Last week in a nutshell
- US consumer price inflation for July was in line with consensus, with headline at 5.4% YoY, and core at 4.3%. Used car prices were again the largest contributor to the slowdown.
- The US Senate passed the infrastructure fiscal redistribution bill with bipartisan support. The bill will now head to the House.
- In Turkey, the CBT decided to maintain a tight monetary policy with unchanged interest rates at the level of 19%, while in Mexico, Banxico raised its benchmark interest rate by 25bps to 4.50%.
- Concerns over further regulation in China grew as a released State Council document called for greater regulation over national security, technology and monopolies.
What’s next?
- The agenda appears relatively quiet as we head into the back half of August. A data highlight will be the US retail sales figures, likely showing that Americans have begun allocating more spending to services.
- Ahead of the Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium in the last week of August, the main central bank highlight will be the release of the July FOMC meeting minutes.
- Markets will pay attention to potential supply chain disruptions after a major shipping terminal at the Ningbo-Zhoushan port in China has been shut down indefinitely as a result of a COVID-19 infection.
- The earnings season is nearing its end. Investors will hear from Gazprom, Samsung, Walmart, Home Depot, Tencent, Nvidia, Cisco, Lowe’s, Target, Applied Materials and, on Friday, Deere & Co.