The Weekly Wrap – Positive Economic Data, the ECB, and the U.S Relief Package Were in Focus

In This Article:

The Stats

It was a quieter week on the economic calendar, in the week ending 12th March.

A total of 45 stats were monitored, following 70 stats from the week prior.

Of the 45 stats, 24 came in ahead forecasts, with 17 economic indicators coming up short of forecasts. There were 4 stats that were in line with forecasts in the week.

Looking at the numbers, 23 of the stats reflected an upward trend from previous figures. Of the remaining 22 stats, 18 reflected a deterioration from previous.

For the Greenback, it was back into the red, following 2 consecutive weekly gains. In the week ending 12th March, the Dollar Spot Index fell by 0.33% to 91.679. In the previous week, the Dollar had rallied by 1.17% to 91.940.

Out of the U.S

It was a quieter week on the economic data front.

Key stats included inflation, jobless claims, and consumer sentiment figures.

The stats were skewed to the positive.

While inflationary pressures softened in February, initial jobless claims fell back from 754k to 712k in the week ending 5th February.

The annual rate of core inflation eased from 1.4% to 1.3% in February.

JOLTs job openings were also positive for January, with openings rising from 6.752m to 6.917m.

At the end of the week, the Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index rose from 76.8 to 83.0.

In the equity markets, the Dow rallied by 4.07, with the S&P500 and the NASDAQ rising by 3.09% and by 2.64% respectively.

The passing of the $1.9 trillion through the House coupled with positive stats supported the markets.

Out of the UK

It was another relatively quiet week on the economic data front.

In the 1st half of the week, stats included retail sales figures for February.

A 9.5% increase in retail sales, year-on-year, according to the BRC, provided Pound support.

At the end of the week, GDP and manufacturing and industrial production figures drew interest.

Manufacturing production and industrial production fell by 2.3% and by 1.5% respectively in January. Production had seen minor increases in December.

The UK economy also contracted in January, after having returned to growth in December.

Month-on-month, the economy contracted by 2.9%, reversing growth of 1.2% from December. Year-on-year, the economy contracted by 9.2% after having contracted by 8.6% in December.

Trade data was Pound positive, with the trade deficit narrowing.

In January, the UK trade deficit narrowed from £14.32bn to £9.83bn.

The Non-EU trade deficit narrowed from £5.2bn to £1.76bn

In the week, the Pound rose by 0.60% to end the week at $1.3924. In the week prior, the Pound had fallen by 0.68% to $1.3838.