The Weekly Wrap – U.S PMIs and the Coronavirus Drive Risk Aversion

In This Article:

The Stats

It was a busy week on the economic calendar, in the week ending 21st February.

A total of 72 stats were monitored, following the 46 stats in the week prior.

Of the 72 stats, 39 came in ahead forecasts, with 24 economic indicators coming up short of forecast. 9 stats were in line with forecasts in the week.

Looking at the numbers, 27 of the stats reflected an upward trend from previous figures. Of the remaining 45, 36 stats reflected a deterioration from previous.

For the Greenback, it was a particularly bullish week, with risk aversion and positive economic data driving demand for the Dollar. That was the story until Friday when the Dollar hit speed bumps as private sector activity waned.

The Dollar Spot Index rose by 0.21% to 99.337, in the week.

Out of the U.S

In the 1st half of the week, key stats in the week included manufacturing numbers out of NY State and January wholesale inflation figures.

Any concerns over the impact of the coronavirus on U.S manufacturing sector activity would have eased. The Index jumped from 4.80 to 12.90 in February.

Wholesale inflationary pressures were also on the rise. Core producer prices rose by 0.5% in January, following a 0.1% rise in December. Producer prices also rose by 0.5%, following a 0.1% increase in December.

The focus then shifted to Philly FED Manufacturing and U.S prelim private sector PMI numbers for February.

On Thursday, the Philly FED Manufacturing Index jumped from 17.0 to 36.7 in February. Economists had forecast a fall to 10.0.

Private sector PMIs failed to impress on Friday, however.

The all-important U.S service sector contracted in February. According to prelim February figures, the Services PMI fell from 53.4 to a 76-month low 49.4.

Things were not much better for the manufacturing sector, with the PMI falling from 51.9 to 6-month low 50.8. As a result, the U.S Composite Output Index slumped to a 76-month low 49.6.

Friday’s numbers will have created some uncertainty over the U.S economic outlook that struggled in February. The ISM numbers will be key… Did the FED Chair get it that wrong?

On the monetary policy front, the FOMC meeting minutes from Wednesday had limited impact. FED Chair Powell’s testimony from last week was considered more current.

In the equity markets, the Dow fell by 1.38%, with the S&P500 and NASDAQ down by 1.25% and by 1.59% respectively.

Out of the UK

It was a busy week on the economic calendar.

In the early part of the week, employment and inflation figures provided direction.

In December, average wages plus bonuses rose by 2.9%, easing from 3.2% in November. While wage growth slowed, employment continued to rise at a solid clip in the final quarter. Employment rose by 180k in December, following on from a 208k rise in the 3-months to November.