Archiv für den Monat: August 2023
Top Wall Street analysts pick these dividend stocks for solid returns
New trading tech doesn’t alter long-standing investment fundamentals, best-selling financial author William Bernstein suggests
Gold, Silver Forecast: It’s Now or Never for XAU/USD, XAG/USD
US Dollar Forecast: Dollar Index Rally Continues with Fundamental and Technical Challenges Ahead
US Crude Oil Weekly Forecast: Market May Be Tiring Close to 2023 Highs
Weekly Market Outlook (14-18 August)
UPCOMING EVENTS:
- Tuesday:
PBoC MLF, Australia Wage Price Index, China Industrial Production, UK Jobs
Report, German ZEW, US Retail Sales, Canada CPI, NAHB Housing Market Index. - Wednesday:
RBNZ Policy Decision, UK CPI, FOMC Meeting Minutes. - Thursday:
Australia Jobs Report, US Jobless Claims. - Friday:
Japan CPI, UK Retail Sales.
Tuesday
The PBoC is expected to keep the MLF rate
unchanged. Chinese authorities recently promised more policy support though
and that included RRR cuts, OMO, and rate cuts from the PBoC. The Chinese
economic data has been ugly, and the country recently slipped into deflation,
so it’s common sense to expect more support. The other side of the coin is that
more stimuli would pressure the yuan further and we’ve seen how they
dislike this as they’ve been constantly intervening to stem the depreciation.
Wages data is something the central
banks are watching closely lately as they look for
signs of wage-price spiral. The Australian Wage Price Index for Q2 Y/Y is
expected at 3.8% vs. 3.7% prior, while the Q/Q reading is seen at 1.0% vs. 0.8%
prior.
The UK Unemployment Rate is expected to
remain steady at 4.0%. The focus should be on the wages data (barring
a big jump in the unemployment rate) with the Average Earnings ex-Bonus
expected at 7.4% vs. 7.3% prior and Average Earnings + Bonus seen at 7.3% vs.
6.9% prior.
The US Retail Sales M/M are expected to
rise 0.4% vs. 0.2% prior, while the Y/Y reading is seen at 1.5% vs. 1.49%
prior. The Control Group is seen as a better gauge of consumer spending so
this is the number that will likely matter the most. There’s no consensus
at the moment but the prior release saw a 0.6% increase.
The Canadian CPI Y/Y is expected to ease
to 2.7% vs. 2.8% prior. The BoC is more focused on the underlying inflation
data but given the recent weakness in retail sales and the uptrend in the
unemployment rate (although wage
growth jumped), the central bank is likely to respond with a hike only
if the data beats. The Common CPI Y/Y is expected at 4.7% vs. 5.1% prior; the
Trimmed Mean CPI Y/Y is seen at 3.4% vs. 3.7% prior and the Median CPI Y/Y is
expected at 3.7% vs. 3.9% prior. As a reminder, the BoC target range is 1-3%.
Wednesday
The RBNZ is expected to keep the OCR
unchanged as the central bank paused its tightening cycle to see how things
evolve. The data has been mixed so far but inflation and wage growth eased
further with the unemployment rate also ticking higher. Overall, it should
be enough for them to keep rates steady at this meeting as well.
The UK CPI Y/Y is expected at 6.8% vs.
7.9% prior, while the M/M reading is seen at -0.5% vs. 0.1% prior. The Core CPI
Y/Y is expected at 6.8% vs. 6.9% prior, while the M/M figure is seen at 0.3%
vs. 0.2% prior. As a reminder, the BoE is expected to hike again by 25 bps at
the September meeting.
Thursday
The Australian Jobs Report is expected to
show 21.5K jobs added vs. 32.6K prior with the Unemployment and Participation
Rates remaining steady at 3.5% and 66.8% respectively.
The US Jobless Claims remain a key
labour market data and a big market mover.
Initial Claims are expected at 240K vs. 248K prior, while Continuing Claims are
seen at 1700K vs. 1684K prior.
Friday
The Japanese CPI Y/Y is expected to ease
to 2.5% vs. 3.3% prior with the Core CPI Y/Y also seen cooling to 3.1% vs. 3.3%
prior. There’s no forecast for the Core-core reading at the moment, but the
prior figure showed a 4.2% increase. As a reminder, the Tokyo
CPI, which is seen as a leading indicator for nationwide inflation, beat
expectations across the board with the Core-core reading rising to 4.0% vs.
3.7% expected and 3.8% prior.
This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at www.forexlive.com.