Home
News
默认头像

Weekly Economic & Financial Commentary: What Shall We Do Now?

2024-06-22ActionForexActionForex
Summary United States: What Shall We Do Now? Piecing together the implications of this week’s softer-than-expected inflation data with last week’s blowout nonfarm payroll report for the Fed’s policy path is top of mind for many. The FOMC has made it clear that it needs to see inflation slowing on a sustained basis before pivoting […]

Summary

United States: What Shall We Do Now?

  • Piecing together the implications of this week’s softer-than-expected inflation data with last week’s blowout nonfarm payroll report for the Fed’s policy path is top of mind for many. The FOMC has made it clear that it needs to see inflation slowing on a sustained basis before pivoting from its current stance.
  • Next week: Housing Starts (Mon.), Retail Sales (Tues.), Industrial Production (Tues.)

International: Lower U.S. CPI Fuels International Financial Markets

  • The U.S. dollar broadly sold off against foreign currencies, particularly emerging market currencies this week. Currencies across Latin America and EMEA rallied in the immediate aftermath of the July U.S. CPI print and sustained those gains over the second half of the week.
  • Next week: Canada CPI (Tues.), German ZEW Survey (Tues.), U.K. CPI (Wed.)

Interest Rate Watch: The Great Flattener

  • On Tuesday of this week, the spread between the two-year Treasury yield and the 10-year Treasury yield reached -50 bps, the largest inversion between the two securities since 2000. What is driving this move, and what does it tell us about future economic conditions?

Credit Market Insights: Running a Tight Ship

  • The Fed released its Senior Loan Office Opinion Survey for Q2-2022 last week. Surveyed banks pointed to the beginnings of tightening in lending standards and plans to continue to tighten throughout the rest of the year. Demand for credit card loans rose as consumers continue to spend amid blazing inflation.

Topic of the Week: Mind the Gap: New Evidence Suggests Early Emergence of Gender Wage Gap

  • Recent data released by the Department of Education suggests the gender wage gaps form almost immediately upon workforce entry. These findings provide color and insight into our continuously evolving understanding of wage disparities among gender.

Full report here.

Disclaimers

The article is sourced from ActionForex with the original source credited. The views expressed herein are not affiliated with FXOR; readers are encouraged to approach the content rationally. Copyright belongs to the original author. If unintentional infringement upon media or personal intellectual property rights has occurred, please contact us, and we will promptly remove the content. FXOR merely provides information storage services. The article is compiled and released by FXOR; reprints must indicate the original source.