The Weekly Wrap – Another Spike in Inflation Delivered a Dollar Boost

In This Article:

The Stats

It was a busy week on the economic calendar for the week ending April-15, 2022.

A total of 59 stats were monitored, following 33 stats in the week prior.

Of the 59 stats, 27 beat forecasts, with 23 economic indicators coming up short of forecasts. 9 stats were in line with forecasts.

Looking at the numbers, 29 of the stats reflected an upward trend. Of the remaining 30 stats, 28 stats were weaker.

Out of the U.S

At the start of the week, inflation was back in focus, with the U.S annual rate of inflation accelerating from 7.9% to 8.5%. In March, the core annual rate of inflation picked up from 6.4% to 6.5%.

On Thursday, the market focus shifted to retail sales, jobless claims, and consumer sentiment.

In March, retail sales increased by 0.5%, with core retail sales rising by 1.10%. Economists had forecast increases of 0.6% and 1.0%, respectively.

Jobless claims held below the 200k level. In the week ending April-08, jobless claims increased from 167k to 185k.

While of less influence, consumer sentiment also drew interest amidst the shift in FED policy forced by the surge in consumer prices.

In April, the Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index jumped from 59.4 to 65.7.

In the week ending April 15, 2022, the Dollar Spot Index rose by 0.71% to end the week at 100.50. The Index jumped by 1.18% to 99.796 in the week prior.

Out of the UK

GDP and production, inflation, and employment figures were the key stats of the week.

It was a mixed set of numbers for the Pound, with the UK economy growing slower than forecast.

In February, the UK economy grew by 0.1%, slowing from 0.8% growth in March. Year on year, the economy also expanded at a slower pace, easing from 10.5% to 9.5%.

Manufacturing and industrial production figures were disappointing, while the UK’s unemployment rate slipped from 3.9% to 3.8% in February. Claimant counts for March were also positive, falling by 46.9k. In February, claimant counts declined by 58.0k.

On Wednesday, inflation figures added further pressure on the BoE to take a more aggressive stance on monetary policy.

In March, the UK’s annual rate of inflation accelerated from 6.2% to 7.0%.

In the week, the Pound rose by 0.27% to end the week at $1.3060. The Pound fell by 0.68% to $1.3025 in the week prior.

The FTSE100 ended the week down 0.68%, following a 1.73% gain from the previous week.

Out of the Eurozone

It was a quieter week, with the markets focused on economic sentiment and ECB monetary policy.

Economic sentiment figures for Germany and the Eurozone weakened further. In April, Germany’s ZEW Economic Sentiment Index slipped from -39.3 to -41.0, with the Eurozone’s falling from -38.7 to -43.0.