The Weekly Wrap – Economic Data, COVID-19, and U.S Politics Influenced in the Week

In This Article:

The Stats

It was a busy week on the economic calendar, in the week ending 14th August.

A total of 69 stats were monitored, following 59 stats from the week prior.

Of the 69 stats, 38 came in ahead forecasts, with 20 economic indicators coming up short of forecasts. 11 stats were in line with forecasts in the week.

Looking at the numbers, 30 of the stats reflected an upward trend from previous figures. Of the remaining 39, 31 stats reflected a deterioration from previous.

For the Greenback, it was back into the red. In the week ending 14th August, the Dollar Spot Index fell by 0.36% to 93.096. In the week prior, the Dollar had risen by 0.09% to end a run of 6 consecutive weekly losses.

Negative sentiment towards the lack of progress on the COVID-19 stimulus package weighed in the week.

The downside came in spite of economic data being skewed to the positive.

Out of the U.S

It was another busy week on the economic data front.

In the 1st half of the week, July inflation figures were skewed to the positive, with inflationary pressures building.

The producer price index rose by 0.6%, reversing a 0.2% decline from June. Consumer prices were also on the rise, with the annual rate of core inflation picking up from 1.2% to 1.6%.

On Thursday, the initial jobless claims eased back for the 2nd time in 4-weeks adding further support.

Initial jobless claims stood at 963k in the week ending 7th August. In the week prior, initial jobless claims stood at 1,191k.

At the end of the week, July retail sales and industrial production and August consumer sentiment figures were in focus.

Retail sales rose by 1.20%, with core retail sales rising by 1.90% following more than 7% increases in June.

Industrial production also continued to recover, rising by 3.0% in July, following a 5.7% increase in June. Year-on-year, however, production was still down by 8.18%.

Rounding off a positive week, consumer sentiment also improved. The Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index increased from 72.5 to 72.9, according to prelim August figures.

In the equity markets, the NASDAQ and S&P500 rose by 0.08% and by 0.64% respectively. The Dow led the way, however, gaining by 1.81%.

Out of the UK

It was a particularly busy week on the economic calendar. On Tuesday, claimant count and unemployment figures were in focus.

A 94.4k jump in claimant counts in July was Pound negative, while June’s unemployment rate held steady at 3.9%.

On Wednesday, the focus shifted to the 2nd quarter GDP and June manufacturing production figures.

While manufacturing production jumped by 11%, following an 8.3% rise in May, GDP numbers shocked…