Last week in a nutshell
- Delivery bottlenecks and price increases, triggered a surge in global inflation, Chinese and US Consumer and Producer price indexes showed. Whether it is the peak remains debatable.
- In the US, the consumer sentiment index compiled by the University of Michigan hit a 10Y low in a context of receding COVID-19 cases and strengthening labour market but rising prices.
- In Europe, the ZEW economic sentiment index increased by 4.9 points to 25.9, rather undisturbed by the rising COVID-19 tally in Europe that did not yet knock investor sentiment in the current wave.
- The UK government threatened to suspend parts of the arrangements meant to steer clear from a hard border with Ireland. The EU commission started considering retaliatory measures.
What’s next?
- Chinese leader Xi Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden are scheduled to hold a virtual summit. Tensions over trade, human rights and military activities are on the agenda.
- China will release its October data on industrial production and retail sales. The zero-COVID-19 policy, power rationing as well as environmental curbs on several industries have recently hit output.
- Markets are expecting the White House to announce its choice for Federal Reserve chair. The incumbent, Jerome Powell, and Fed governor Lael Brainard appear as frontrunners.
- Japan will release its preliminary Q3 GDP growth rate. Investors expect a slightly negative number as consumption and output were hindered by a virus resurgence and supply bottlenecks.