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Limbo prime price
Limbo prime price






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  2. LIMBO PRIME PRICE PC

Price indicators out of the NAB survey will continue to be in focus, having been signalling elevated and broadening price pressures in recent months.

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AU: NAB Survey & W-MI Consumer Confidence: No hints here.The story hasn’t affected the market, with the euro flat on the day and European gas futures settling lower. An export curb here can only add to the evolving energy crisis in Europe, one that looks to intensify as winter approaches. Norway’s hydro lakes are low and there is political pressure to refill the reservoirs rather than pump out electricity to export to the UK, Germany, Netherlands and Denmark. My BNZ colleague Jason Wong noted in his desperate search to write about something today, found an FT article that Norway is set to curb electricity exports in a blow to European energy supplies. The EUR (+0.1%), GBP (+0.0%) and USD/Yen (-0.1%) are all been little changed. Geopolitical tensions have had little impact even with China’s decision to extend its military exercises surrounding Taiwan, continuing training “under real war conditions”, as the People’s Liberation Army has described it. The AUD (1.1%) or the NZD (+0.9%) were boosted yesterday, helped by the better than expected Chinese trade numbers as were most commodities. In FX, the USD has given up some of its Friday gain, with the DXY down about -0.2%. Many analysts are taking the gains in meme-stock as a sign that financial conditions are still not tight enough (having loosened since the last FOMC meeting) and that the Fed still has a lot of work to do. Also interesting in terms of financial conditions is a return of meme-stock enthusiasm, with dogs like Bed Bath and Beyond (+39.8%), AMC (+8.4%) and Gamestop (+8.6%) enjoying gains today.

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High end graphic chip demand has weakened with major gaming and pc companies reporting weaker outlooks. Nvidia noted fiscal second-quarter revenue was about $6.7bn, down from its earlier projection of $8.1bn. In that light Nvidia’s (-6.3%) weaker than expected revenue numbers put pressure on semi-conductor stocks and combined with technicals (the Nasdaq had retraced 38.2% of its losses from its November high) was the catalyst that saw the S&P trade from being up 1.0% at one point, to closing ‑0.1%. With payrolls strong on Friday, there is lots of focus on equities and whether the current rally can be sustained.

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Note another measure of inflation expectations will be out on Friday in the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Survey with the Fed closely watching the 5-10yr expectation. The move in inflation expectations broadly supports the movements seen in implied inflation breakevens over the past few months with the 10yr breakeven at 2.48%, well down on its highs of 3.04% back in April.

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The drivers appeared to be expectations of a sharp fall in price increases for gas and food – likely reflective of the decline seen in oil prices to date. That survey reported a fall in inflation expectations across all time horizons with the one year to 6.2% from 6.8%, three year to 3.2% from 3.6%, and the five year which is asked on an ad-hoc basis to 2.3% from 2.8%. One second-tier report that did get a few headlines was the NY Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations. A weak earnings report by Nvidia (-6.3%) was one catalyst for the reversal. Meanwhile the USD edged lower with the DXY -0.2%, while equities gave up earlier gains with the S&P500 -0.1% after having been up some 1.0% at one stage. That dynamic of course means the 2/10s curve has inverted further to ‑46.0bps, the most inverted in 20 years and continues to drive talk of recession risk (note the largest in modern times was -56bps in April 2000). Yields meanwhile consolidated last week’s large moves with 2yr yields down by -1bps to 3.21% compared to larger moves in the 10yr of -7.7bps to 2.75%. As for how high US rates may go, markets price a peak of 3.62% in March 2023, followed by 57bps worth of cuts in 2023. Markets of course got their first on Friday with 69bps priced, now increased slightly to 70bps. Markets instead have been mulling over Friday’s strong payrolls report with a few more US banks calling a 75bp hike in September. China is continuing its military drills around Taiwan, but that hasn’t impacted markets apart from gold (+0.7% to 1,787.61) retaining some slight geopolitical risk premium. “Sweet dreams are made of this Who am I to disagree I travel the world and the seven seas Everybody’s looking for something”, Eurythmics 1983Ī very quiet start to the week with little news flow of significance.

  • Coming up: AU NAB Survey & Confidence, US NFIB.
  • Curve inverts further 2/10s now -46.0bps.
  • Equities reverse initial gains Nvidia weighs.
  • US Treasury yields lower and USD also lower.
  • Very quiet ahead of US CPI on Wednesday.







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