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Lebanon Has Demanded That Israel Cease Its Attacks And Has Stated That It Is Ready To Resume Negotiations
The Swiss National Bank Stated That It Is Now More Prepared To Intervene In The Foreign Exchange Market
[War Exacerbates Inflation Fears, Traders Cut Bets On Fed And Bank Of England Rate Cuts] As Middle East Wars Push Up Oil Prices And Exacerbate Inflation Concerns, Currency Markets On Monday Reduced Bets On Rate Cuts In The US, UK, And Eurozone. According To Swap Contracts Linked To Policy Meeting Dates, The Probability Of Three Fed Rate Cuts In 2026 Has Fallen From Nearly 50% Last Week To 20%. Traders No Longer Expect Three Bank Of England Rate Cuts This Year And Have Lowered Their Probability Of A March Rate Cut From Over 80% To 60%. They Halved The Probability Of A European Central Bank Rate Cut This Year
The Lebanese Prime Minister Announced That Lebanon Is Prepared To Invite Civilian Experts To Participate In Negotiations With Israel, With International Support
The Cypriot Government Says Two Drones Flying Toward The British Airbase In Akrotiri, Cyprus, Have Been Intercepted
A Senior Iranian Official Said: "In The Future, We Will Strive To Stop Ships Associated With Zionist Entities."
A Senior Iranian Official Said: "We Will Deepen And Intensify Our Actions In The Occupied Territories."
Sources Say Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Office Was Not Attacked By Iranian Missiles
US President Trump: "Very Disappointed" By British Prime Minister Starmer's Decision To Block Him From Using The Diego Garcia Base To Strike Iran
U.S. Central Command: During Intense Fighting, U.S. Fighter Jets Were Mistakenly Shot Down By Kuwaiti Air Defense Forces
[Iran Appoints Acting Defense Minister] Reporters Have Learned That Iranian President Pezechzian Has Issued An Order Appointing Brigadier General Saeed Majid Ibn Reza As Acting Defense Minister

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U.S. Defense Secretary Hergsayh held a press conference.
ECB President Lagarde Speaks
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That's certainly how the market looked at things yesterday, after an August US CPI report that was broadly inline with expectations, contrasted with a marked and surprising rise in initial jobless claims.
That's certainly how the market looked at things yesterday, after an August US CPI report that was broadly inline with expectations, contrasted with a marked and surprising rise in initial jobless claims. It's also, of course, how the FOMC are looking at things, after Chair Powell's dovish pivot at Jackson Hole.In terms of the specifics – headline CPI rose 0.4% MoM/2.9% YoY last month, while core CPI rose 0.3% MoM/3.1% YoY. Though this is, clearly, considerably north of the Fed's price target, and the headline metric continues to move in the wrong direction, Chair Powell has indicated that the FOMC will largely look-through any tariff-induced price pressures as a ‘one-time shift in the price level'. Hence, neither the above metrics, nor the 1.5% YoY rate of core goods inflation (the fastest pace since May 2023), will derail the Committee from delivering a 25bp cut next Wednesday.
As for the labour market, initial jobless claims rose to 263k in the week ending 6th September, the highest level since late-2021, though continuing claims unexpectedly fell to 1.939mln, in the seven days before that. That initial claims print, though, is clearly a concern, especially given the dismal July and August jobs reports, which also pointed to the labour market broadly losing momentum. I would flag, however, that the initial claims print did coincide with Labor Day, which could've somewhat skewed the figures higher.
That said, the jobless claims figures, coupled with underlying inflationary pressures not intensifying further last month, as well as the recent poor payrolls prints, has all further raised the risk that the FOMC now decide to make consecutive cuts through year-end, as opposed to the 2x 25bp moves (in Sep & Dec) that remains my base case. Markets are also increasingly of this view, with the USD OIS curve now fully discounting 75bp of easing by year-end.
In contrast to that more dovish path, the policy path for the ECB moving forwards is now a flat one, with yesterday's decision having all-but-confirmed that the easing cycle is done & dusted. As expected, the Governing Council maintained the deposit rate at 2.00%, while maintaining a ‘data-dependent' stance. Despite continuing to forecast an inflation undershoot next year, and now also forecasting an undershoot in 2027, President Lagarde repeated that policy is in a ‘good place', firmly supporting the idea that no further cuts are set to be delivered.
This narrowing US-E/Z rate differential, and in fact the narrowing US-RoW rate spread, adds further support to the bear case for the greenback, which remains predominantly driven by ongoing capital outflows as Fed policy independence is further eroded by the Trump Administration. The buck lost ground against most major peers yesterday, and I remain not only a longer-run dollar bear, but also a rally seller, if any rebounds were to occur.
Elsewhere, yesterday largely brought ‘more of the same' across the board. Equities ground out another day of gains, benefitting this time not from any notable macro optimism, but instead from the aforementioned dovish repricing of Fed policy expectations, in a classic ‘bad news is good news' rally. Typically, those sort of moves make me a little nervous, though for now I'll set those nerves aside as, firstly, I think the present labour market weakness is an adjustment to tariffs as opposed to anything more structural; and, secondly, as earnings growth remains solid, and underlying economic growth appears resilient too.
Finally, it would be remiss not to mention the gains seen across the Treasury curve, with benchmark 30-year yields sliding further below 4.70%, and the benchmark 10-year yield trading under 4.00% for the first time since April. Frankly, with the Fed having all-but-given up on the 2% inflation target, and with the Treasury showing no sign of reigning in runaway fiscal spending, I see little reason to like duration, and little reason not to expect a steeper curve. Mr Market, though, seems to have other ideas right now.
UK GDP figures are due this morning, though it's the very noisy monthly series for July which, while set to show the economy having stagnated last month, remains much too volatile to be of any use. In fact, the ONS would be wise to cancel its publication entirely, and focus its efforts on fixing much more important series such as the flawed inflation, and labour market, reports.
On the subject of volatility, the UMich sentiment index has been all over the place this cycle, largely due to political bias, and a very small sample size. In any case, the prelim. September reading is set to print 58.0 this afternoon, down from the 58.2 seen in August.
Besides that, all participants have to digest will be the typical deluge of ECB speakers that we tend to see the day after a policy announcement. If it being the end of a long week wasn't excuse enough to imbibe later, that lot will almost certainly drive us to a beer!
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