* December Fed cut now only 50-50
A Fed rate cut in December, which was a 90% certainty only a couple of weeks ago according to rates futures markets, is now a coin flip. The rapid shift in market expectations is such that the next fully-priced rate cut isn't until March.
Very broadly speaking, a split appears to be forming between Fed governors and regional bank presidents: governors, nominated by the President, are leaning dovish; regional bank presidents, less so. Since 1990, the most dissents at a Fed policy meeting have been four. Chair Jerome Powell will earn his leadership spurs next month.
* Short goodbye from the Big Short
Michael Burry, the 'Big Short' investor who made his fame and fortune betting against the U.S. housing market in the mid-2000s, is closing his hedge fund. On Wednesday he posted on X that he has bet $9.2 million shorting Palantir stock, although it's unclear if that position is still open.
There's an interesting debate around long-term 'shorts'. Market dynamics, structure, and liquidity are very different from 20 years ago. The 'buy the dip' mentality, built on an expected Fed backstop, is such that investors need bags of nerves, patience and deep pockets like never before.
* The limits of long bond demand
Appetite for U.S. Treasuries this year has been remarkably strong. Just look at where yields are today compared with where they were on January 1 - even the yield on the much-maligned 30-year bond is lower year-to-date.
But auctions of 10- and 30-year debt this week have been met with pretty weak demand. Perhaps yields have fallen too far, and investors are now requiring more compensation for holding longer-dated debt given how sticky inflation is looking.