US Industrial Production has turned negative on a YoY basis for the first time since February 2021.
Disclaimer
This marketing document has been issued by Bank Syz Ltd. It is not intended for distribution to, publication, provision or use by individuals or legal entities that are citizens of or reside in a state, country or jurisdiction in which applicable laws and regulations prohibit its distribution, publication, provision or use. It is not directed to any person or entity to whom it would be illegal to send such marketing material. This document is intended for informational purposes only and should not be construed as an offer, solicitation or recommendation for the subscription, purchase, sale or safekeeping of any security or financial instrument or for the engagement in any other transaction, as the provision of any investment advice or service, or as a contractual document. Nothing in this document constitutes an investment, legal, tax or accounting advice or a representation that any investment or strategy is suitable or appropriate for an investor's particular and individual circumstances, nor does it constitute a personalized investment advice for any investor. This document reflects the information, opinions and comments of Bank Syz Ltd. as of the date of its publication, which are subject to change without notice. The opinions and comments of the authors in this document reflect their current views and may not coincide with those of other Syz Group entities or third parties, which may have reached different conclusions. The market valuations, terms and calculations contained herein are estimates only. The information provided comes from sources deemed reliable, but Bank Syz Ltd. does not guarantee its completeness, accuracy, reliability and actuality. Past performance gives no indication of nor guarantees current or future results. Bank Syz Ltd. accepts no liability for any loss arising from the use of this document.
Related Articles
With spreads now at 309 bps above Treasuries, credit market investors are back to pricing in a very optimistic outlook with no recession and few defaults. Source: Charlie Bilello, Y Charts
espite the fact that the economy is slowing down. Despite the fact that inflation surprised on the downside recently. So what's going on? 😨 The US Treasury market is trying to absorb a flood of issuance without its historical buyers. 👉 Foreign official demand is weak. Domestic institutional & retail demand as well. And with the Fed still engaged in Quantitative Tightening. 📢 If this continues, consequences are well known: •Wider mortgage spreads (housing stress), •Lower bond market liquidity (bid-ask gaps widen), •Pressure on long-duration tech and utility stocks (+ the end of risk assets rebound) Note that the rise of US bond yields will not necessarily translate into dollar strength - we might see a similar correlation (stocks + bonds + dollar coming down at the same time) as observed a few weeks ago. Stay tuned Source: EndGame Macro on X
Source image below: Skynews