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Little to prompt early policy changes

Little to prompt early policy changes

And a government making things up as it goes along.

Key points

  • US inflation came in higher than expected, but the response was muted which suggests that investors are wedded to a bullish view.
  • Eurozone rate cut expectations were tempered by robust labour market data, with unemployment hitting an all-time low.
  • We’ve seen a renewed compression in credit spreads, and we continue to note that the technical backdrop in IG credit looks supportive.
  • In China, the economic outlook remains depressed, and the country is likely to underperform in the wake of the collapse in property prices.
  • Looking ahead, we continue to retain a cautious macro view, given that investors are complacent in fully discounting a soft landing.

Yields were not much changed in the wake of this week’s eagerly anticipated US CPI release. US headline inflation rose to 3.4% in December, with core price registering a 3.9% gain, which was 0.1% above consensus expectations.

Back in November, a 0.1% miss to the downside on core CPI saw yields post a material rally, as investors grew excited that this would feed into early Fed easing. The fact that a miss to the upside has seen a much more muted response suggests that the market is quite wedded to a bullish view into the year ahead.

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