Eurozone flash CPI could add further pressure to ECB despite January QE announcement


  • PBOC cuts rates in desperate attempt to ease financing conditions;
  • Chinese manufacturing PMIs highlight worrying decline in export demand;
  • Eurozone flash CPI could add further pressure to ECB despite January QE announcement;
  • RBA expected to cut rates for second consecutive month when it meets this evening.


Traders should brace themselves for a busy and volatile week in the financial markets, as a large number of important economic indicators are released from across the globe while central banks from the Eurozone, UK, Canada and Australia announce their latest monetary policy decisions.

The People’s Bank of China announced its second rate cut in three months over the weekend, cutting rates by another 25 basis points to 5.35% in a desperate attempt to reduce the cost of funding for companies. The rising interbank repo rate is making financing conditions increasingly difficult which is a serious threat to growth in China. It is already facing the prospect of growth falling below 7% this year, the level many expect to be announced as this year’s target following the National People’s Congress which gets underway this week, and increasingly tough financial conditions is only going to make matters worse.

The official manufacturing PMI further highlighted the need for additional monetary support. The February reading, released over the weekend, was marginally better than expectations, coming in at 49.9, but remained in contraction territory for a second month. Given the importance of the manufacturing sector to China, this is a major concern. The HSBC release may have eased some of those concerns, rising to a seven month high of 50.7, except for the fact that it, like the official release, showed the same worrying decline in export demand, something the country has relied on for growth.

We know that China is attempting to move away from the export and investment driven growth model, but the process is meant to be quite gradual so in the near term, a threat to both of these, combined with the low inflation environment, is going to be a massive test for both the government and the central bank. The lack of movement in the markets following the surprise rate cut from the PBOC is a sign of the task ahead from an investors stand point. They clearly believe that this rate cut will be insufficient and much more needs to be done.

While the early part of the first week of the month can sometimes be a little subdued, as traders show a little caution ahead of the ECB meeting on Thursday and the US jobs report on Friday, I’m not sure this week will be the same. The release of the Eurozone flash CPI reading this morning certainly has the potential to cause a stir, with deflation in the region seen as one of the biggest threats to growth and the future stability of the monetary union. With the ECB having already announced the quantitative easing package at its January meeting I doubt it will have a big impact on Thursday’s meeting, but further decline in the rate may force the ECB into even bolder action.

Manufacturing PMI readings from both the UK and the US will also be in focus on Monday, along with inflation and personal income and spending data from the latter. This evening we’ll get the latest monetary policy decision from the Reserve Bank of Australia which could bring with it the second rate cut of the week, following the PBOC’s steps over the weekend. This would be the second rate cut in as many months from the RBA, bringing the rate to a new all-time low of 2%.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD holds hot Australian CPI-led gains above 0.6500

AUD/USD holds hot Australian CPI-led gains above 0.6500

AUD/USD consolidates hot Australian CPI data-led strong gains above 0.6500 in early Europe on Wednesday. The Australian CPI rose 1% in QoQ in Q1 against the 0.8% forecast, providing extra legs to the Australian Dollar upside. 

AUD/USD News

USD/JPY sticks to 34-year high near 154.90 as intervention risks loom

USD/JPY sticks to 34-year high near 154.90 as intervention risks loom

USD/JPY is sitting at a multi-decade high of 154.88 reached on Tuesday. Traders refrain from placing fresh bets on the pair as Japan's FX intervention risks loom. Broad US Dollar weakness also caps the upside in the major. US Durable Goods data are next on tap. 

USD/JPY News

Gold price struggles to lure buyers amid positive risk tone, reduced Fed rate cut bets

Gold price struggles to lure buyers amid positive risk tone, reduced Fed rate cut bets

Gold price lacks follow-through buying and is influenced by a combination of diverging forces. Easing geopolitical tensions continue to undermine demand for the safe-haven precious metal. Tuesday’s dismal US PMIs weigh on the USD and lend support ahead of the key US macro data.

Gold News

Crypto community reacts as BRICS considers launching stablecoin for international trade settlement

Crypto community reacts as BRICS considers launching stablecoin for international trade settlement

BRICS is intensifying efforts to reduce its reliance on the US dollar after plans for its stablecoin effort surfaced online on Tuesday. Most people expect the stablecoin to be backed by gold, considering BRICS nations have been accumulating large holdings of the commodity.

Read more

US versus the Eurozone: Inflation divergence causes monetary desynchronization

US versus the Eurozone: Inflation divergence causes monetary desynchronization

Historically there is a very close correlation between changes in US Treasury yields and German Bund yields. This is relevant at the current juncture, considering that the recent hawkish twist in the tone of the Fed might continue to push US long-term interest rates higher and put upward pressure on bond yields in the Eurozone.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures