Finance Am

Informações:

Synopsis

This is your daily morning briefing. With commentary and analysis from Westpac's Institutional banking team, Finance AM brings you insights on today's business news, the markets, FX and more. In one short bulletin, you'll get the heads up on what will be dring the markets in the day ahead.

Episodes

  • 240424

    23/04/2024 Duration: 03min

    The US dollar fell following stronger than expected European PMI data and disappointing US equivalents. Bond yields fell, and equities rose, the S&P500 up 1.2%.

  • 230424

    22/04/2024 Duration: 02min

    Amid little major news, the US dollar and bond yields fell slightly, while equities rose – the S&P500 up 1.2%.

  • 220424

    21/04/2024 Duration: 02min

    Friday’s risk-off move related to Israel’s strike on Iran was unwound in bond and currency markets, as retaliation fears dissipated. Equities fell though, the S&P500 down 0.9%.

  • 190424

    18/04/2024 Duration: 04min

    The US dollar and bond yields rose amid hawkish Fedspeak and some solid US economic data. Equities fell slightly.

  • 180424

    17/04/2024 Duration: 03min

    The US dollar and bond yields corrected lower amid little major news for markets. Equities fell slightly.

  • 170424

    16/04/2024 Duration: 04min

    Further gains in the US dollar and bond yields were helped by hawkish comments from Fed Chair Powell and solid US industrial production data.

  • 160424

    15/04/2024 Duration: 03min

    Gains in the US dollar and bond yields were helped by stronger US retail sales data, while equities fell (S&P500 -1.0%).

  • 150424

    14/04/2024 Duration: 02min

    Risk-aversion struck markets on Friday, as they braced for an attack by Iran on Israel. The defensive US dollar rose, bond yields fell, and equities fell (S&P500 -1.5%).

  • 120424

    11/04/2024 Duration: 05min

    Markets consolidated the previous day’s sharp moves, with minor movement in bond yields and the US dollar following the ECB’s on hold decision.

  • 110424

    10/04/2024 Duration: 05min

    Markets were rattled by stronger than expected US CPI inflation data. US bond yields and the US dollar jumped significantly, and equities fell, the S&P500 down 1.3%.

  • 100424

    09/04/2024 Duration: 04min

    In another session bereft of major news, bond yields fell, while the AUD and NZD currencies outperformed. Markets are focussed on tonight’s US CPI data.

  • 090424

    08/04/2024 Duration: 03min

    Bond yields rose slightly to multi-month highs, Friday’s strong US jobs data still resonating. The US dollar did not follow suit though.

  • 080424

    07/04/2024 Duration: 04min

    Bond yields rose following strong US payrolls data and hawkish Fedspeak. The US dollar is only slightly firmer, though, with equities higher – the S&P500 up 1.1%.

  • 050424

    04/04/2024 Duration: 03min

    The US dollar fell further but bond yields were mixed, ahead of important US payrolls data. Fedspeak emphasised patience, and jobless claims data was slightly cooler.

  • 040424

    03/04/2024 Duration: 03min

    Bond yields and the US dollar fell, initially in response to weaker US services activity data, and then during Fed chair Powell’s speech. The S&P500 is up 0.4%.

  • 030424

    02/04/2024 Duration: 04min

    Bond yields rose further but the US dollar fell, amid mostly solid economic data in the US, Eurozone and UK. Equities fell, the S&P500 down 0.9%.

  • 020424

    01/04/2024 Duration: 02min

    Bond yields and the US dollar are higher, following stronger US manufacturing data. Equities are slightly lower.

  • 280324

    27/03/2024 Duration: 03min

    Bond yields are slightly lower, following the Swedish central bank’s dovish hold, and dovish ECB comments. The US dollar is little changed.

  • 260324

    25/03/2024 Duration: 03min

    US bond yields rose and the US dollar fell slightly, amid little major news and mixed Fedspeak.

  • 240324

    24/03/2024 Duration: 02min

    US bond yields fell slightly, while the US dollar rose, as markets digested the previous week’s signals from major central banks.

page 1 from 25