* Oil on the slide
Oil is on a wild ride, buffeted by geopolitical tensions in large part sparked by the Trump administration's military foray into Venezuela, and events in Iran. On Wednesday, Brent crude was at a three and a half-month high, up almost 10% year to date.
On Thursday it posted its biggest fall since June after Trump said the crackdown on protesters in Iran was easing. If the threat of US-Iran conflict cools, oversupply returns as the main market driver. But as this year has clearly shown, Trump's foreign policy agenda is, if nothing else, unpredictable.
* Fed bets fade, curves flatten
Fed rate cut bets are fading. The next fully-priced cut is drifting to July from June, and 50 bps of easing this year is no longer fully baked into the 2026 curve. Stronger-than forecast economic data and sticky inflation are behind the moves.
Among the ripple effects on markets is a flattening of the yield curve. Most parts of the U.S. curve are now at their flattest in a month, with the 2s/30s curve narrowing 20 bps from its 4-year peak just last week.
* Dollar and the odd yuan out
The U.S. dollar continues to grind higher, as Fed rate cut expectations whittle away. The greenback on Wednesday hit an 18-month high against the yen, and on Thursday a six-week high against a basket of major currencies.