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Contact Mace News President
Tony Mace tony@macenews.com 
to find a customer- and markets-oriented brand of news coverage with a level of individualized service unique to the industry. A market participant told us he believes he has his own White House correspondent as Mace News provides breaking news and/or audio feeds, stories, savvy analysis, photos and headlines delivered how you want them. And more. And this is important because you won’t get it anywhere else. That’s MICRONEWS. We know how important to you are the short advisories on what’s coming up, whether briefings, statements, unexpected changes in schedules and calendars and anything else that piques our interest.

No matter the area being covered, the reporter is always only a telephone call or message away. We check with you frequently to see how we can improve. Have a question, need to be briefed via video or audio-only on a topic’s state of play, keep us on speed dial. See the list of interest areas we cover elsewhere
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You can have two weeks reduced price no-obligation trial for $199. No self-renewing contracts. Suspend, renew coverage at any time. Stay with a topic like trade while it’s hot and suspend coverage or switch coverage areas when it’s not. We serve customers one by one, 24/7.

Tony Mace was the top editorial executive for Market News
International for two decades. 

Washington Bureau Chief Denny Gulino had the same title at Market News for 18 years. 

Similar experience undergirds our service in Ottawa, London, Brussels and in Asia. 

CONTRIBUTORS

Picture of Tony Mace

Tony Mace

President
Mace News

Picture of Denny Gulino

Denny Gulino

D.C. Bureau Chief
Mace News

Picture of Steven Beckner

Steven Beckner

Federal Reserve
Mace News

Picture of Vicki Schmelzer

Vicki Schmelzer

Reporter and expert on the currency market.
Mace News

Picture of Suzanne Cosgrove

Suzanne Cosgrove

Reporter and expert on derivatives and fixed income markets.
Mace News

Picture of Laurie Laird

Laurie Laird

Financial Journalist
Mace News

Picture of Max Sato

Max Sato

Reporter, economic and political news.
Japan and Canada
Mace News

FRONT PAGE

Fed’s Waller: Another ‘Hot’ Core Inflation Reading May Force ‘Near Term’ Rate Hike

– Inflation And Monetary Policy Are ‘At A Crossroads’

– Economy Solid’, Employment ‘Stable’;  So, Focus Must Be on 2% Inflation Target

By Steven K. Beckner

(MaceNews) – On the eve of a critical inflation report, Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller declared Monday that a bad reading could necessitate an early Fed interest rate hike.

Waller, who not long ago was thought of as being one of the more dovish Fed policymakers, instead took a very hawkish perspective in remarks to the New York Association for Business Economics.

Describing himself as “concerned about the elevated pace of core inflation,” he said, “inflation and monetary policy are at a crossroads” with the July 28-29 meeting of the Fed’s rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee rapidly approaching.

With the economy enjoying “solid” growth and labor markets “stable,” Waller said the Fed’s focus has to be on inflation, which has exceeded the Fed’s 2% target for going on six years.

Delaying action against inflation could risk a further acceleration of inflation, as well as a deterioration of inflation expectations that would make inflation even harder to rein in, he cautioned.

On Tuesday morning, the Labor Department will be releasing its consumer price index for June, and Waller warned, “If we get another hot reading on core inflation … then the FOMC will need to consider tightening monetary policy in the near term.”

The June CPI report, which will be released ahead of congressional testimony by Chair Kevin Warsh on the Fed’s semi-annual Monetary Policy Report, is less important than the Commerce Department’s price index for personal consumption expenditures (PCE), but will still get a close, extrapolating look on Wall Street and at the Fed.

Some are hoping for a softer result than in May, when the CPI increased 0.5% for the month and 4.2% from a year earlier. The core CPI, excluding volatile food and energy prices, was up 0.2% on the month and 2.9% on year.

The CPI, as well as Wednesday’s Producer Price Index, will be used to calculate estimates of the PCE inflation rate for June. In May the PCE registered 4.1% overall and 3.4% on a core basis from a year earlier.

The FOMC has held the key federal funds rate in a target range of 3.5% to 3.75% since it concluded a series of rate cuts totaling 100 basis points in December, but at its June 17 meeting, FOMC participants projected the funds rate will need to rise by 25 basis points by the end of the year to a median 3.8% (3.75% to 4.0%) as they significantly boosted their inflation forecasts.

A bad inflation reading this week could force the FOMC to begin raising rates as soon as the late July meeting, implied Waller, who not long ago was an advocate of rate cuts when he was competing with Waller for the Fed chairmanship.

He said the FOMC cannot afford to merely “look through” energy price hikes, assuming they will recede, because core inflation has also been stubbornly high.

“Because core inflation is a good guide to future inflation,” he said. “I am concerned that, if this upward trend continues, it will be hard to push inflation back toward the Committee’s 2% goal with monetary policy at its current setting.”

Waller recalled “the mistake we made in 2021 by not responding sooner to the high inflation we observed,” and said he is “determined to avoid repeating it.”

He allowed for the possibility that the FOMC won’t have to raise rates, saying, “there is still a credible case for inflation to begin to fall back to our 2% goal with policy at its current setting.”

“But,” he added, “I am concerned about the equally plausible case that data in the coming weeks will show that inflation will remain at its elevated level or even trend higher, requiring tighter monetary policy in the near term.”

While “committed to returning inflation to the FOMC’s 2% goal,” Waller said he is “also determined to avoid over tightening policy and risking a recession.”

But he went on to suggest that recession is now the least of the Fed’s worries.

“Economic activity continues to be solid…,” he said. “(S)pending appears to have held up reasonably well. At the same time, businesses continued to make investments related to artificial intelligence (AI).”

What’s more, downward risks to the Fed’s “maximum employment” mandate are few, Waller indicated. “

Together, “(A)though there has been some noise in the labor market data recently, I believe the story there is one of stability and a balance between supply and demand…..Other data in recent months support the idea that the labor market is stable and balanced.”

And so, Waller asserted, “Unless I see evidence of a significantly weakening labor market, my focus will be on inflation.”

While surging energy costs have driven up overall price indices, “more concerning is the escalation in core inflation, which, at a 12-month rate of 3.4% in May, was more than 0.5 percentage point higher than last October,” he said, adding that these core price pressures are “quite broad.”

“Sometimes a big change in only one component of core prices can move the total significantly without reflecting broader pressures from escalating inflation, but that doesn’t appear to be the case this time,’ he elaborated. “Both core goods prices and core services inflation are up relative to last year. And, they stand well above their averages at times when inflation was running persistently close to 2% percent, such as the six years from 2002 through 2007.”

Waller, who was speaking just as a flare-up in tensions with Iran was pushing oil prices back up, said, “I do expect a deceleration of headline inflation due to declining oil prices, starting with the inflation data we get this week.”

But he reiterated, “I will be focused on core inflation, and on that count, there are recent signs of continued pressure on goods prices.”

Waller attributed upward pressures on core inflation to three factors: tariffs, energy prices, and “spillovers from demand for the AI build-out.”

Regarding the latter, he said AI-related demand “is being reflected in some large price increases on selected goods such as semiconductors, computer chips, servers, computers, and peripherals.” He said those price pressures “could be a larger factor if the investment surge for AI continues.”

The FOMC must be ready to respond, possibly in coming weeks, Waller argued.

“Overall, I am monitoring price movements and am alert to the risk that the increase in core inflation is a sign that inflationary pressures are spreading through the economy,” he said. “The FOMC has to be ready to tighten monetary policy to prevent a repeat of the 2021-to-2022 inflation episode.”

Nevertheless, Waller described himself as “cautious” about raising rates as steeply as it did then because of two factors: “The first is that today’s labor market isn’t nearly as tight…..Another difference with 2022 is that inflation expectations today seem well anchored.”

But he said those who maintain “anchored” inflation expectations allow the Fed to avoid raising rates are “wrong,” although he said rate hikes may have to be “less persistent.”

“In this situation, the central bank only faces one problem—getting inflation back to target,’ Waller declared.

During previous inflation periods, when inflation expectations were less “anchored,” the Fed had to raise rates aggressively, he recalled.

“Thankfully, we are not in this position today,” he said. “But it does not mean we can be lackadaisical in responding to inflation that is well above target and headed in the wrong direction.”

Looking ahead to the CPI and PPI reports, Waller said he “would be very pleased to see a lower reading on core inflation, but after its escalation over the first half of this year, I will need to see several months of lower readings to feel that inflation is moving in the right direction…..”

“I think that is still a reasonable outcome, and I would then continue to hold the policy rate at its current target range,” he continued.

“But,” he added, “If we get another hot reading on core inflation this week, then the FOMC will need to consider tightening monetary policy in the near term.”

Japan Week Ahead: Markets Continue to Expect BOJ Rate Hike Toward Yearend after Tankan Business Survey, Branch Managers Report Points to Resilient Economy amid Mideast Uncertainty

–May Machinery Orders Set for Pullback after April Surge but Strong Demand for Computers, AI-Linked Equipment Seen Intact

By Max Sato

(MaceNews) – Bank of Japan policymakers have received evidence this month that the domestic economy has been resilient, overcoming high fuel costs and material shortages triggered by the Middle East conflict amid the global artificial intelligence boom and solid nominal wage growth.

The bank’s board made it clear that it will continue to raise rates after it decided in a majority vote in June to raise the target of the overnight interest rate by 25 basis points (0.25 percentage point) to 1%.

To ease market jitters, BOJ officials have also repeated that they will react swiftly to a rapid rise in long-term rates by raising purchases of Japanese government bonds and conducting fixed-rate JGB purchase operations among other tools. They have been gradually reducing asset purchases as part of the policy normalization process.

Many economists and market participants expect the BOJ to conduct its sixth rate hike in the current cycle by the end of the year, possibly at the Dec. 17-18 meeting, when board members may be able to see early indications of whether large firms will continue raising wages at the recent pace of about 5% in fiscal 2027 starting in April. Some BOJ watchers are calling for a rate hike at the Oct. 29-30 meeting when the board updates its medium-term growth and inflation projections as well as risk analysis in the quarterly Outlook Report but others argue that BOJ officials may need more time to assess the impact of the Mideast conflict as the fate of the latest U.S.-Iran ceasefire deal remains uncertain.

In the BOJ’s quarterly report on regional economies released on July 9, all nine regions in Japan described their economies as either recovering moderately, picking up or picking up moderately while five regions continued to note that there were some soft spots.

BOJ branch managers reported that supply disruptions and material shortages caused by the Iran war exerted downward pressures on exports and production but many of them noted that the likelihood of a significant decline had decreased compared to an earlier stage of the conflict as Japan had secured, at least temporarily, alternative supply sources and transportation routes bypassing the Gulf.

On the upside, the report showed that the global artificial intelligence boom had boosted orders for semiconductor-producing equipment and electronic components and that AI-related demand was also spreading to power and power supply equipment, telecommunications equipment and molds among other areas.

As department store sales data have shown in recent months, branch managers pointed to robust spending on high-end goods by affluent domestic consumers in urban areas who are benefiting on rising stock prices. Solid wage hikes by large firms, averaging 5% for the third consecutive year (high for Japan), have also supported the tourism, accommodations and food and beverage sectors.

Sales of air conditioners and automobiles are growing in response to regulatory and tax changes while the government’s on-and-off fuel and utility subsidies are alleviating the impact of high energy costs. But the report also said against the backdrop of cautious spending patterns among many households, supermarkets and other retailers have seen sales of certain goods drop when they mark up their prices.

Branch managers reported that companies in the materials sector continued to pass rising labor and supply costs on to their selling prices while suppliers of food and daily necessities are considering whether to raise their prices, citing the Middle East situation. The timing of such markups is likely to be in the summer (usually from July to September). Small businesses told branch managers that they had failed to fully reflect rising procurement costs in sales prices, which in turn is depressing their profits.

The latest BOJ data showed that producer inflation in Japan continued to accelerate to 7.1% in June from upwardly revised gains of 6.6% in May and 5.4% in April as fuel costs rose further to reflect an earlier spike in crude oil prices and global memory chip shortages pushed up the prices for computers and other electronic goods. The weak yen also kept imports expensive. Crude oil prices slipped to around pre-Iran war levels in June on expectations that Washington and Iran would follow up on their ceasefire agreement but it takes some time before it filters through to product prices.

In the coming week, machinery orders for May are widely expected to slip back after surging in April but the trend for the key indicator of capital investment is likely to confirm that there are strong business investment intensions despite the lingering Mideast conflict.

Data released on July 1 showed the Bank of Japan’s quarterly Tankan business sentiment survey recorded an unexpected improvement among many large manufacturers in the June quarter as the positive impact of solid export demand for production machinery and computer chips appeared to have reduced the drag from high producer prices caused by an earlier spike in global crude oil prices and domestic naphtha shortages.

Non-ferrous metals producers saw their confidence unexpectedly jump from the March quarter while the auto industry sentiment slipped only slightly, indicating that those sectors have weathered the negative impact of stiff import duties slapped by the Trump administration last year.

Despite uncertainty generated by the Mideast conflict, large firms revised up their combined plans to increase investment in equipment by 11.5% for fiscal 2026 ending next March, up from the 3.3% rise projected in March. This seems to reflect widespread labor shortages and strong global needs to build artificial intelligence data centers. Smaller firms turned slightly more cautious by forecasting an 8.3% drop in their combined capex plans, down from the 8.1% fall projected three months earlier.

Among other key surveys closely monitored by BOJ officials, the monthly Economy Watchers Survey, which was conducted by the Cabinet Office from June 25 to June 30 and released on July 8, indicated that confidence continued to improve, thanks to easing in Mideast tensions as well as robust spending by visitors from overseas taking advantage of the weak yen and by affluent domestic consumers amid rising stock prices. There is also solid demand for semiconductors and air conditioners.

The Watchers’ sentiment index showing the direction of Japan’s current economic climate rose slightly to a four-month high of 44.0 in June on a seasonally adjusted basis, posting the second straight rise after rising to 43.6 in May from 40.8% in April. Before the impact of the Iran war emerged, the index climbed to a nearly two-year high of 48.9 in February from 47.6 in January. The last time the index was above the neutral line of 50 was in March 2024, when it was at 50.1.

The Watchers’ outlook index, which shows sentiment in two to three months, marked the third straight increase, rising to 45.7 in June from 40.7 in May and 39.4 in April. The index started the year at 50.1 before slipping to 50.0 in February and plunging to 38.7 in March.

Wednesday, July 15
0850 JST (2350 GMT/1950 EDT Tuesday, July 14) The Cabinet Office releases May machinery orders.
Mace News median: core orders -5.0% m/m (range: -6.5% to -0.7%) vs. April +8.7%; +13.7% y/y (range: +12.2% to +16.6%) vs. April +15.6

Japan’s core machinery orders, a key leading indicator of business investment in equipment and software, are forecast to slip back 5.0% on the month in May after posting an unexpected rebound in April with a sharp 8.7% gain and slumping 9.4% in March. But the data is also likely to show persistent domestic demand for computers, reflecting the need to digitize operations to cope with labor shortages, as well as strong demand for equipment to produce memory chips amid the global move to build artificial intelligence data centers.

Last month, the Cabinet Office maintained its assessment that machinery orders are “showing signs of a pickup.” The three-month moving average rose 3.7% in April after slipping 0.9% in March rising 7.5% previously.

From a year earlier, core orders excluding those from electric utilities and for ships are projected to rise 13.7% in May for a sixth straight increase after surging 15.6% the previous month.

Thursday, July 16
1330 JST (0430 GMT/0030 EDT Thursday, July 16) The Bank of Japan releases the quarterly survey on consumer sentiment, inflation outlook.

In the March quarter survey conducted from Feb. 4 to March 9, the consumer confidence index continued to improve to a two-year high of -45.5 from -50.4 in December and -58.7 in September, although just over a half of respondents still said things were worse than a year earlier. By contrast, the index showing sentiment a year ahead dipped slightly to -18.5 after picking up sharply to -18.3 from -40.2. The Iran war broke out in late February, triggering a spike in global energy prices in March.

On the inflation outlook for 12 months ahead, the share of those who projected that prices would rise declined to 83.7% of the respondents in March from 86.0% in December and 88.0% in September. The median of the projected inflation rate was 10.0%, unchanged from the previous two quarters. In the face of elevated costs for essential goods, consumers have felt much higher inflation than the consumer price index shows. As for inflation five years ahead, the share of those who forecast higher prices fell slightly to 82.6% after shrinking at a faster pace to 83.0% from 84.8%.

Friday, July 17
– The Diet’s special 150-day session is scheduled to end. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi called a snap election in January for a Feb. 8 vote, delaying the start of what is usually called an ordinary 150-day session for about a month. Some opposition parties are calling for an extension of the assembly to allow more debate time.

FOMC Minutes: Alternative Scenarios Showed Potential Rate Hikes Or Cuts

– Most Agree ‘Some Policy Firming’ Needed if Inflation Elevated, Employment Stable

– ‘Almost All’ Agree Cut Rates ‘Eventually’ if Inflation ‘Dissipates,’ Returns to 2%

– ‘A Few’ Made Case For Rate Hike, But Not Immediately

By Steven K. Beckner

(MaceNews) – With Kevin Warsh chairing the Federal Open Market Committee for the first time in mid-June, the Federal Reserve’s policymaking body considered alternative economic scenarios that could lead to either interest rate hikes or to rate cuts, minutes of the meeting released Wednesday show.

Although the FOMC was sharply divided in their economic forecasts and rate projections, the minutes show that FOMC participants were unanimous in wanting to hold the federal funds rate steady for the time being, although “a few” made a case for a rate hike.

And the Fed officials tended to agree on the appropriate policy prescription should different scenarios actually play out – higher rates if above-target inflation were to persist “in the context of stable labor market conditions”; “eventually” lower rates if inflation were to “dissipates” and head toward the Fed’s 2% target. 

Most of the Fed governors and Federal Reserve Bank presidents supported a shorter monetary policy statement and the deletion of a previous, longstanding easing bias.

Overhanging the June 16-17 meeting, as the minutes make clear, was a cloud of uncertainty, not only about the war with Iran but also about how artificial intelligence investment would affect productivity growth and in turn inflation in the future.

But, on balance, the Fed governors and Federal Reserve Bank presidents, were more optimistic about about continued “solid” economic growth and “stable” employment than they were about the outlook for inflation.

And, as they discussed the future course of monetary policy, it was inflation, and the prospects for reducing it to the 2% target from the current 3.6% pace, that predominated.

The minutes themselves did not take on an obviously different look as Warsh began to put his own stamp on Fed communications, although he has issued fair warning that changes are coming.

On June 17 meeting, the FOMC left the federal funds rate unchanged in a target range of 3.5% to 3.75%, but made a major change in its policy statement by ending “forward guidance” on the rate path, thereby removing a six-month-old bias toward a resumption of rate cuts.

FOMC participants differed considerably in their rate projections. The “dot plot” in the revised, quarterly Summary of Economic Projections showed eight officials anticipating that the funds rate will remain where it is through the end of the year; one projecting a 25 basis point rate cut, and nine projecting rate hikes of various sizes.

On net, FOMC participants projected the median funds rate will end the year up 25 basis points to 3.8%, compared to the 3.4% projected in the March SEP. Simultaneously, they forecast that the price index for personal consumption expenditures (PCE) will be up 3.6% from a year earlier in the fourth quarter – compared to just 2.7% in the March SEP.

Warsh, who did not make a projection, told his first post-FOMC press conference that his colleagues had written down their “dots” with “humility” and “in pencil,” implying that they are more than usually subject to change as the economy evolves in coming months.

“I didn’t hear tons of conviction” about the projections and forecasts, he remarked.

As the FOMC minutes note, “all participants supported maintaining the current target range for the federal funds rate,” given that “economic activity had been expanding at a solid pace and that labor market conditions had appeared stable,” while “inflation was elevated.”

In terms of the Fed’s risk management considerations, the minutes say “participants generally assessed that …. upside risks to price stability remained elevated while downside risks to achieving maximum employment had moderated a bit.”

The minutes say there were “a few participants” who made “a case for raising the target range for the federal funds rate,” but added that “those participants indicated that they supported maintaining the current target range at this meeting.”

There was some disagreement on how “restrictive” monetary policy is at current rate levels.

“Several participants remarked that they did not see the current policy stance as restrictive, while a few other participants commented that they saw the current policy stance as slightly restrictive,” the minute say.

In reaching their stand-pat rate decision, with no easing bias, the minutes say FOMC participants had to deal with “high assessed uncertainty.” Hence, there was a discussion of “a range of scenarios for the evolution of the economy and for future monetary policy actions.”

“Most participants remarked on scenarios in which inflationary pressures would dissipate and inflation would soon begin to return to 2%,” the minutes disclose. “In such scenarios, almost all of these participants noted that it would likely be appropriate to maintain or eventually lower the target range for the federal funds rate.”

“Most participants, however, also pointed to scenarios in which, in the context of stable labor market conditions, inflation would remain elevated due to strong AI-related demand, the conflict in the Middle East, or the effects of tariffs,” the minutes continue. “In such scenarios, almost all of these participants indicated that some policy firming would likely be warranted to return inflation to 2%.”

“Regarding participants’ individual assessments of appropriate monetary policy under what each participant judged to be the most likely scenario for the economy, many participants indicated that the appropriate level of the federal funds rate would be within or slightly below the current target range at the end of this year,” the minutes go on.

However, they add that “many other participants … assessed that the appropriate level of the federal funds rate would be above the current target range at the end of this year.”

Warsh has made clear he wants to make unspecified changes in the way the Fed communicates with the public and with financial markets and has appointed a task force for that purpose. The streamlined policy statement issued by the FOMC on June 17 was seen as the first fruits of the Warsh approach, He strongly hinted that he will push for changes in the SEP in his press conference.

The minutes do not address exactly what future communications changes might be made, pending recommendations from Warsh’s task force, but they do note that “some participants commented that they welcomed the opportunity to review the Committee’s communications tools and practices.“

Regarding changes already made on June 17, the minutes say, “A number of participants noted that it was an opportune time to consider significant changes to the FOMC’s post meeting statement. A majority of participants remarked that they saw advantages in shortening the statement.”

“Most participants emphasized that they preferred not to repeat the language in the previous post meeting statement that had suggested an easing bias regarding the likely direction of the Committee’s future interest rate decisions,” the minutes continue.

“Various participants discussed how the public could perceive the changes to the post meeting statement,” they add.

Since the meeting, no clear policy direction has emerged in comments by officials, which admittedly have been more sparse than when Jerome Powell was running things.

Warsh, who took office on May 22 with a dovish reputation, continued to stress his commitment to the Fed’s “price stability” mandate last Wednesday.

“If there were people in the household or the business sector and the financial markets who thought that this central bank was going to be comfortable with an inflation objective above 2%, well, I guess they’d be disappointed. We’re going to deliver price stability in the US,” he told a  European Central Bank forum.

Warsh declined again to give any forward guidance on rates, though he said the Fed would  “chart a new course” under his supervision. He pledged a “good debate” on policy at  the mid-July FOMC meeting.

New York Federal Reserve Bank President John Williams said Tuesday that he “feels a little bit more positive about the near-term inflation outlook because of the energy price declines that we’re going to see.”

The FOMC Vice Chairman, who was speaking before an apparent  breakdown in peace talks with Iran caused oil to rebou8nd, reiterated his view that “monetary policy is well-positioned.”

At the last FOMC meeting, Williams said there had been “strong agreement” about removing forward guidance, because “given the uncertainties that we face in terms of inflation, the economic outlook, trying to give explicit forward guidance about where interest rates are going to be was no longer appropriate. The uncertainties are too great.”

Governor Christopher Waller, who had developed a dovish reputation while in the running for the Fed chairmanship, continued to take a more hawkish position Monday, explaining that the risks facing the Fed have “completely flipped around … .The “labor market seems to be stabilizing in the U.S., inflation’s been taking off. So then that changes how you might want to think about policy.”

Waller also pushed back on Warsh’s disfavoring of forward guidance, contending that it can be useful at times.

San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said last Thursday that the course of monetary policy will depend on which of a couple of scenarios play out.

“I think there’s a scenario where we ​have to fight inflation that turns out to be more persistent,” ⁠she said at a Banco de España conference in Santander, Spain, but “there’s also a scenario where the growth just doesn’t continue to sustain itself … or the investment slows because people are worried they haven’t seen the gains yet.”

The FOMC should be in rush to change rates in any direction, Daly suggested. “You don’t want to react quickly when ​the world is changing quickly. You want to assess before you jump or act because ​you’ll make better decisions.”

MORE NEWS

CONTACT US/SALES

President, Mace News:

tony@macenews.com


Washington Bureau Chief:

denny@macenews.com


SUBSCRIPTIONS

Contact Mace News President
Tony Mace tony@macenews.com 
to find a customer- and markets-oriented brand of news coverage with a level of individualized service unique to the industry. A market participant told us he believes he has his own White House correspondent as Mace News provides breaking news and/or audio feeds, stories, savvy analysis, photos and headlines delivered how you want them. And more. And this is important because you won’t get it anywhere else. That’s MICRONEWS. We know how important to you are the short advisories on what’s coming up, whether briefings, statements, unexpected changes in schedules and calendars and anything else that piques our interest.

No matter the area being covered, the reporter is always only a telephone call or message away. We check with you frequently to see how we can improve. Have a question, need to be briefed via video or audio-only on a topic’s state of play, keep us on speed dial. See the list of interest areas we cover elsewhere
on this site.

You can have two weeks reduced price no-obligation trial for $199. No self-renewing contracts. Suspend, renew coverage at any time. Stay with a topic like trade while its hot and suspend coverage or switch coverage areas when it’s not. We serve customers one by one 24/7.

Tony Mace was the top editorial executive for Market News International for two decades. 

Washington Bureau Chief Denny Gulino had the same title at Market News for 18 years. 

Similar experience undergirds our service in Ottawa, London, Brussels and in Asia.

 

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