Weekly Wrap – Stats and Trade Round off a Dire Month
A bearish week rounds off a bearish month, with economic indicators and Trump delivering an inverted U.S Treasury yield curve. · FX Empire

In This Article:

 The Stats

It was another relatively quiet week on the economic calendar in the week.

A total of 49 stats were monitored through the week ending 31st May.

Of the 49 stats, 27 came in below forecasts, with just 15 coming in ahead of forecasts. 7 stats were in line with forecasts through the week.

Looking at the numbers, 29 of the stats reflected a deterioration from previous figures. Of the remaining 20, 15 stats reported an upward trend.

With the economic data heavily skewed to the negative, the Dollar managed to eke out a 0.14% gain for the week.

Partially reversing a 0.39% fall from the previous week, the U.S Dollar Index (“DXY”) ended the week at $97.75.

For the month, the Dollar ended up 0.28% to give a 1.78% gain year-to-date.

In another relatively choppy week, the EUR slipped by 0.3%, weighed by particularly disappointing stats out of the Eurozone.

The losses came in spite of the EUR managing to recover from a Thursday intraweek low $1.1116.

Out of the U.S,

On the data front, key stats were skewed to the negative in the week.

Following Memorial Day on Monday, May consumer confidence figures provide direction on Tuesday.

The CB Consumer Confidence Index continued its upward trajectory, rising from 129.2 to 134.1. The move back to close to 18-year highs provided the Greenback with support early in the week.

Following a quiet Wednesday, 1st quarter GDP, trade, jobless claims, and pending home sales provided direction on Thursday.

While 2nd estimate GDP numbers were in line with forecasts and the weekly jobless claims figures held relatively steady, pending home sales and a widening in the U.S trade deficit were negatives on the day.

In spite of the U.S President’s efforts to address trade imbalances, the goods trade deficit widened from $71.33bn to $72.12bn in April

Perhaps of greater interest, however, was more disappointing numbers from the housing sector.

Pending home sales fell by 1.5% in April. The numbers came off the back of a 0.4% fall in existing home sales and a 6.9% slide in new home sales in April. The pullback came in spite of the downward trend in mortgage rates from last November’s latest high.

Wrapping up the week, the FED’s preferred inflation numbers, personal spending, Chicago PMI and finalized consumer sentiment figures were released on Friday.

Lackluster personal spending figures, core inflation at 1.6% and weaker than prelim economic sentiment figures weighed on the day.

Outside of the stats, the markets continued to focus on Trump and trade war chatter.

With China looking to up the ante, Trump shifted attention to Mexico on Friday, adding to the market angst in the week.