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Japan Finance Minister Katayama: Volatility in Oil prices is affecting the forex market

Japan’s Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said on Monday that the volatility in Oil prices is affecting the forex market. Speaking to reporters after the first day of the G7 Finance Ministers meeting in France, she added that she is seeing speculative moves in the financial markets.

Source  Fxstreet1779128701
China: Targeted support offsets April slump – TD Securities

Alex Loo at TD Securities highlights that China’s April data were weak, with soft retail sales and falling investment, while exports and housing prices offered some relief.

Source  Fxstreet1779127920
Singapore: K-shaped NODX upswing to persist – UOB

UOB economist Jester Koh highlights a strong rebound in Singapore’s Non-oil Domestic Exports (NODX), led by electronics and pharmaceuticals, with petrochemicals slightly softer.

Source  Fxstreet1779125103
Fed Warsh will be sworn in on Friday at the White House

A White House official said that the US President Donald Trump will swear in Kevin Warsh as the next Fed Chairman on Friday, May 22nd, at the White House.

Source  Fxstreet1779124423
China: Growth slowdown and reflation risks – ING

ING’s Lynn Song highlights that China’s April data showed broad-based weakness in domestic activity, with retail sales, industrial production and fixed asset investment all disappointing.

Source  Fxstreet1779116519
Equities: Energy shock risks to AI investment – Standard Chartered

Standard Chartered’s Madhur Jha assesses how the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the current energy shock could challenge AI optimism. The bank highlights near-term risks to semiconductor input supplies and longer-term risks to AI investment and demand.

Source  Fxstreet1779113802

United States NAHB Housing Market Index above expectations (35) in May: Actual (37)

Source  Fxstreet1779112801
Europe: Rearmament reshapes growth outlook – Nordea

Nordea's Chief Economist Helge J. Pedersen argues that rapidly rising defense spending in Europe represents a historic fiscal expansion that can support GDP in the short term but raises medium‑term risks.

Source  Fxstreet1779112764
RBA: Rate hike timing questions persist – TD Securities

TD Securities strategists reiterate their view that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) will likely need to raise the cash rate to 4.60% in this cycle. They note that the May policy statement suggests hesitation to hike in June, and expects the RBA minutes to clarify this.

Source  Fxstreet1779111649
China: Recovery stalls as domestic demand weakens – Commerzbank

Commerzbank’s Dr. Henry Hao notes that China’s post-Q1 recovery lost momentum in April, with industrial output at a three-year low and fixed-asset investment shrinking. Domestic consumption remains fragile as retail sales barely grew and youth unemployment rose.

Source  Fxstreet1779110578
United Kingdom: Sluggish jobs outlook persists – Deutsche Bank

Deutsche Bank’s Sanjay Raja expects the United Kingdom (UK) labour market to remain weak after a surprise drop in the jobless rate driven by self-employment.

Source  Fxstreet1779103364
IMF Staff: BoE doesn’t need to raise interest rates this year

According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff, the Bank of England (BoE) doesn’t need to raise rates this year, based on the current energy price outlook.

Source  Fxstreet1779102898
Chinese Yuan: Stimulus hopes as PBoC defends 6.8 – TD Securities

TD Securities strategists judge China’s April data as weak, citing higher Oil prices and soft consumer sentiment. They expect targeted fiscal stimulus focused on infrastructure and see the PBoC remaining cautious on easing.

Source  Fxstreet1779102745
10-Year JGB Hits Near 30-Year High, 30-Year JGB Yield Breaks 4%. Will It Deal a Devastating Blow to US Treasuries?

TradingKey - During Asian trading on Monday (May 18), the 10-year Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yield rose to 2.8% at one point, reaching a nearly 29-and-a-half-year high since October 1996. Last Fri

Source  Tradingkey1779101033
Equities: Bond-oil pressure hits sentiment – Deutsche Bank

Deutsche Bank strategists note that the S&P 500 has extended its run to seven consecutive weekly gains, the longest since 2023, even as rising bond yields and Oil prices triggered the worst daily decline since March.

Source  Fxstreet1779097271
China: Cooling demand and stable US ties – Standard Chartered

Standard Chartered strategists note that China’s April data showed weaker domestic demand, with both consumption and investment slowing even as exports supported industrial production.

Source  Fxstreet1779095302
Japan mulls issuing fresh debt to fund extra budget - Reuters

According to a Reuters report, the Japanese government plans to issue fresh debt as part of its funding for a planned extra budget, a scenario that would undermine the Japanese Yen (JPY) and boost yields on Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs).

Source  Fxstreet1779094466
US Dollar: Fed pressure and bond sell-off – ING

ING’s Chris Turner highlights that rising US Treasury yields and a bearish yield curve steepening are pressuring the Federal Reserve (Fed) to sound more hawkish, even without immediate hikes. He notes high Oil prices and higher yields are negative for risk assets but supportive for the Dollar.

Source  Fxstreet1779093494
Japanese Yen struggles despite retreating oil prices

USD/JPY continues its winning streak for the sixth consecutive day, trading around 158.90 during the European hours on Monday.

Source  Fxstreet1779093412
US President Trump: Iran is dying to sign a deal

United States (US) President Donald Trump said in an interview with Fortune, released during the European trading session on Monday, that Iran is dying to sign a deal with Washington. “I can tell you one thing—they’re dying to sign [a deal]," Trump said.

Source  Fxstreet1779093218
Silver: Downside risks build after sharp slide – OCBC

OCBC strategist Christopher Wong notes that Silver dropped around 9% to below US$76/oz, extending a sharper correction than Gold.

Source  Fxstreet1779092228

Italy Trade Balance EU declined to €-1.08B in March from previous €-0.652B

Source  Fxstreet1779091334

Italy Global Trade Balance registered at €4.709B, below expectations (€5.2B) in March

Source  Fxstreet1779091290
BoE’s Greene: Second-round effects of energy price shock won't show up for another year

Bank of England (BoE) Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) member Megan Greene said on Monday, “the second-round effects of energy price shock won't show up for another year.”

Source  Fxstreet1779091012
Iran and Oman held discussions on safe transit through Strait of Hormuz

According to the state media, Iran's foreign ministry spokesperson said during the European trading session on Monday that technical teams from Iran and Oman met last week in Oman to negotiate a mechanism for safe transit in the Strait of Hormuz.

Source  Fxstreet1779090438
ECB: June hike odds shaped by survey prices – Societe Generale

Societe Generale’s team notes that the European Central Bank's (ECB Economic Bulletin stresses that a Middle East-driven Oil shock would hit inflation more than activity, but confidence effects could weigh on 2027 growth.

Source  Fxstreet1779089715
Japan’s Kihara: Watching market moves with very high sense of urgency

Japan Chief Cabinet Secretary Seiji Kihara said during the European trading session on Monday that the administration is watching market moves, including long-term rates, with a very high sense of urgency. However, Kihara denied commenting on potential intervention in forex markets.

Source  Fxstreet1779089440

Turkey Consumer Confidence rose from previous 85.5 to 85.8 in May

Source  Fxstreet1779087629
UK Deputy to PM Lammy: There will be no timetable for departure

United Kingdom (UK) Deputy David Lammy to Prime Minister (PM) Keir Starmer said during the European trading session on Monday that the PM will not set out a timetable for his departure from Downing Street, according to Sky News. "There will be no timetable for departure," Lammy told, adding that he

Source  Fxstreet1779087586
Brent: Supply risks keep prices elevated – ING

ING analysts Warren Patterson and Ewa Manthey say Brent remains supported as the oil market reprices ongoing supply disruptions linked to the US-Iran standoff and tensions in the Persian Gulf.

Source  Fxstreet1779087107
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