Group 1: Federal Reserve and Economic Outlook - The Federal Reserve officials show significant divergence regarding future interest rate cuts, adding uncertainty to the outlook[2] - Powell indicates that any rate cuts will likely be slow and moderate unless there is a clear economic downturn[2] - U.S. economic data remains resilient, with PPI's year-on-year decline narrowing and industrial profits turning positive, suggesting the effectiveness of anti-involution measures[2] Group 2: Domestic Economic Indicators - As of September 26, 2023, passenger car sales reached 1.191 million units, a year-on-year increase of 0.3% and a month-on-month increase of 5.9%[2] - The Baltic Dry Index (BDI) averaged 2118.6, up 5.9% month-on-month and 7.7% year-on-year, indicating strong export resilience[2] - Industrial production shows a month-on-month increase, with average blast furnace operating rates rising by 0.47 percentage points to 84.47%[2] Group 3: Price Trends and Inflation - As of September 26, 2023, pork prices fell by 0.94% week-on-week, while the average wholesale price of 28 monitored vegetables rose by 1.16%[2] - The Consumer Price Index (CPI) shows a slight increase in food prices, with energy prices rising by 0.8% and food prices by 0.5%[4] - Core PCE price index increased by 0.2% month-on-month and 2.9% year-on-year, indicating stable inflation levels[4] Group 4: Fiscal and Monetary Policy - This week, ordinary government bonds issued totaled 247.5 billion, with an issuance progress of 79%[3] - The central bank's net MLF injection was 300 billion, signaling a monetary easing policy[3] - The yield curve for government bonds steepened, with the 30-year yield at 2.217% and the 10-year yield at 1.8768%[3]
宏观周报(9月22日-9月28日):美联储分歧加剧,国内静待政策加力-20250928
Yin He Zheng Quan·2025-09-28 07:02