The Weekly Wrap – Economic Data and the Delta Variant Deliver Mixed Results

In This Article:

The Stats

It was a busier week on the economic calendar, in the week ending 2nd July.

A total of 58 stats were monitored, which was up from 49 stats in the week prior.

Of the 58 stats, 26 came in ahead forecasts, with 26 economic indicators coming up short of forecasts. There were 6 stats that were in line with forecasts in the week.

Looking at the numbers, 26 of the stats reflected an upward trend from previous figures. Of the remaining 32 stats, 25 reflected a deterioration from previous.

For the Greenback, economic data had delivered strong Dollar support ahead of Friday’s NFP numbers. In the week ending 2nd July, the Dollar Spot Index rose by 0.41% to 92.226. In the previous week, the Dollar had fallen by 0.41% to 91.851.

Out of the U.S

After a quiet start to the week, consumer confidence figures impressed on Tuesday. The CB Consumer Confidence Index jumped to a 16-month high in June.

Mid-week, ADP nonfarm employment change figures pointed to another sharp increase in hiring. In June, the ADP reported a 692k increase in nonfarm payrolls, following an 886k surge in May.

On Thursday, the focus shifted to the weekly jobless claims and manufacturing sector PMI numbers.

In the week ending 25th June, initial jobless claims fell from 415k to 365k.

Manufacturing sector activity saw slightly weaker growth in June, however, with the ISM Manufacturing PMI falling from 61.2 to 60.6.

While the stats delivered Dollar support, nonfarm payroll data at the end of the week was the key stat of the week.

In June, the government reported a 662k increase in nonfarm payrolls following a 516k rise in May.

In spite of the rise, the unemployment rate edged up from 5.8% to 5.9%.

Economists had forecast nonfarm payrolls to rise by 570k and for the unemployment rate to fall to 5.7%. The participation rate held steady at 61.6% versus a forecasted increase to 61.7%…

In the equity markets, the Dow rose by 1.02%, with the NASDAQ and the S&P500 ending the week up by 1.94% and by 1.67% respectively.

Out of the UK

It was another relatively quiet week, with GDP and finalized manufacturing sector PMI figures in focus.

The stats were skewed to the negative, with the UK economy contracting more than had been expected in the 1st quarter.

Quarter-on-quarter, the economy contracted by 1.6%, revised down from a prelim 1.5%.

In June, the Manufacturing PMI fell from 65.6 to 63.9, which was revised down from a prelim 64.2.

Away from the economic calendar, concerns over the continued spread of the Delta variant added further downward pressure on the Pound.

In the week, the Pound fell by 0.40% to end the week at $1.3824. In the week prior, the Pound had risen by 0.50% to $1.3879.