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Week Ahead – US and eurozone inflation, Fed speak, Bank of Japan minutes

Started by PocketOption, Sep 25, 2023, 08:07 am

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PocketOption

Week Ahead - US and eurozone inflation, Fed speak, Bank of Japan minutes

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US


It will be a busy week filled with a wide range of economic releases, with the focus falling on the consumer and the Fed's preferred inflation gauge.  August personal income is expected to rise given the strong labor market while spending cooled given the end of summer vacations.  The bond market will pay extremely close attention to the next round of inflation readings.  Headline PCE will likely heat up given the surge in energy prices, while the core reading should maintain the 0.2% monthly pace. 


Wall Street will also pay close attention to the UAW strike and if government shutdown odds grow.  It will also be a busy week filled with central bank speak.  On Monday, the Fed's Kashkari speaks at Wharton School. Tuesday contains Bowman's welcoming remarks at a FedCommunities event on rental housing affordability. Thursday contains four events, with Chair Powell hosting a town hall with educators and speeches from Goolsbee, Cook, and Barkin. Williams speaks on monetary policy on Friday. 


Eurozone


The ECB signaled after its September meeting that its tightening cycle was likely at an end, barring any nasty surprises on the data front. Next week could be the first test of that, with flash HICP inflation data due on Friday. Substantial progress has already been made and much more is expected over the remainder of the year, while a cooling economy and threat of recession is clearly making policymakers nervous. 


As always, a number of individual countries will release their inflation numbers in the days leading up to the eurozone release so we could have a pretty good idea of what we're in for by the time the Friday release happens. That aside, there are some surveys released over the course of the week among other tier two and three data. Central bank speak will also be monitored, most notably President Christine Lagarde's comments as she makes an appearance on the same day as the inflation report is released.


UK 


The Bank of England surprised markets this past week in choosing to hold the Bank Rate at 5.25, with those backing it taking the vote by the finest of margins 5-4. That doesn't necessarily mark the end of the tightening cycle but if the data improves as the MPC expect, it may well be. Any negative data surprises between now and the early November meeting though may tip the balance the other way. There's going to be even more pressure on the data now, not that there's really anything of note next week. The final GDP reading for the second quarter is the only one that stands out in any way.



There's a selection of data due next week although I'm not sure any will hold much sway when it comes to upcoming monetary policy announcements unless they're particularly shocking. Industrial output, retail sales, GDP, unemployment, and real wages are among the releases. 's issues with inflation and the currency are much bigger than all of these, although it will be interesting to see how the economy is holding up amid these additional pressures. 


South Africa


The SARB held rates steady at its September meeting, as expected, with headline and core inflation sitting comfortably within its 3-6% target. The central bank continued to warn about risks to the inflation outlook and hasn't declared the end of the tightening cycle just yet. PPI figures next week may be of interest. 


Turkey


The Turkish central bank raised interest rates by 5% on Thursday, taking the Key Rate to 30% amid a plunging lira and soaring inflation. The move didn't help lift the currency which still sits near record lows. Next week doesn't have much to offer beyond a few tier-three data releases.


Switzerland


The SNB opted against raising interest rates in September as their new forecasts showed inflation below 2% over the forecast horizon, meaning no more tightening is necessary. The decision obviously came with warnings that hikes could be considered in the future if the data warrants it, as the SNB attempted to put itself into hawkish hold territory, which markets didn't buy. The SNB is done with rate hikes and the focus now will shift to when the first cut will come. Next week has a few things of note, with the KOF indicator and investor sentiment surveys, and the SNB quarterly bulletin being released.



China


The only data to watch will be total industrial profits for August which are forecasted to contract at a slower pace of -10% y/y from -15.5% y/y in July.


India


Q2 current account and external debt data will be released on Friday. The current account deficit is expected to shrink marginally to $1 billion from $-1.3 billion recorded in Q1.


The Indian rupee has been resilient against the strength of the US dollar against other emerging currencies in the past three months. The USD/INR has been trading in a tight range of 175 pips and capped below its October 2022 high of 83.28.


Australia


Two key data releases to be aware of this week. Firstly, the monthly CPI for August will be out on Wednesday, and after a deceleration to 4.9% in the year to July, marking the lowest inflation rate since February 2022, a slight uptick to 5.2% is expected in August.


Secondly, preliminary retail sales for August on Thursday are expected to show a dip to 0.3% m/m from 0.5% in July.


New Zealand


Business confidence data for September is due on Thursday with an improvement to 5 from -3.7 in August expected. That would put an end to 26 consecutive months of negative readings.


Consumer confidence on Friday is expected to slow to 81.5 for September from 85 previously. 


Japan


Bank of Japan (BoJ) monetary policy meeting minutes will be out on Wednesday and market participants will scrutinize the BoJ official’s remarks or expressed views on the state of inflation in Japan as well as any debate on bringing forward the end of negative interest rate policy.


A busy Friday with a slew of data releases. The leading Tokyo core inflation reading (excluding fresh food) is expected to dip to 2.6% y/y from 2.8%. That would be the third straight month of deceleration in Tokyo's core inflation. However, the core-core inflation rate (excluding fresh food and energy) is forecasted to remain the same at 2.6% y/y for September, a 31-year high.


Retail sales for August are expected to dip slightly to 6.6% y/y from 6.8% in July, Consumer confidence in September is expected to improve to 37 from 36.2 in August.


Singapore


Inflation data for August will be out on Monday and the core inflation rate is expected to decelerate further to 3.5% y/y from 3.8% in July. That would be the fourth consecutive month of slowdown. Meanwhile, the headline inflation rate is expected to be almost unchanged at 4% y/y in August versus 4.1% in July.


August's industrial production figures will be released on Tuesday with another month of contraction expected at a higher magnitude of -3.1% y/y from -0.9% in July. That would mark eleven straight months of contraction suggesting a sticky weak external demand environment.




Economic Calendar


Saturday, Sept. 23


Economic Data/Events


78th session of the UN General Assembly (plenary) continues


German Chancellor Scholz attends SPD campaign events in Nuremberg and Hesse


Sunday, Sept. 24


Economic Data/Events


Austrian Chancellor Nehammer opens Salzburg Europe Summit


Monday, Sept. 25


Economic Data/Events


Germany IFO business climate


Singapore CPI


IAEA General Conference starts in Vienna


RBA Assistant Governor Jones speaks on financial technology and climate change


Fed's Kashkari participates in Q&A at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.


ECB's Villeroy speaks on monetary policy and macroeconomics at the Paris conference


EU industry ministers meet in Brussels


German Chancellor Scholz and Economy Minister Habeck attend the national aerospace conference  


European Budget Commissioner Hahn and Austrian Finance Minister Brunner speak at the Salzburg Europe Summit


Tuesday, Sept. 26


Economic Data/Events


US new home sales, Conference Board consumer confidence


Mexico international reserves


Singapore industrial production


ECB's Holzmann speaks at Bloomberg event in Vienna


ECB's Lane speaks on monetary policy and macroeconomics at the Paris conference


Spanish Parliament begins debate on the new prime minister. Vote to occur on Sept. 27th


German Chancellor Scholz speaks at the annual meeting of the German Society for International Cooperation


German Economy Minister Habeck speaks at the BDI climate conference


Wednesday, Sept. 27


Economic Data/Events


US durable goods


China industrial profits


Mexico trade


unemployment, industrial production


Thailand rate decision: Expected to raise rates 25bps to 2.50%


Bank of Japan issues minutes of July's policy meeting


French government reveals 2024 budget


Foreign ministers of Austria, Slovenia, Slovakia, Czechia, and Hungary hold a briefing in Vienna


Thursday, Sept. 28


Economic Data/Events


US initial jobless claims, GDP


Australia retail sales


Eurozone economic confidence, consumer confidence


Germany CPI


Mexico unemployment, rate decision


Spain CPI


Fed Chair Jerome Powell hosts town hall meeting 


Fed's Barkin dinner speech on monetary policy outlook at Money Marketeers of NYU


Fed's Goolsbee speaks at Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington


South African Reserve Bank issues quarterly bulletin


German Chancellor Scholz, Belgian Prime Minister De Croo, Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, and BlackRock CEO Larry Fink attend the Berlin Global Dialogue


Riksbank Deputy Governor Flodén speaks at Svenska Kreditföreningen's autumn conference


IEA's Critical Minerals and Clean Energy Summit in Paris


Austrian energy regulator's gas chief Millgramm speaks at the Montel Energy Day conference


Friday, Sept. 29


Economic Data/Events


US consumer spending, wholesale inventories, University of Michigan consumer sentiment


China Caixin manufacturing PMI, Caixin services PMI


Czech Republic GDP


Eurozone CPI


France CPI


Germany unemployment


Hong Kong retail sales


Italy CPI


Japan unemployment, Tokyo CPI, industrial production, retail sales


Poland CPI


South Africa trade balance


Thailand trade


UK GDP


China's 'Golden Week' holiday begins from Sept. 29 to Oct. 8


ECB President Lagarde speaks in Paris at an event on the energy transition


Fed's Williams speaks at the Long Island Association


Helsinki Security Forum begins


Sovereign Rating Updates


Portugal (Fitch)


Turkey (S&P)


Source: Week Ahead - US and eurozone inflation, Fed speak, Bank of Japan minutes