.
Eye-Opener: More wasting of time in Greece, jump in Chinese CPI, lower yields
Euro-area yields saw big declines yesterday,
Eye-Opener: Mid-year Fed hike on track, ECB starts QE, Nordic inflation focus
Over the week-end, Greek ministers have floated the prospect of
Eye-Opener: ECB detailing of QE caused gyrations, upside risks to payrolls
As expected, yesterday’s ECB meeting provided a lot of QE details.
Eye-Opener: ECB – more details on QE, please
Rates and the oil price barely moved yesterday while the S&P 500 went down 0.4%.
Eye-Opener: US yields remain above 2%, record-high DKK interventions, stronger SEK
US stocks retreated (S&P 500: -0.5%) yesterday after the Nasdaq index on
Eye-Opener: Deflation risk in Euro-area narrows, Greek bailout speculation, AUD strengthens
The euro fell slightly against the USD yesterday.
Eye-Opener: China cut rates again, busy week for data, more details from ECB
In Asia this morning, the Nikkei (+0.2%), Hang Seng (+0.3%) and
Eye-Opener: German CPI to fall further, expect downward revisions to US Q4 GDP, further pressure on EUR/USD
The EUR/USD fell yesterday, and is close to testing year-to-date lows (1.1098).
Eye-Opener: Fed less patient, eyes on US inflation numbers, and SEK strengthening
US 10Y Treasury yields edged lower on Yellen’s comments,