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NAB Morning Call

Quietly Confident

Season 7, Ep. 4

Monday 16th January 2023


NAB Markets Research Disclaimer 

Financial Services Guide | Information on our services - NAB


It’s a quiet start to the week, but markets in the US finished last week assuming that inflation has peaked and the Fed will go no further than a couple of 25 basis point hikes. The increasing expectation is that the US will weather the inflation curse without going into recession. That seems less likely for the UK, even with a surprise (but marginal) increase in monthly GDP for November. Today on the podcast NAB’s Taylor Nugent looks at the week ahead, including the possibility of a widening of the tolerance band in the Bank of Japan’s yield control curve, and Australian employment data later in the week – the ongoing tightness of the labour market will be very influential in future RBA rate decisions.

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  • 94. US productivity slips adding to labour costs

    19:29
    Friday 3rd May 2024NAB Markets Research Disclaimer Financial Services Guide | Information on our services - NABUS productivity has slipped quite markedly in Q1, that’s pushed up labour costs – is that something to worry about? Phil puts the question to NAB’s Gavin Friend, who says markets are still responding to yesterday’s dovish slant from the Fed. Non-farm payrolls will be watched keenly tonight, along with US Services PMI. Locally  Australia’s home loans data is out today. Phil and Gavin also talk through revisions to the OECD’s growth forecasts for the US, Australia, Europe and the UK. 
  • 93. Fed’s lack of progress

    17:09
    Thursday 2nd May 2024NAB Markets Research Disclaimer Financial Services Guide | Information on our services - NABThe Fed kept rates on hold for the sixth meeting in a row this morning, warning that there had ben a lack of further progress towards their 2% inflation target. NAB’s Ray Attrill says it didn’t really change market pricing for a cut, with the first fully priced move still looking like December. But there was a fair bit discussed during the press conference, from the terminal rate, the impact of the election and the possibility of a rate hike. Jerome Powell gave a cautious ‘no’ to the rate hike. Listen in for the latest from the Fed and the latest data, including JOLTS from last night and Australia’s trade data today.
  • 92. Bond yields push higher, heavy losses in equities a day out from the Fed

    14:43
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  • 91. A sticky last mile for Europe

    14:01
    Tuesday 30th April 2024NAB Markets Research Disclaimer Financial Services Guide | Information on our services - NABGerman inflation numbers overnight were stickier than expected, presenting a challenge for the ECB, one of the few central banks that has been talking-up the mid-term rate cuts. Phil asks NAB’s Rodrigo Catril if this puts June cut in jeopardy, or the expected follow-up cuts later in the year. Elsewhere we saw a sharp reversal in the value of the Yen. Has it been driven by intervention, or at least the anticipation of it? Australia’s retail numbers will be the focus locally today.  
  • 90. Waiting longer as inflation persists

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  • 88. Stagflation anyone?

    19:46
    Wednesday 24th April 2024NAB Markets Research Disclaimer Financial Services Guide | Information on our services - NABIs stagflation on the horizon for America? It’s a question Phil puts to NAB’s Rodrigo Catril after we saw slower growth and rising prices in data out on Wednesday. Could slow growth impact the euphoria around the Magnificent Seven? Well not just yet, as Microsoft and Alphabet have both enjoyed double digit percentage growth in after-hours prices o the back of strong earnings data. They also discuss Australia’s latest CPI data which will mean a revised forecast from the RBA, but what does it do to the speed of rate cuts? And could the Bank of Japan surprise today, as the Yen hits another low?
  • 87. PMIs show narrowing US-Europe gap, Inflation Day for Australia

    16:35
    Wednesday 24th April 2024NAB Markets Research Disclaimer Financial Services Guide | Information on our services - NABPMIs showed some strength in Europe, but were generally weaker than expected in the US. NAB’s Taylor Nugent says it’s the US numbers that generated a market reaction because it adds to the leading indicators that challenge the notion of US exceptionalism and that the gap between the US and Europe is closing. Today the quarterly CPI print for Australia is unlikely to move the dial on RBA cuts, even if it comes in slightly lower than expected. Plus, Tesla’s earnings results, which have seen a rise in after hours pricing.