In between the deluge of US political news and views we had a few items worth noting here in the Asian timezone.

Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President Mary Daly spoke, sounding a little less dovish than her FOMC colleagues have recently. Daly said "we're not there yet" on price stability and the inflation target.

  • That the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) needs to "balance the costs of acting fast and being wrong"
  • That she is not yet convinced it’s a "green light" for a September interest rate cut

Next up was Japanese inflation data for June

  • the 'core-core' rate of inflation in May (core-core is that excluding food and energy, it's the closest to the US measure of core inflation) inched up on the month.

The other two measures came in just above the May figures and all well above the BoJ 2% target. I posted early in the session a reminder that the Bank of Japan is dissatisfied with the nature of the inflation in Japan. Higher inflation, says the BoJ, is mainly due to 'cost-push' inflation pressure from rising input prices and the weak yen. The BoJ want 'demand-pull' inflation from consumers increasing spending after wage rises. Japanese Prime Minister Kishida popped up in the news later in the session alluding to this, saying the government must be vigilant about the impact of rising prices, driven in part by the weak yen, on the economy moving to achieve domestic-demand driven recovery. It’s a difficult time for Japanese authorities. They’d like to keep progressing towards policy normalisation but tightening monetary policy risks endangering the precarious economic recovery.

From China today we had a news conference on the Third Plenum outcome, Chinese Communist Party officals made positive comments about economic reform but details were extremely thin. We’ll get more on these in the weeks and months ahead I suspect.

There was news out of Tel Aviv, Israel, where an explosion occurred due to a drone attack. A person was killed and others injured.

Major FX traded in small ranges only, characterised by a USD inching higher. Gold fell. Oil fell but has recovered.

Gold:

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