It took only a few hours after the US Supreme Court had ruled against the US administration’s emergency tariffs from 'Liberation Day' (here is our original reaction piece), before President Donald ...
Seasonally adjusted total billings in New Zealand were $4.5 billion in January-26. Annually, this was an increase of 1.0 percent from January-25 (Figure 1). • Seasonally adjusted domestic billings on ...
New orders for manufactured goods in the United States stood at $617.5 billion in December 2025, slipping 0.7% month on month, the US Census Bureau reported on Monday. Shipments increased 0.5% or $3.1 ...
The pattern is composed of four price swings (legs) and five pivot points labeled X, A, B, C, and D. It can appear in two forms: Bullish (looks like an "M") and Bearish (looks like a "W"). XA Leg: The ...
The dollar’s slide last year looks less like a sudden break and more like the culmination of pressures that have been gathering for a while. The fading of US exceptionalism has sat quietly in the ...
Overall economic activity increased at a slight to moderate pace in seven of the twelve Federal Reserve Districts, while the number of Districts reporting flat or declining activity increased from ...
Retail and food services sales in the United States decreased by 0.2% in January compared to last month's figures, landing at $733.5 billion, the US Census Bureau revealed in its report published on ...
On Friday, February 20, the Supreme Court ruled that President Trump exceeded his power when he imposed the reciprocal and fentanyl-related tariffs by using the International Emergency Economic Powers ...
The US dollar was fairly resilient in the face of the softer than expected Q4 GDP reading and the Supreme Court’s tariff decision. However, it came under pressure earlier today in the Asia Pacific ...
Just as we saw immediately after the Liberation Day tariff rate announcement in early April last year, markets are again showing pressure on the US dollar alongside renewed demand for safe havens. As ...
We could cling to the fact that the RBA pays closer attention to trimmed mean than headline CPI, but it is harder to ignore the headline inflation figure when it is trending higher at 3.8% y/y.
Total nonfarm payroll employment edged down by 92,000 in February, and the unemployment rate changed little at 4.4 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Employment in health ...