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Trading The FOMC

With the market already pricing in dramatically fewer rate-hikes that the "cheerleading" Fed, Deutsche Bank expects the USD to respond favorably to the FOMC’s signals on Wednesday, contrary to the pattern seen after the last four FOMC meetings with press conferences.

The waning influence of the Fed’s projections is showing up in derivatives markets. After the December revision to the projected path of interest rates, traders responded much less than they did earlier in the year in the market for derivatives known as overnight-indexed swaps.

"At The Moment, It's Carnage" - The Startling Truth About China's 'Strong Consumer'

One of the biggest false narratives pitched by the mainstream to mitigate concerns about a global recession, is that even as China's massively overlevered manufacturing sector is careening into a hard landing, China's "strong" consumer base will keep the country's economy afloat (a narrative shared with the U.S.), even though as reported over the past weekend retail sales soundly disappointed expectations, while the latest proxy of China's consumer strenth, namely "record" box office receipts, was recently uncovered to have been - like everything else in China - mostly fabricated.

"Sweden Most At Risk Of Asset Bubble" Moody's Warns, After Taking A Look At Swedish House Prices

Last September, in the aftermath of Sweden going full NIRP, we warned that "Sweden Goes Full Krugman, Gets Massive Housing Bubble", in which we showed the unprecedented surge in Swedish home prices, which have been the one asset class to "benefit" the from the Riksbank's ultra loose monetary policy hoping to stimulate inflation, even as overall inflation has failed to materialize.

Since then things have only gone more surreal, and the chart below shows what has happened to Swedish home prices in recent months.

 

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