A longer Brexit (perhaps), a boost for US banks and a bad night for the Aussie
Theresa May survives, positive housing data in the US, equities up, but why was the Aussie dollar down? I talk to NAB’s Ray Attrill.
Start your day with the Morning Call for the latest overnight key economic and market information straight from NAB’s team of expert market economists and strategists.
Theresa May survives, positive housing data in the US, equities up, but why was the Aussie dollar down? I talk to NAB’s Ray Attrill.
A humiliating defeat for the UK Prime Minister over Brexit. I talk to NAB’s Gavin Friend about the impact and what next.
China’s slowdown continues. So does the US government shutdown. And what next for Brexit if the meaningful vote is knocked out of court, as expected? I talk to NAB’s Tapas Strickland.
The shutdown, Brexit, negative data (and revolts) from Europe and the trade impasse between the US and China. Yet the markets are a little optimistic, for now.
It was far from a quiet Christmas period, with market volatility driven by data, trade concerns, a government shutdown and a very different attitude coming from the US Fed.
The NAB Morning Call team take a look back at what’s been driving the markets in 2018 and what to expect in the new year.
To say the fall in markets is a reaction to the Fed is over-reach says NAB’s David de Garis on today’s Morning Call podcast. Maybe a Christmas break will help press the reset button.
Has the US Fed been dovish enough? I talk to NAB’s Ray Attrill about the stance they have taken, which has surprised many.
Further falls in oil prices. I ask NAB’s David de Garis ‘when will it stop”?’ Plus, President Trump tells the Fed to read the Wall Street Journal for advice on monetary policy.
A sea of red in the markets today. And, as NAB’s Rodrigo Catril discusses on The Morning Call, it’s not a jolly festive red.