Thursday, July 17, 2025

Fed Reserve Blackout Begins Soon

Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller spoke earlier:

  • Fed's Waller says the FOMC should cut interest rates by 25bp at the July meeting
  • More from Waller: Lots of uncertainty around long term Fed Fund rate, 3% seems right
  • Wall Street Journal on Waller comment: strongest endorsement yet for a rate cut this month
  • I don't have any Federal Reserve speakers scheduled for today, Friday, July 18, 2025. Which doesn't mean one won't pop up on some media interview or other, these often don;t make it onto calendars.

Beginning tomorrow, Saturday, July 19, 2025 the 'blackout' period begins:

  • The 'blackout' policy from the Federal Reserve limits the extent to which Federal Open Market Committee participants and staff can speak publicly or grant interviews.
  • The period begins the two Saturdays preceding a Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

CME Lawsuit : Trading Floor

CME Lawsuit Could Redefine 'Trading Floor' in the Age of Electronic Markets

A high-stakes legal battle is underway in downtown Chicago, where a class of longtime traders is suing CME Group—the operator of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) and the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT)—over allegations that it breached contractual rights tied to legacy trading floor memberships.

Opening statements in the case began on July 7, before Cook County Circuit Judge Patrick J. Sherlock at the Richard J. Daley Center.

At the heart of the lawsuit is a dispute over how CME's transition to electronic trading more than a decade ago affected the rights of B-share members. These memberships historically granted traders access to fee discounts and trading privileges on physical exchange floors.

Plaintiffs allege that CME's 2010 launch of its Aurora data center—and the 2012 migration of most trading volume to that site—stripped them of contractual benefits and devalued their ownership stakes.

According to an article from Wall Street Journal (WSJ), the plaintiffs are seeking over $1 billion in damages, with some estimates placing the potential liability as high as $2 billion plus interest. They argue that CME's restructuring favored non-member electronic traders, some of whom now pay lower trading fees than legacy members—a reversal of longstanding privileges granted under B-share ownership.

WSJ stated that B-share prices have reportedly dropped from a peak of $1.6 million in 2008 to between $875,000 and $1.5 million in recent years.

In an e-mail exchange with Traders Magazine, CME Group declined to comment.

The trial is expected to last several weeks. A ruling in favor of the plaintiffs could have wide-reaching consequences.

James J. Angel, Associate Professor Academic Director, FINRA Certified Regulatory and Compliance Professional (CRCP (r)) Program at Georgetown University explained that the lawsuit is fundamentally about the interpretation of the contract between CME and the Class B shareholders, the plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs allege that their contract with the CME gives them trading floor privileges, and that those privileges extend to the electronic trading system, he told Traders Magazine.


James J. Angel
The plaintiffs allege that by allowing non Class B shareholders to access the electronic system, and by charging fees to the Class B shareholders who want to use the electronic system, the CME has violated its contract and harmed the Class B shareholders, Prof. Angel said.

"The Class B shareholders want CME to pay and pay big for the alleged damage," he stressed.

Prof. Angel believes this case is a specialized one-off case that will be determined by the specific details of the contract between the CME and its Class B shareholders.

"Other exchanges, most notably the NYSE, demutualized a long time ago with different legal structures. I suspect that the details of the other demutualizations are sufficiently different that the CME case won't set much of a precedent with one possible exception: The definition of a trading floor," he said.

"The case revolves around the promise to grant trading floor rights to the old floor traders. Do any rules or contracts regarding a trading floor also apply to electronic data centers? That is what the court will decide," he said.

"A broad and widely influential definition of 'trading floor' that includes electronic systems could open the way for novel interpretations of other old rules and contracts, leading to litigation," he added.

In the old days, Prof. Angel noted, exchanges used to be clubhouses where members traded. "They bought memberships for access to the trading, not for a piece of the exchange's profits."

He said that technology changed, and the old exchanges have become technology companies.

"When the exchanges demutualized, they cut deals to buy out the old members. The exchanges' only obligation to their old members is to live up to the deals that they cut," he concluded.

This isn't the first legal challenge brought by former members over CME's digital evolution. In April 2014, three floor traders—William C. Braman, John Simms, and Mark Mendelson—filed a federal class action in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois: Braman et al. v. CME Group Inc. (Case No. 1:14-cv-02646).

The Braman plaintiffs alleged that CME violated the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) by selling early access to market data to high-frequency traders, allowing them to see and act on price information before it became public. This "two-tier market," they claimed, harmed traditional traders and undermined market fairness.

That case was dismissed in December 2015 by Judge John Robert Blakey, who ruled that the plaintiffs failed to plausibly allege manipulation, artificial pricing, or any false information that would be actionable under the CEA.

Largest Crude Oil Producers

Japan's Exports

Japan's exports shrank 0.5% yoy to JPY 9,162.6 billion in June 2025, marking the second consecutive monthly drop and missing market estimates for a 0.5% growth, as rising U.S. tariffs weighed on foreign demand. 

source: Ministry of Finance, Japan

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

WTI Crude Oil Update

WTI crude oil futures rose toward $67 per barrel on Wednesday, trimming losses from a two-day decline as traders focused on improving demand signals from the US and China. 

Strong summer travel and rising US gasoline consumption supported the outlook, while China's second-quarter growth exceeded expectations, easing concerns over its energy demand despite tariff-related headwinds. 

This aligned with OPEC+'s latest report, which projected a stronger global economy in the second half of 2025, with rising oil demand driven by growth in India, China, and Brazil, along with continued recovery in the US and EU.

Meanwhile, a drone strike halted output at Iraq's Sarsang field, adding a short-term geopolitical risk premium. 

However, gains were capped by fading concerns over Russian exports after President Trump issued a 50-day ultimatum for Russia to end the war. 

Additionally, API data showed a surprise 19.1 million-barrel jump in US crude inventories, marking a record high.

Monday, July 14, 2025

Japan election jitters rattle bond market


Japanese government bond (JGB) investors are on edge ahead of this weekend's upper house elections, fearing a political shake-up that could accelerate fiscal spending and drive super-long bond yields higher.

Reuters with the piece, in brief:

Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's declining approval ratings have cast doubt on his coalition's ability to retain a majority.
A defeat could usher in more stimulus-focused policies, even if Ishiba remains in power.
Opposition parties are campaigning on tax cuts to ease inflation's burden—fueling investor concerns over fiscal discipline.
Yields on Japan's 30-year bonds surged 13 basis points on Monday to 3.17%, approaching May's record highs. Barclays estimates current yields already reflect expectations of a three-point cut to Japan's 10% consumption tax.

"If the opposition parties win, the government deficit will see a huge expansion," said Toshinobu Chiba of Simplex Asset Management. "The JGB yield curve will steepen by a lot."
With Japan's debt at roughly 250% of GDP, bond market pressure is mounting. The Ministry of Finance has moved to cut issuance of 20-, 30-, and 40-year bonds, but demand from life insurers remains weak. Analysts warn that even a modestly expansionary outcome could spark further volatility, particularly if the Bank of Japan holds back on rate hikes.

---

The political background to this:

Japan will hold upper house by-elections this weekend, with the results seen as a key test for Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's leadership.
Election marks a crucial test for Ishiba's minority government too, which aims to retain a simple majority alongside its Komeito coalition partner amid sliding approval ratings, growing public concern over the rising cost of living, and broader economic concerns.
While the ruling coalition is not at risk of losing overall power, a poor showing could weaken Ishiba's position and embolden opposition parties, many of which are campaigning on tax cuts and expanded fiscal stimulus.
The outcome could influence the direction of economic policy, including budget negotiations and the balance of power in the Diet, with potential market implications if more populist or spending-heavy policies gain traction.
---

Japan is holding a House of Councillors (upper house) election on July 20, 2025

125 of the 248 seats (124 regular seats plus one Tokyo by‑election) are up for grabs
members serve six‑year terms, with half the chamber elected every three years
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.

Five Federal Reserve officials speaking Tuesday

Five Federal Reserve officials speaking Tuesday
Fed Speakers – Today’s Schedule (All times Eastern)

9:15 AM ET – Fed Vice Chair Michelle Bowman speaks at the "Unleashing a Financially Inclusive Future" conference (1315 GMT)

12:45 PM ET – Fed Governor Michael Barr speaks at the same Fed conference (1615 GMT)

2:45 PM ET – Boston Fed President Susan Collins gives keynote at NABE’s Economic Measurement Seminar (1845 GMT)

7:45 PM ET – Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan gives remarks at World Affairs Council event in San Antonio (2345 GMT)

Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin speaks in Baltimore on forecasting (based on location and event timing alignment) - Ihaven't got a time for this one.

Google Confirms Major OS Merger: Android & ChromeOS to Become a Single Unified Platform

Google Confirms Major OS Merger: Android & ChromeOS to Become a Single Unified Platform


WTI Crude Update

WTI crude oil futures fell 2.1% to below $67 per barrel on Monday after President Trump stopped short of announcing new sanctions on Russian oil, disappointing markets that had anticipated tougher action. 

While Trump did warn of potential 100% secondary tariffs on Russia if a ceasefire isn't reached within 50 days, the absence of immediate measures weighed on prices. 

Meanwhile, Trump's escalating global tariff threats, including 30% duties on EU and Mexican goods, dampened risk appetite and fueled concerns over weaker energy demand. 

Traders fear that protectionist policies could hurt global growth and contribute to an oil supply glut later this year. 

Hedge funds have responded by cutting bullish positions at the fastest pace since February. 

Still, Chinese trade data offered some support, with crude imports rising and Iranian oil purchases climbing in June, signaling resilient near-term demand.

US Stocks Rise Slightly / Inflation / Earnings

US stocks closed slightly higher on Monday as investors weighed renewed tariff threats from President Trump against optimism over upcoming earnings and inflation data. 

The S&P 500 added 0.1%, the Dow rose 88 points, and the Nasdaq gained 0.3%, supported by gains in tech stocks such as Meta and Netflix. 

Trump announced plans to impose 30% tariffs on goods from the EU and Mexico starting August 1, but hopes for continued negotiations helped ease investor concerns. 

Markets are also bracing for a wave of second-quarter earnings reports, with major banks such as JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo set to report starting Tuesday. 

At the same time, investors await the June CPI report, which could reveal how earlier tariffs are affecting inflation and shape expectations for the Fed's next move. 

Among megacaps, Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, and Broadcom traded lower, while Meta and Alphabet posted gains. 

Tesla rose 1% after Elon Musk said shareholders would vote on the company's investment in xAI.

Largest Known Natural Gas Reserves

Sunday, July 13, 2025

The Week Ahead

Mon: EU 90-Day Retaliatory Pause Ends; Indian WPI (Jun), Chinese Trade Balance (Jun)
Tue: OPEC MOMR; Chinese House Prices (Jun), Retail Sales (Jun), GDP (Q2), German WPI (Jun), EZ Industrial Production (May), German ZEW (Jun), US CPI (Jun), NY Fed Manufacturing (Jul), Canadian CPI (Jun)
Wed: UK CPI (Jun), EZ Trade (May), US PPI (Jun), Industrial Production (Jun)
Thu: Japanese Trade Balance (Jun), Australian Unemployment (Jun), UK Unemployment & Wages (May), EZ Final HICP (Jun), US Export/Import Prices (Jun), Weekly Claims, Philadelphia Fed (Jul), Retail Sales (Jun)
Fri: Japanese CPI (Jun), German Producer Prices (Jun), US Building Permits/Housing Starts (Jun), Uni. of Michigan Prelim. (Jul)

Chinese Trade Balance (Mon):

There are currently no central expectations for the Chinese June Trade Balance, although the metrics do encapsulate the 90-day trade agreement between the US and China on May 12th. Using the most recent Caixin June PMIs as a proxy, the commentary suggested, "According to panellists, better trade conditions and promotional activities supported a fresh rise in new orders. The rate of new order growth was only marginal, however, as external demand remained muted. New export orders declined for the third month in a row in June, albeit at a noticeably weaker pace than in May. However, the commentary added, "supply chain conditions continued to deteriorate at the end of the second quarter, as Chinese manufacturers experienced delivery delays again in June." Analysts at ING expected a modest uptick in export and import growth, suggesting that "Early signs are that there isn't much trade frontloading activity during the tariff ceasefire period so far."

Chinese GDP/Retail Sales/House Prices (Tue):

The focus will be on China's Q2 GDP, with the latest Reuters poll forecasting Q2 Y/Y growth at 5.1% (vs 5.4% in Q1) and Q/Q at 0.9% (vs 1.2% in Q1). The YTD Y/Y rate is seen at 5.6% (prev. 5.8%). The poll also forecast 2025 GDP growth at 4.6% vs China's target of "around 5%". Analysts note that while headline growth is likely to hit the 5% annual target, concerns persist around underlying domestic demand, employment, and deflationary pressures. ING highlights that recent hard data has been mixed, with retail sales surprising to the upside but industrial production and investment softening. On housing, two straight months of notable price declines have raised speculation about potential real estate stimulus, with markets watching the housing price release for further signs of a downturn. Note, on July 10th, the gauge of Chinese property shares posted the largest gain in nine months amid speculation that a high-level meeting will be held next week to help revive the property sector, according to Bloomberg. SCMP flags that rising external uncertainties—especially new US tariffs—could prompt calls for more proactive fiscal policy. Still, economists suggest that Beijing is unlikely to deploy major stimulus unless export growth slows more sharply, as policymakers appear focused on meeting but not exceeding the 5% target, according to the article. In terms of monetary policy forecasts, the aforementioned Reuters poll also suggested that the PBoC is expected to cut 1yr LPR by 10bps in Q4, and RRR is expected to be cut by 10bps in Q4.

Canadian CPI (Tue):

With the BoC on pause and avoiding forward guidance, the central bank is taking it meeting-by-meeting due to economic uncertainty. The upcoming inflation report will help shape expectations for BoC easing. Money markets are only pricing in one further rate cut by the end of the year. The prior BoC statement in June highlighted how, excluding taxes, inflation was slightly stronger than the BoC expected, while the BoC's preferred measures moved up. It also highlighted that "recent surveys indicate that households continue to expect that tariffs will raise prices and many businesses say they intend to pass on the costs of higher tariffs". The next BoC meeting is on July 30th, and the guidance from the BoC noted they "will continue to assess the timing and strength of both the downward pressures on inflation from a weaker economy and the upward pressures on inflation from higher costs", adding it is proceeding carefully. Meanwhile, in a recent speech, Macklem warned that "underlying inflation could be firmer than we thought". However, if inflation pressures were contained, the BoC agreed there could be a need for a further cut in the policy rate. The problem the BoC faces is that there could be a slowdown in inflation due to the tariff impact on the labour market and economic growth, but at the same time, upward pressure could be seen due to the implementation of tariffs. The BoC will be monitoring upcoming inflation reports to gauge what way prices are being pushed before dictating monetary policy. "

US CPI (Tue):

The consensus expects US CPI to rise by 0.3% M/M in June, picking up in pace vs the +0.1% in May; core CPI is also expected to rise by +0.3% M/M in June after the +0.1% in May. Wells Fargo says the data is likely to show inflation beginning to strengthen again, albeit not enough to alarm Fed officials at this stage. It said that "amid a softer labour market and services inflation dissipating a bit more, the pickup in core inflation stemming from tariffs is likely to look more like a bump than a spike." The data will be framed in the context of how US tariff policy is impacting prices, and the consequential knock-on onto Fed policy. Most Fed officials have taken a cautious approach on the outlook for rates, given expectations that consumer prices are expected to rise towards the end of the year due to tariff effects. However, some (Bowman and Waller) have suggested that the tariff-induced price rises might be a one-off and would therefore allow officials to look at rate cuts as soon as the July meeting if inflation pressures remain contained. Money markets, however, do not see this materialising, and are currently pricing a sub-5% probability that the Fed will reduce rates on July 30th; through the end of the year, markets are still fully pricing two 25bps reductions, in keeping with the Fed's own projections.

UK CPI (Wed):

Expectations are for headline Y/Y CPI to rise to 3.5% from 3.4% with the core Y/Y rate seen holding steady at 3.5%. As a reminder, the May report saw headline Y/Y CPI slip to 3.4% (matching the MPC forecast) from 3.5%, core decline to 3.5% from 3.8% and services fall to 4.7% from 5.4% as the Easter-driven boost seen in the April data unwound. This time around, analysts at Oxford Economics, who hold a below-consensus view of 3.4% for headline Y/Y CPI, expect a series of offsetting forces. Specifically, they anticipate that "modest upward pressure from a smaller drag from the petrol category and base effects in the core goods category will likely be counterbalanced by softer services inflation". From a policy perspective, the release will likely underscore the tough balancing act put before the MPC, whereby growth appears to be slowing, the labour market is loosening, but inflation is stubborn and is set to remain the case. As it stands, an August cut is priced at 78% for the August meeting, with a total of 52bps of loosening seen by year-end.

Australian Jobs Report (Thu):

The Australian labour force data for June comes after May's surprise 2.5k drop in employment, which followed a sharp April gain (+87.6k). Westpac expects a +30k rise in June employment (vs market forecast of +20k), with underlying three-month average jobs growth holding steady at 2.3% Y/Y—matching late 2024 levels and signalling ongoing labour market resilience. The participation rate dipped to 67.0% in May but is forecast to edge back to 67.1% in June, supporting the view that the unemployment rate will hold at 4.1% for a fifth straight month, according to the desk. Overall, Westpac notes that job growth remains robust beneath monthly volatility, with labour market conditions still steady despite recent swings.

UK Jobs (Thu):

Expectations are for the ILO unemployment rate in the 3-month period to May to hold steady at 4.6% with headline earnings (ex-bonus) 3M/YY set to pull back to 5.0% from 5.2%. As a reminder, the prior report showed a large contraction in HMRC payrolls change (-109k vs. prev. -55k) for May, the unemployment rate in the 3M period to April rose to 4.6% from 4.5% and headline earnings 3M/YY slipped to 5.3% from 5.6%. This time around, analysts at Investec continue to flag the data quality concerns that have been plaguing the labour market report; however, they expect employment growth to slow on account of their estimates "that vacancies and more timely PAYE employment figures have recently softened, and at an increasing pace". Note, markets will also be keeping an eye on any upward revision to last month's HMRC payrolls print. On the pay front, the desk also notes signs of recent weakness and expects further softness in the upcoming report, adding that "there are helpful base effects from now lower wage settlements coming through compared with higher pay deals a year ago". From a policy perspective, the likes of Bailey and Ramsden have noted the softening in the labour market. However, there hasn't been much in the way of comms from the MPC to brace markets for an increase in the pace of rate cuts from its current cadence of every other meeting. Note, the impact of the release will need to be taken in the context of the inflation data due out the day before.

US Retail Sales (Thu):

Analysts expect US retail sales to be unchanged in June, with the consensus predicting +0.0% M/M from a prior -0.9%; the ex-autos measure is seen rising +0.3% M/M vs a prior -0.3%. Bank of America's monthly consumer checkpoint data suggests that there was an overall rise of +0.7% M/M in June, though services spending is seen slipping for a third straight month. Its aggregated credit card data showed that credit and debit card spending per household was up +0.2% Y/Y in June (vs +0.8% Y/Y in May), and seasonally adjusted, spending per household rose +0.3% M/M, only partially unwinding the monthly declines of 0.2% and 0.7% in April and May. BofA said, "it appears consumers are pulling back on some areas of discretionary services spending, though this cooling does not currently appear broad-based." BofA did note, however, that lower-income households' spending growth is particularly soft, with total card spending growth negative on an annualised basis in the three months to June; "these households also have the weakest after-tax wage growth in Bank of America deposit data," but the spending and wage growth of higher-income households appears to have risen.

Japanese CPI (Fri):

There are currently no median market expectations for the June CPI, but the data follows May's 3.7% Y/Y rise in the core index—a more than two-year high and well above the BoJ's 2% target. ING expects the release to show a slight easing of inflation pressures, driven by government caps on energy and food prices, though the headline is still seen staying above 3%. Last month's report noted that persistent food inflation and firms passing on higher labour costs kept price growth elevated, while service-sector inflation continued to accelerate. BoJ policymakers remain divided on the outlook, balancing upside inflation risks against external headwinds from US tariffs.

This article originally appeared on Newsquawk

This article was written by Newsquawk Analysis at www.forexlive.com.

Copper Update

Copper futures hovered below $4.40 per pound on Friday and were on track for a weekly drop of around 24%, pressured by a surprise US tariff ...