Time | Country | Event | Period | Previous value | Forecast |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
00:30 | Japan | Nikkei Services PMI | May | 51.8 | 51.9 |
01:30 | Australia | Gross Domestic Product (YoY) | Quarter I | 2.3% | 1.7% |
01:30 | Australia | Gross Domestic Product (QoQ) | Quarter I | 0.2% | 0.4% |
01:45 | China | Markit/Caixin Services PMI | May | 54.5 | 54.3 |
07:50 | France | Services PMI | May | 50.5 | 51.7 |
07:55 | Germany | Services PMI | May | 55.7 | 55.0 |
08:00 | Eurozone | Services PMI | May | 52.8 | 52.5 |
08:00 | United Kingdom | MPC Member Ramsden Speaks | |||
08:30 | United Kingdom | Purchasing Manager Index Services | May | 50.4 | 50.6 |
09:00 | Eurozone | Producer Price Index, MoM | April | -0.1% | 0.3% |
09:00 | Eurozone | Producer Price Index (YoY) | April | 2.9% | 3.2% |
09:00 | Eurozone | Retail Sales (MoM) | April | 0% | -0.4% |
09:00 | Eurozone | Retail Sales (YoY) | April | 1.9% | 1.5% |
12:15 | U.S. | ADP Employment Report | May | 275 | 183 |
12:30 | Canada | Labor Productivity | Quarter I | -0.4% | 0.3% |
13:45 | U.S. | Services PMI | May | 53.0 | 50.9 |
13:45 | U.S. | FOMC Member Clarida Speaks | |||
13:45 | U.S. | FOMC Member Bostic Speaks | |||
14:00 | U.S. | ISM Non-Manufacturing | May | 55.5 | 55.5 |
14:30 | U.S. | Crude Oil Inventories | May | -0.282 | -0.208 |
18:00 | U.S. | Fed's Beige Book |
Major US stock indexes rose strongly against the backdrop of heightened hopes for lowering the Fed rates and signs of weakening trade tensions.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell made it clear that the central bank is open to loosen monetary policy in order to save the economy. According to him, the Fed will "act properly" to support economic growth. Powell noted, however, that the Fed does not know “how or when” the trade conflict will be resolved. “We are closely following the implications of these events for the US economic outlook,” he added.
Comments by the Fed Chairman have heightened expectations for the Fed rate cut. The CME FedWatch tool showed that market participants see a 92 percent chance of a rate cut in September. The odds of a second rate cut in December exceeded 80%.
The market was also supported by official statements from Mexico and China. Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said he expects to negotiate with the United States on immigration before Washington realizes its threat of introducing tariffs.
The Chinese Ministry of Commerce stated that “differences and friction between the two parties” should be resolved through negotiations, which “should be based on mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit.” On Wall Street, these statements were taken as a sign that Beijing had weakened harsh rhetoric.
The focus of market participants was also the latest data on the United States. According to the report of the Ministry of Commerce, production orders fell by 0.8% in April after rising by 1.3% in March (revised from + 1.9%). Economists had expected orders to fall by 0.9%. The fall in production orders was caused by a decrease in orders for durable goods - by 2.1% after rising 1.7% in March. A sharp drop occurred as orders for transportation equipment fell by 5.9%.
Almost all the components of DOW finished trading in positive territory (28 out of 30). The growth leader was NIKE, Inc. (NKE; + 4.34%). Only shares of The Coca-Cola Co. have fallen. (KO; -0.21%) and Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ; -0.63%).
Almost all sectors of the S & P recorded an increase. The greatest growth was shown by the technology sector (+ 2.2%). Only the conglomerate sector decreased (-0.1%).
At the time of closing:
Dow 25,332.18 +512.40 +2.06%
S & P 500 2,803.27 +58.82 +2.14%
Nasdaq 100 7,527.12 +194.10 +2.65%
Time | Country | Event | Period | Previous value | Forecast |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
00:30 | Japan | Nikkei Services PMI | May | 51.8 | 51.9 |
01:30 | Australia | Gross Domestic Product (YoY) | Quarter I | 2.3% | 1.7% |
01:30 | Australia | Gross Domestic Product (QoQ) | Quarter I | 0.2% | 0.4% |
01:45 | China | Markit/Caixin Services PMI | May | 54.5 | 54.3 |
07:50 | France | Services PMI | May | 50.5 | 51.7 |
07:55 | Germany | Services PMI | May | 55.7 | 55.0 |
08:00 | Eurozone | Services PMI | May | 52.8 | 52.5 |
08:00 | United Kingdom | MPC Member Ramsden Speaks | |||
08:30 | United Kingdom | Purchasing Manager Index Services | May | 50.4 | 50.6 |
09:00 | Eurozone | Producer Price Index, MoM | April | -0.1% | 0.3% |
09:00 | Eurozone | Producer Price Index (YoY) | April | 2.9% | 3.2% |
09:00 | Eurozone | Retail Sales (MoM) | April | 0% | -0.4% |
09:00 | Eurozone | Retail Sales (YoY) | April | 1.9% | 1.5% |
12:15 | U.S. | ADP Employment Report | May | 275 | 183 |
12:30 | Canada | Labor Productivity | Quarter I | -0.4% | 0.3% |
13:45 | U.S. | Services PMI | May | 53.0 | 50.9 |
13:45 | U.S. | FOMC Member Clarida Speaks | |||
13:45 | U.S. | FOMC Member Bostic Speaks | |||
14:00 | U.S. | ISM Non-Manufacturing | May | 55.5 | 55.5 |
14:30 | U.S. | Crude Oil Inventories | May | -0.282 | -0.208 |
18:00 | U.S. | Fed's Beige Book |
The U.S.
Commerce Department reported on Tuesday that the value of new factory orders
decreased 0.8 percent m-o-m in April, following a revised 1.3 percent gain in
March (originally a 1.9 percent m-o-m surge). That was the largest decline in
factory orders since October 2018.
Economists had
forecast a 0.9 percent m-o-m drop.
According to
the report, orders for transportation equipment tumbled 5.9 percent and orders
for computers and electronic products declined 0.5 percent, while orders for
electrical equipment, appliances and components rose 0.9 percent and orders for
machinery edged up 0.3 percent.
Total factory
orders excluding transportation, a volatile part of the overall reading, rose
0.3 percent m-o-m in April (compared to a 0.3 percent m-o-m advance in March), while
orders for nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft, a measure of business
spending plans, declined 1.0 percent m-o-m (compared to a 0.3 percent m-o-m gain
in March). The report also showed that shipments of core capital goods were
unchanged m-o-m in April, following a decrease of 0.6 percent m-o-m in March.
In y-o-y terms,
factory orders increased 1.6 percent in April.
U.S. stock-index futures rose on Tuesday, supported by increased hopes for Fed rate cut as well as China’s statement that trade dispute with the U.S. should be resolved with dialogue.
Global Stocks:
Index/commodity | Last | Today's Change, points | Today's Change, % |
Nikkei | 20,408.54 | -2.34 | -0.01% |
Hang Seng | 26,761.52 | -132.34 | -0.49% |
Shanghai | 2,862.28 | -27.80 | -0.96% |
S&P/ASX | 6,332.40 | +11.90 | +0.19% |
FTSE | 7,216.33 | +31.53 | +0.44% |
CAC | 5,267.34 | +25.88 | +0.49% |
DAX | 11,960.47 | +167.66 | +1.42% |
Crude oil | $52.74 | -0.96% | |
Gold | $1,327.10 | -0.06% |
(company / ticker / price / change ($/%) / volume)
3M Co | MMM | 161 | 0.96(0.60%) | 4413 |
ALCOA INC. | AA | 21.6 | 0.09(0.42%) | 1214 |
ALTRIA GROUP INC. | MO | 50.39 | 0.29(0.58%) | 3382 |
Amazon.com Inc., NASDAQ | AMZN | 1,705.50 | 12.81(0.76%) | 80024 |
Apple Inc. | AAPL | 175.07 | 1.77(1.02%) | 269697 |
AT&T Inc | T | 31.32 | 0.23(0.74%) | 27072 |
Boeing Co | BA | 343.19 | 4.30(1.27%) | 12647 |
Caterpillar Inc | CAT | 121.61 | 0.96(0.80%) | 4728 |
Chevron Corp | CVX | 116.62 | 0.63(0.54%) | 448 |
Cisco Systems Inc | CSCO | 52.29 | 0.51(0.98%) | 36900 |
Citigroup Inc., NYSE | C | 63.6 | 0.99(1.58%) | 23650 |
Deere & Company, NYSE | DE | 143.92 | 0.63(0.44%) | 356 |
Exxon Mobil Corp | XOM | 72.32 | 0.44(0.61%) | 6850 |
Facebook, Inc. | FB | 164.48 | 0.33(0.20%) | 192648 |
FedEx Corporation, NYSE | FDX | 153.69 | 1.35(0.89%) | 1789 |
Ford Motor Co. | F | 9.73 | 0.12(1.25%) | 28151 |
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc., NYSE | FCX | 10 | 0.08(0.81%) | 44621 |
General Electric Co | GE | 9.54 | 0.01(0.10%) | 50225 |
General Motors Company, NYSE | GM | 34.27 | 0.57(1.69%) | 12878 |
Goldman Sachs | GS | 185.54 | 2.35(1.28%) | 3722 |
Google Inc. | GOOG | 1,042.90 | 6.67(0.64%) | 10225 |
Hewlett-Packard Co. | HPQ | 19 | 0.34(1.82%) | 216 |
Home Depot Inc | HD | 191 | 1.43(0.75%) | 1209 |
Intel Corp | INTC | 44.09 | 0.63(1.45%) | 27598 |
International Business Machines Co... | IBM | 129.25 | 0.98(0.76%) | 2119 |
Johnson & Johnson | JNJ | 132.3 | 0.86(0.65%) | 950 |
JPMorgan Chase and Co | JPM | 107.88 | 1.42(1.33%) | 20451 |
McDonald's Corp | MCD | 199.44 | 0.66(0.33%) | 1358 |
Merck & Co Inc | MRK | 80.51 | 0.25(0.31%) | 1108 |
Microsoft Corp | MSFT | 121.33 | 1.49(1.24%) | 148780 |
Nike | NKE | 78.55 | 0.59(0.76%) | 375 |
Pfizer Inc | PFE | 42.3 | 0.38(0.91%) | 7119 |
Procter & Gamble Co | PG | 104 | 0.20(0.19%) | 3653 |
Starbucks Corporation, NASDAQ | SBUX | 76.75 | 0.53(0.70%) | 2962 |
Tesla Motors, Inc., NASDAQ | TSLA | 181.45 | 2.48(1.39%) | 121567 |
The Coca-Cola Co | KO | 50 | 0.02(0.04%) | 3408 |
Twitter, Inc., NYSE | TWTR | 35.03 | 0.60(1.74%) | 120403 |
UnitedHealth Group Inc | UNH | 238.98 | 2.42(1.02%) | 1594 |
Verizon Communications Inc | VZ | 56.6 | 0.22(0.39%) | 8116 |
Visa | V | 160.45 | 1.85(1.17%) | 17347 |
Wal-Mart Stores Inc | WMT | 102.55 | 0.59(0.58%) | 1892 |
Walt Disney Co | DIS | 133 | 0.53(0.40%) | 4950 |
Yandex N.V., NASDAQ | YNDX | 35.29 | -0.15(-0.42%) | 9164 |
Lyft (LYFT) initiated with a Buy at Citigroup; target $70
Lyft (LYFT) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays; target $55
Lyft (LYFT) initiated with a Buy at BTIG Research; target $77
Lyft (LYFT) initiated with a Buy at SunTrust; target $68
Lyft (LYFT) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital target $72
Lyft (LYFT) initiated with a Hold at Loop Capital; target $60
Lyft (LYFT) initiated with a Neutral at Goldman; target $65
Lyft (LYFT) initiated with an Outperform at Macquarie
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank; target $58
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Neutral at Citigroup; target $45
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Buy at Needham; target $52
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Buy at BofA/Merrill; target $53
Uber (UBER) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays; target $50
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Mkt Outperform at JMP Securities; target $54
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Buy at Mizuho; target $50
Uber (UBER) initiated with an Outperform at Cowen; target $58
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Buy at BTIG Research; target $80
Uber (UBER) initiated with an Outperform at Oppenheimer; target $55
Uber (UBER) initiated with an Outperform at Macquarie
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Buy at Canaccord Genuity; target $55
Uber (UBER) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital Mkts; target $62
Uber (UBER) initiated with an Overweight at Morgan Stanley; target $56
Uber (UBER) initiated with an Outperform at William Blair
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Buy at SunTrust; target $56
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Buy at Goldman; target $56
Uber (UBER) initiated with a Buy at Loop Capital
Twitter (TWTR) initiated with a Buy at Loop Capital
Amazon (AMZN) target raised to $2380 from $2200 at Loop Capital
Apple (AAPL) target lowered to $220 from $245 at Cowen
Apple (AAPL) target lowered to $202 from $245 at Canaccord Genuity
Analysts at TD Securities note the markets are looking to the Fed's "Conference on Monetary Policy Strategy, Tools, and Communication Practices" for indications the Fed will make a dovish pivot to higher inflation "make-up" policies but are likely to be disappointed.
Analysts at TD Securities note that the UK’s construction PMI unexpectedly dropped in May to 48.6, its lowest reading since the Beast of the East-influenced March 2018 drop.
Felicity Emmett, a senior economist at ANZ, is expecting another disappointing advance in Australia’s GDP of 0.4% q/q in Q1, which would see annual growth decline to 1.7%, - its slowest pace since 2009 in the midst of the global financial crisis.
Bert Colijn, a Senior Eurozone Economist at ING, notes that core inflation droped to 0.8% and headline to 1.2% in May, indicating that price pressures remain mild in times of economic uncertainty, and this puts further pressure on the ECB.
Economic forecasts had assumed rates at 1% by year-end
The board has not yet made a decision, much depends on labour market
Rate decision was not in response to deterioration in outlook since May
Rate cut is to lead lower AUD than otherwise would have been the case
Easing aimed at spurring jobs growth, lifting inflation
One option is for fiscal support, including spending on infrastructure
Banks should fully pass through rate cut through mortgage rates
Well aware that savers will be disappointed by rate cut
The international corporate taxation landscape has changed to Germany's disadvantage recently, Chancellor Angela Merkel said, adding that her ruling coalition would try to address this.
"We know that in the area of corporate taxation, things have changed very unfavourably for Germany in recent years. Competitive relations have recently changed very much to our disadvantage. So we will try, in the grand coalition, to achieve something here," Merkel told.
Merkel also described a future trade agreement between the European Union and United States as being of existential importance, saying she would keep trying to make progress despite the "regrettable" opposition from France. "We have a mandate for talks with the United States and I think it is of existential importance," Merkel told.
According to the report from Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union, the euro area (EA19) seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate was 7.6% in April 2019, down from 7.7% in March 2019 and from 8.4% in April 2018. This is the lowest rate recorded in the euro area since August 2008. The EU28 unemployment rate was 6.4% in April 2019, stable compared with March 2019 and down from 7.0% in April 2018. This remains the lowest rate recorded in the EU28 since the start of the EU monthly unemployment series in January 2000.
Eurostat estimates that 15.802 million men and women in the EU28, of whom 12.529 million in the euro area, were unemployed in April 2019. Compared with March 2019, the number of persons unemployed decreased by 108 000 in the EU28 and by 64 000 in the euro area. Compared with April 2018, unemployment fell by 1.394 million in the EU28 and by 1.147 million in the euro area.
According to a flash estimate from Eurostat, euro area annual inflation is expected to be 1.2% in May 2019, down from 1.7% in April. Economists had expected a slowdown to 1.3%.
Looking at the main components of euro area inflation, energy is expected to have the highest annual rate in May (3.8%, compared with 5.3% in April), followed by food, alcohol & tobacco (1.6%, compared with 1.5% in April), services (1.1%, compared with 1.9% in April) and non-energy industrial goods (0.3%, compared with 0.2% in April).
Eurostat also said that core CPI fell to 0.8% y/y in May from 1.3% y/y in April. Economists had expected a slowdown to 0.9%.
According to the report from IHS Markit/CIPS, UK construction companies indicated a renewed decline in total business activity during May. Lower volumes of commercial work and civil engineering activity more than offset a modest increase in house building. New orders also decreased across the construction sector, with survey respondents noting that subdued domestic economic conditions had led to project delays and fewer tender opportunities. Average input prices continued to rise in May, which was often attributed to higher fuel and energy costs. However, the overall rate of input price inflation eased to its weakest since June 2016. Meanwhile, construction firms signalled a fall in business optimism to its weakest since October 2018.
At 48.6 in May, down from 50.5 in April, the headline seasonally UK Construction PMI registered below the 50.0 no-change mark for the third time in the past four months. The latest reading was the lowest since the snow-related downturn in construction output during March 2018.
Allan von Mehren, chief analyst at Danske Bank, notes that the GBP weakened against EUR yesterday, on a day full of headwinds.
“Softer UK PMIs, compression of Italian sovereign spreads and marginally negative but not too surprising comments from Boris Johnson combined to send the GBP lower. If indeed we are about to see a weakening of domestic data in UK combined with euro spread compression, the EUR/GBP could move towards 0.9., although this is not our main scenario. Nonetheless, forecasters have been surprised by strong UK data and a turn towards weaker growth indicators could fuel some short-term headwind for the GBP, even if Brexit news is neutral.”
Allan von Mehren, chief analyst at Danske Bank, points out that the USD sold off broadly after the Fed’s Bullard blinked late yesterday, when he argued a rate cut may be warranted soon.
“We have stressed numerous times that a key driver for FX markets would be if the Fed started to acknowledge dovish market pricing. Bullard’s comment was a first step in that direction, but the market likely needs more confirmation (and at some point action) for further selling USD.”
Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini said on Tuesday he had no intention of bringing down the Italian government, but wanted to see the cabinet act with greater urgency and push through much-needed reforms.
Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte threatened on Monday to resign unless his two coalition partners, Salvini’s League and the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement, put an end to their constant feuding and start cooperating on policy.
Salvini said he was ready to meet his government partners whenever they wanted, adding that the coalition could not keep on delaying approval of measures such as a new building code and greater autonomy for the regions.
In view of analysts at Danske Bank, today's main event is the inflation print out of the euro area.
“As the Easter boost to travel-related service prices wanes, we expect both headline and core inflation to drop back in May, to 1.6% and 1.1%, respectively. It leaves the ECB with a rather bleak picture of still too low core inflation and the expected recovery being threatened by trade war escalation and weaker Chinese growth. Market inflation expectations also keep falling and are back at the lows seen in 2016.”
“US Fed Chair Powell will speak this afternoon as part of the 'Fed listens' event. The theme will be monetary policy strategy, tools and communication practices. Although the speech may not entail guidance for new policy signals near term yet, the speech is important as part of the revisit of the monetary policy framework/target discussion.”
According to analysts at TD Securities, for the Eurozone, Easter base effects were especially pronounced in 2019 owing to the timing of the Easter holiday vs 2018.
“We've now seen sharp unwinds of the April inflation data across the four major economies, and this points to a sharp slowdown in May euro area inflation figures. We look for headline inflation to drop back sharply to 1.2% y/y (consensus: 1.3%), while core inflation slides to 0.8% y/y (consensus: 0.9%). The unemployment rate for April is also released, and markets look for an unchanged reading of 7.7%.”
Mexico’s Economy Minister Graciela Marquez said that the tariffs U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened to place on Mexican exports would impact all 50 U.S. states and harm value chains, consumers and trade-related jobs in both nations.
In a joint statement with Marquez and other senior government officials, Agriculture Minister Victor Villalobos said the proposed tariffs would cause total economic damage to the agriculture sector of $117 million per month in both countries. Villalobos did not specify at what level of tariffs this damage would occur.
Trade uncertainties are high on the minds of investors and businesses — but they’re not the only risk facing the U.S. economy right now, said Mary Daly, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.
The global economy is slowing and the circumstances surrounding how the U.K. eventually leaves the European Union have also affected economic activity, Daly told.
“I don’t want us to get too focused on only trade when there are these other looming uncertainties that also need resolution,” she said.
Still, Daly reiterated that the U.S. economy is “in a good place” given that it is close to full employment, inflation is slowly inching up toward the Fed’s 2% target, and the federal funds rate is near “neutral.”
That means the Fed can afford to wait before making its next monetary policy move, she said. “I think patience is the way we should be right now,” she added.
Australia’s central bank (RBA) cut its cash rate to a record low 1.25% in what could be the first in a series of stimulus measures amid growing calls for policymakers to revive the country’s slowing economy.
“The Board took this decision to support employment growth and provide greater confidence that inflation will be consistent with the medium-term target,” RBA Governor Philip Lowe said.
In a signal that the door was still wide open for further cuts, if need, Lowe said: “The Board will continue to monitor developments in the labor market closely and adjust monetary policy to support sustainable growth in the economy and the achievement of the inflation target over time.”
Australia’s economy has dodged a recession since the early 1990s but is now battling falling home prices, rising unemployment, sluggish consumer spending and lukewarm inflation.
However, Lowe said monetary policy alone will not be enough to boost economic momentum as households were already up to their eyeballs in debt, putting the onus on Prime Minister Scott Morrison to slash income tax and boost spending.
EUR/USD
Resistance levels (open interest**, contracts)
$1.1354 (5649)
$1.1306 (4719)
$1.1263 (2931)
Price at time of writing this review: $1.1250
Support levels (open interest**, contracts):
$1.1181 (3073)
$1.1159 (7405)
$1.1131 (3704)
Comments:
- Overall open interest on the CALL options and PUT options with the expiration date June, 7 is 123912 contracts (according to data from June, 3) with the maximum number of contracts with strike price $1,1500 (9032);
GBP/USD
Resistance levels (open interest**, contracts)
$1.2760 (626)
$1.2720 (883)
$1.2689 (443)
Price at time of writing this review: $1.2667
Support levels (open interest**, contracts):
$1.2576 (2237)
$1.2538 (858)
$1.2494 (1236)
Comments:
- Overall open interest on the CALL options with the expiration date June, 7 is 41375 contracts, with the maximum number of contracts with strike price $1,3450 (3277);
- Overall open interest on the PUT options with the expiration date June, 7 is 41496 contracts, with the maximum number of contracts with strike price $1,2700 (4008);
- The ratio of PUT/CALL was 1.00 versus 1.01 from the previous trading day according to data from June, 3
* - The Chicago Mercantile Exchange bulletin (CME) is used for the calculation.
** - Open interest takes into account the total number of option contracts that are open at the moment.
Raw materials | Closed | Change, % |
---|---|---|
Brent | 60.6 | -0.64 |
WTI | 52.84 | 0.02 |
Silver | 14.75 | 1.24 |
Gold | 1324.423 | 1.32 |
Palladium | 1328.63 | 0.16 |
Index | Change, points | Closed | Change, % |
---|---|---|---|
NIKKEI 225 | -190.31 | 20410.88 | -0.92 |
Hang Seng | -7.23 | 26893.86 | -0.03 |
KOSPI | 26.11 | 2067.85 | 1.28 |
ASX 200 | -76.4 | 6320.5 | -1.19 |
FTSE 100 | 23.09 | 7184.8 | 0.32 |
DAX | 65.97 | 11792.81 | 0.56 |
Dow Jones | 4.74 | 24819.78 | 0.02 |
S&P 500 | -7.61 | 2744.45 | -0.28 |
NASDAQ Composite | -120.13 | 7333.02 | -1.61 |
Pare | Closed | Change, % |
---|---|---|
AUDUSD | 0.69748 | 0.61 |
EURJPY | 121.485 | 0.44 |
EURUSD | 1.12435 | 0.68 |
GBPJPY | 136.834 | 0 |
GBPUSD | 1.26641 | 0.25 |
NZDUSD | 0.65978 | 1.03 |
USDCAD | 1.34375 | -0.57 |
USDCHF | 0.99206 | -0.89 |
USDJPY | 108.047 | -0.24 |
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