Coffee Break


Coffee Break:
  • Week

Last week in a nutshell

  • The ECB held its monetary policy and shifted in the direction of “accommodation for longer” with a higher threshold required for tightening. The ECB suggested that any tightening would occur when:
    • Inflation would reach 2% “well ahead of the end of its projection horizon”;
    • When it would judge that “realised progress in underlying inflation is sufficiently advanced”.
  • OPEC and its allies stroke a deal to raise oil production to gradually restore capacity cut at the start of the pandemic.
  • US jobless claims rose to 419k last week, higher than consensus expectations (350k). The rise was mainly driven by auto manufacturing. Problems with seasonal adjustments given the pandemic may also account for some of this surprising figure.
  • Euro Flash Composite PMI climbed to 60.6 in July from 59.5, its highest reading since July 2000 as loosening of more COVID-19 restrictions gave a boost to services.

What’s next?

  • Fears of another wave of infections might grow and hit business confidence as the delta variant has globally risen from 10% to 90% of cases in 6 weeks.
  • US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman will visit China to meet Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, setting the stage for a potential meeting between Joe Biden and Xi Jinping later this year.
  • The FOMC meeting should be the highlight of this week.
  • Summer Olympics in Tokyo will see their first week of competition with rising fears that the spread of the variant will interfere with the smooth running of the event.
  • Google, Apple, Amazon and Facebook will release the same day their earnings reports (July 30th).

Find it fast

Get information faster with a single click

Get insights straight to your inbox