Érje el gyorsan globális céljait szakértői segítséggel.
Fedezze fel a határokon átnyúló kereskedelem jövőjét alakító meglátásokat, kutatásokat és szakértői nézőpontokat.
Fedezze fel a határokon átnyúló kereskedelem jövőjét alakító meglátásokat, kutatásokat és szakértői nézőpontokat.

Another surprise to the upside in this morning’s UK inflation report, a trend that we have become all too familiar with in the past year or so, elicited a rather muted response in currency markets.

Heightened fears surrounding a slowdown in global growth, and possible recessions, were once again back dominating the narrative in the FX market on Monday.

UK posts two consecutive quarterly deficit in the trade of goods with the US for first time since 1998 – driven by strong USD and surging fu...

Wednesday’s softer-than-expected US inflation print provided some relief for markets, sending the US dollar lower and risk currencies sharply higher.

Sterling fell fairly sharply against its major peers on Thursday afternoon following a very doom and gloom assessment of the UK economy from the Bank of England.

We expect the Bank of England to deliver a 50 basis point interest rate increase at this Thursday’s MPC meeting, though the decision among policymakers on the size of the hike is unlikely to be a unanimous one.

The US economy now meets the barest technical definition of a recession, and Federal Reserve hikes are now fully dependent on inflation and labour data meeting to meeting.

The US economy contracted for the second straight quarter in Q2 according to data released on Thursday, falling into what is traditionally classed as a technical recession, though US government officials have attempted to deny it.

This week’s FOMC announcement was largely as expected, though the lack of a firm commitment to additional larger rate increases did send the US dollar lower against its major counterparts on Wednesday.

The Federal Reserve is expected to deliver another sizable interest rate hike at its July policy meeting on Wednesday, although we think that calls for a 100 basis point move are unjustified.

Disappointing economic data out of the US brought yields down worldwide and removed any chance of a 100 basis point interest rate hike from the Federal Reserve this week.

The European Central Bank delivered a larger-than-expected 50 basis point interest rate hike on Thursday afternoon, as policymakers in the bloc grapple to rein in the sharp increase in inflation in the Euro Area.
