The Morning Bell — May 01, 2026

Three major central banks hit the pause button this week, but don’t mistake coordination for confidence. The Fed, ECB, and Bank of England are all standing pat while oil holds above $100 and bond markets flash warning signs — a combination that screams “wait and see” rather than “mission accomplished.” When mortgage rates jump to 6.3% and Treasury yields keep climbing despite rate pauses, something bigger than monetary policy is driving the bus.

Today’s Briefing


The Morning Bell

Oil Above $100, Fed on Hold: The Energy Reality Check Markets Can’t Ignore

Markets are digesting an uncomfortable truth this morning: the Fed’s pause yesterday wasn’t dovish positioning — it was energy shock damage control. With crude oil holding above $100 and inflation expectations creeping higher, the central bank just m

Read full analysis →

Data Wire

Labor Costs Hit a Wall as Wage Growth Stalls Out

The Employment Cost Index held dead flat at 3.4% in the fourth quarter, marking the second straight quarter without any acceleration in what businesses pay their workers. That’s a sharp deceleration f

Read full analysis →

News Wire

WHAT HAPPENED

ECB’s Rate Pause Reveals Europe’s Stagflation Dilemma

Read full analysis →

Data Wire

Fed’s Inflation Gauge Heats Up: PCE Jumps 0.66% in March

The Fed’s favorite inflation measure just delivered its hottest monthly reading since last summer. The Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index surged 0.66% in March, pushing the annual rat

Read full analysis →

Data Wire

Labor Market Sends Mixed Signals as Jobless Claims Drop Sharply

Initial jobless claims fell to 189,000 last week, down 26,000 from the prior week’s 215,000 reading. That’s the lowest level in three weeks — but it also highlights just how volatile this indicator ha

Read full analysis →

Data Wire

US Economy Keeps Accelerating — But Something’s Shifting

The US economy expanded at a 6.04% annual pace in Q4, capping off a year that saw GDP growth consistently surprise to the upside. That’s the kind of momentum that usually comes with warning labels.

Read full analysis →

Data Wire

Mortgage Rates Hit 6.3% — The Housing Market’s Spring Surprise

Mortgage rates jumped to 6.3% this week, up from 6.23% just seven days ago — the kind of sharp weekly move that makes homebuyers pause mid-search and real estate agents check their phones twice.

Read full analysis →

Data Wire

The 10-Year Treasury Just Hit 4.42% — Here’s Why That’s the Real Story

The 10-year Treasury yield jumped 6 basis points to 4.42% yesterday — its highest level in over a week and part of a steady climb that’s pushed rates up 12 basis points in just five trading days.

Read full analysis →

Data Wire

Bond Markets Signal Fed Anxiety as 2-Year Treasury Jumps

The 2-year Treasury yield surged 8 basis points to 3.92% on Tuesday — its biggest single-day move in over a week and a clear sign that bond traders are getting nervous about something.

Read full analysis →

Data Wire

US National Debt Hits $38.95 Trillion as Growth Rate Moderates

The US national debt reached $38.95 trillion at the end of April, growing at its slowest pace in recent weeks as daily increases dropped to just $300 million — practically a rounding error by Washingt

Read full analysis →

Fed Watch

Fed Funds Rate Holds Dead Steady as Energy Crisis Reshapes Policy Calculus

The effective federal funds rate stayed locked at 3.64% through the end of April, marking six consecutive days without movement as the Federal Reserve holds its position amid the ongoing Strait of Hor

Read full analysis →


What to Watch Tomorrow

Keep your eyes on tomorrow’s jobs report, which could either validate the Fed’s patient approach or force them back to the drawing board. With jobless claims bouncing around and wage growth stalling out, the employment picture is messier than the headline numbers suggest — and that uncertainty is exactly what’s making bond traders nervous.


ON1010 provides economic education for investors. Nothing in this email constitutes investment advice. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.

Free Research

The economy moves fast. We make sure you move faster.

Economic data, policy shifts, and market signals — delivered to your inbox.

Subscribe Free