Last week in a nutshell
- Markets started digesting the fall of Kabul. The short term economic implications might be a flow of Afghan refugees whereas the long-term implications are less clear for now.
- The FOMC minutes confirmed that tapering is looming in the coming months. During last week’s rise in volatility, Fed’s James Bullard estimated that "taper is mostly priced into markets at this point”.
- In the US, main hard data releases showed a mixed bag as retail sales fell by a more-than-expected 1.1%, while industrial production rebounded by 0.9%, well above consensus.
- In the UK, an unexpected fall in retail sales (-2.5%), the most since January, indicated that a large part of the re-opening boom might already have peaked as sales were down in nearly all sectors.
- In Canada, PM Justin Trudeau announced early election on September 20th, betting that the electorate will reward his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and vaccine rollout.
What’s next?
- Investor focus will turn to the Federal Reserve Symposium in Jackson Hole. Numerous policymakers including Fed Chair Jerome Powell are set to discuss economic and monetary policy.
- The spread of the delta variant has raised fears about the economic outlook as the vaccination coverage appears uneven, including in the US. The release of flash PMIs might show of how that’s affecting businesses.
- In Germany, the Ifo Business Climate indicator will be released, roughly one month ahead of the general election on September 26th.
- US fiscal policy might continue to drive concerns after two moderate Democratic senators have doubted the achievability of the recent bipartisan bill.