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US Labor Market: Cracks Beneath The Surface

The US unemployment rate has clocked in below 4.5% for 33 consecutive months. However, this historicallylow rate camouflages nascent cracks in the US labor market.

The US Fiscal OutlookIs Unsightly,But A Debt Crisis Is Not Inevitable

Executive SummaryInvestors have observed that pandemic spending materially worsened the USfiscal outlook and are asking our US strategists about it in nearly every meeting

On Crude's Tug-Of-War

Bottom Line: A continued softening of oil demand will eventually intensifybearish pressures and pull the floor from beneath oil prices. But we probably arenot there yet..

USD: in the shadow of the Rockies

It was a tentative start to the week for risk sentiment. The rhetoric from the Fed remains mixed. While dovish FOMC voter Mary Daly expressed more confidence

FAST FX Fair Value Model--USD looking undervalued

The FAST FX model continues to sit out the FX markets and remains up 2.50% over the past year with a hit rate of 50%. Heading into the Jackson

Global Rates StrategyWeekly supply Preview

Global supply next week: Euro area, Us, UK, JP, AUS & NZNominal supply is scheduled in the Euro area (expect ~EUR4.5bn), US (USD16bn), UK(GBP3.75bn), Japan (JPY1.65tn),Australia (AUD1.5bn) and New Zealand

Global Rates StrategySep/Dec Futures roll

Repo risk is meaningful for DecGiven the uncertain path of the Fed over the next few months, valuation of the Deccontracts will be sensitive to

Is the VlX spike a signal of wider credit spreadsahead?

A key debate last week was whether equities were sending a signal for creditThe massive spikes in cross-asset volatility in early August (e.g., 2, 4, 5 sigma moves in1Oyr USTs, IPYUSD, and VlX) have left investors actively

Us Equity StrategyEarnings Brief 2Q24: August 19

With 87.9% of the S&P 500's market cap reported, we will be transitioning to a weeklyEarnings Brief for the remainder of the season..

Multi-Asset Strategy Daily

If there is a message from last week’s US data, we would say it’s this one: “disinflation is ongoing and there is no need to panic on the economy for now”. The UoM survey numbers also supported that view, with