Coffee Break


Coffee Break:
  • Week

Last Week in a Nutshell

  • First estimates for March consumer prices came in above expectations in Spain, Germany and France, mainly driven by energy prices. With an inflation rate at 7.5% in the euro zone, pressure is mounting ahead of the ECB meeting.
  • For the first time in 2 years, China’s manufacturing and services sectors simultaneously contracted in March, challenged by a COVID-19 resurgence. Shanghai, the commercial capital, is on lockdown.
  • The price of oil dropped as the US announced the release of a million reserve barrels a day for 6 months. Meanwhile, OPEC+ countries decided to ignore pressure from the West to accelerate an output rise.
  • The US economy created 431K jobs, while the ISM Manufacturing PMI slipped to a still strong 57.1, confirming the Federal Reserve’s assessment of a tight labour market and a strong economy.

What's Next?

  • The minutes from the last FOMC will be released. Investors will be eager to get more details on the monetary policy path, especially the balance sheet reduction aka quantitative tightening.
  • The ECB is also due to release similar minutes in a context of higher and longer-lasting inflation shedding some light on its timeline.
  • Japan’s consumer confidence is expected as the country is stuck between higher material cost (also due to the Ukraine crisis) and slowing Chinese growth.
  • Last but not least, we will keep hoping for a de-escalation of the war in Ukraine and will expect that geopolitics will remain in focus.

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