Weekly Wrap – Stats and the U.S – China Trade War Put the Dollar on Top

US yields hit fresh 2-year lows · FX Empire

In This Article:

The Stats

The economic calendar was on the busier side in the week ending 17th May.

A negatively skewed set of stats saw the Dollar on the rise for the first time in 3-weeks.

For the week, the Greenback gained 0.68%. Reversing a 0.19% fall from the previous week, the U.S Dollar Index ended the week at 97.955.

The weekly gain saw the Dollar move into the green for the current month and up by 2.04% year-to-date.

Economic data out of the U.S provided support to the U.S Dollar, with stats on the heavier side.

The EUR struggled through the week, however, with key stats skewed to the negative

Having managed to recover to $1.12 levels in the week prior, a 0.67% loss for the week left the EUR at $1.1158 at the end of the week.

A total of 59 stats were monitored through the week ending 17th May.

Of the 59 stats, 17 came in ahead of forecasts, with 29 coming in below forecasts. 13 stats were in line with forecasts through the week.

Looking at the numbers, out of the total 57 stats, 27 economic indicators reflected a deterioration from prior. Of the remaining 32, 22 economic indicators reported better figures from previous.

Out of the U.S,

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

Economic data at the start of the week was skewed to the negative. April retail sales and industrial production figures disappointed on Wednesday.

Retail sales fell by 0.2%, falling short of a forecasted 0.2% rise, with core retail sales rising by just 0.1% month-on-month. Forecasts were for a 0.7% increase.

Industrial production also slipped unexpectedly, falling by 0.5% to reverse a 0.2% rise in March.

In spite of the softer numbers, support for the Dollar came from a jump in the NY Empire State Manufacturing Index. The Index rose from 10.10 to 17.80 in May.

Stats through the 2nd half of the week were on a more positive footing.

April building permit and housing starts were on the rise in April, with the weekly initial jobless claims figures also impressing.

Of greater significance, however, were May’s Philly FED Manufacturing Index and consumer sentiment numbers.

The Philly FED Manufacturing Index jumped from 8.5 to 16.6 in May, with the Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index surging from 97.2 to 102.4.

Outside of the numbers, primary focus through the week remained on the U.S – China trade war.

U.S President Trump upped the ante late in the week, blacklisting Huawei in the week. The move led to Beijing shifting stance on a willingness to resolve the ongoing trade dispute.

Following the tariff hike on Chinese goods in the previous week, China rolled out tariffs on U.S goods last week. The move came in spite of Trump’s warning to Beijing not to retaliate.