|
The Week Ahead: Highlights
Asia-Pacific Preview
China Economic Data Returns
By Brian Jackson, Econoday Economist
Chinese data will be the highlight of the Asia-Pacific
calendar after the normal holiday-related gap in the release schedule in
February. Trade data for January and February combined will provide an
indication of how activity has been at the start of the year, while inflation
data for February will likely show further subdued price pressures. The annual
session of the National People's Congress, which started last week, will
conclude and endorse the policy stability set out by Premier Li Qiang at the
opening of the session.
Business and consumer confidence data in Australia will
provide an indication of the impact on sentiment of the Reserve Bank of
Australia's decision to increase policy rates last month. South Korean GDP,
Indian inflation, and Taiwanese trade data are also scheduled for
release.
Europe Preview
Iran War Dominates Attention
By Marco Babic, Econoday Economist
While the week ahead is quiet in terms of data releases for
Europe, there is no getting around the upheaval caused by last week's attacks
on Iran by the US and Israel. Final CPI data for February are coming from
Germany, France, and the Netherlands, where preliminary results showed still
subdued inflation for Germany and the Netherlands. In France, however,
month-on-month inflation flipped dramatically from a 0.3 percent decline in
January to a 0.7 percent gain in February.
With the usual caveat of one month does not a trend make, the results for
France could be a harbinger of higher prices to come. Already industries are
reporting higher input costs which they are starting to pass downstream. With
the conflict in the Middle East now spreading, oil prices are moving higher which
will already likely manifest itself in the March data.
To make matters worse, there were some indications that reluctant European
consumers were starting to loosen their purse strings. They were able to do
this precisely because energy prices had been subdued. This is no longer likely
to be the case, and the higher costs will eat into discretionary purchasing
power and have a negative impact on GDP should there be no swift resolution to
the flighting.
Among other major indicators, Germany reports industrial
production for January, with Italy and the Eurozone releasing their production
statistics on Friday. In December, production ended the year on a negative
note, and there are no concrete signs emerging from other reports to suggest
there will be any significant recovery in January. While in some countries,
businesses have become more optimistic, the lack of new orders continues to be
of concern.
Friday's US employment report which showed the economy shedding 92,000 jobs
with the unemployment rate rising to 4.4 percent will further add to worries
about the underpinnings of the global economy
US Preview
Inflation Reports in Focus in Runup to FOMC Meeting
By Theresa Sheehan, Econoday Economist
The March 9 week is in the lead up to the March 17-18 FOMC
meeting. The communications blackout period around the meeting begins at
midnight on Saturday, March 8 and runs through midnight on Thursday, March 19. Fed policymakers will not be providing comment regarding the outlook for
monetary policy during that time. Fed Chair Jerome Powell's semiannual monetary
policy testimony is late and has yet to be scheduled. It is highly unlikely to
take place in the March 9 week and as such now won't be until after the FOMC
meeting.
The economic data release schedule has a number of reports
pertinent to the upcoming FOMC deliberations. However, at least some of the
data is already out of date after the US initialed its war on Iran on February
28. Oil prices are already rising sharply and not done. The effect on inflation
in the US is not yet realized. The release of the February CPI report at 8:30
ET on Wednesday and Final Demand PPI at 8:30 ET on Thursday will not reflect
the movement in the first days of March. The PCE deflator for January is at
8:30 ET on Friday and is too old to provide clarity for the current situation.
Fed policymakers will once again have to wait and see where the data takes us
before the April 28-29 FOMC meeting.
The impacts from higher tariffs imposed early in 2025 were
fading but now the inflation reports face a new challenge. Moreover, the
stability of inflation expectations will be rattled - especially in the short
term - by the higher oil prices. While 1-year inflation expectations in March
will certainly take a jump, the question is if successive blows to getting
inflation back to the Fed's 2 percent objective will finally unanchor
expectations for the longer term. The University of Michigan's Survey of Consumers
read on inflation expectations for early March will be one of the first clues.




The Week Ahead: Econoday Consensus Forecasts
Monday
China CPI for February (Mon 0930 CST; Mon 0130 GMT;
Sun 2030 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, Y/Y: 0.7%
Consensus Range, Y/Y: 0.5% to 0.9%
CPI expected to pick up to 0.7 percent on year in the
February report after a marginal 0.2 percent uptick in January.
China PPI for February (Mon 0930 CST; Mon 0130 GMT;
Sun 2030 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, Y/Y: -1.1%
Consensus Range, Y/Y: -1.2% to -1.0%
Deflation to slow to minus 1.1 percent in February from
minus 1.4 percent in January.
Germany Industrial Production for January (Mon 0800
CET; Mon 0700 GMT; Mon 0300 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, M/M: 1.1%
Consensus Range, M/M: 0.9% to 1.5%
Consensus Forecast, Y/Y: -0.7%
Consensus Range, Y/Y: -0.8% to -0.2%
Output expected to rebound by 1.1 percent on the month in
January after a 1.9 percent drop in December. On year, the consensus sees a
decline of 0.7 percent after the 0.5 percent decrease in December.
Tuesday
South Korea GDP for Fourth Quarter (Tue 0800 KST; Mon
2300 GMT; Mon 1900 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, Y/Y: 1.5%
Consensus Range, Y/Y: 1.5% to 1.7%
Growth rate seen flat at 1.5 percent on year in Q4.
Japan Household Spending for January (Tue 0830 JST; Mon
2330 GMT; Mon 1930 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, M/M: 0.6%
Consensus Range, M/M: -0.4% to 2.9%
Consensus Forecast, Y/Y: 1.8%
Consensus Range, Y/Y: 0.6% to 5.2%
Household spending is expected to rise 1.8 percent on the
year in January after declining 2.6 percent a month earlier. December's fall
was partly a reaction to the previous month's jump in automobile purchases. In
addition, there was a drop in another volatile item, home maintenance and
repairs. Even the core measure of expenditures (excluding housing, motor
vehicles and remittances) fell 1.5%, indicating that consumers remain frugal.
On a month-on-month basis, household spending is expected to
rise 0.6 percent in January, rebounding from a 2.9 percent fall a month
earlier.
Japan GDP for Fourth Quarter (Tue 0850 JST; Mon 2350
GMT; Mon 1850 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, Q/Q: 0.3%
Consensus Range, Q/Q: 0.2% to 0.4%
Consensus Forecast, Y/Y: 0.3%
Consensus Range, Y/Y: 0.2% to 0.4%
The country's revised Q4 GDP is expected to rise for the
first time in two quarters, increasing 0.3 percent on the quarter compared with
the preliminary reading of 0.1 percent that was released on February 16. On an
annualized basis, the revised GDP is expected to grow 1.3 percent, up from the
preliminary estimate of 0.2 percent.
Germany Merchandise Trade for January (Tue 0800 CET; Tue
0700 GMT; Tue 0300 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, Balance: E15.4 B
Consensus Range, Balance: E15.4 B to E 15.7 B
The surplus is expected to narrow to E15.4 billion in
January from E17.1 billion in December.
US NFIB Small Business Optimism Index for February (Tue
0600 EDT; Tue 1000 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Index: 99.7
Consensus Range, Index: 99.1 to 100.0
Business sentiment expected edge up marginally to 99.7 from
99.3 in the previous month.
US Existing Home Sales for February (Tue 1000 EDT; Tue
1400 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Annual Rate: 3.88 M
Consensus Range, Annual Rate: 3.81 M to 3.98 M
Sales remain in doldrums, expected at 3.88 million unit rate
versus 3.91 million a month earlier.
Wednesday
Japan PPI for February (Wed 0850 JST; Tue 2350 GMT; Tue
1950 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, M/M: 0.1%
Consensus Range, M/M: -0.1% to 0.2%
Consensus Forecast, Y/Y: 2.1%
Consensus Range, Y/Y: 2.0% to 2.3%
Japan's producer inflation is expected to rise on the year
for a 60th consecutive month, or five years, in February amid gains in
industrial metals prices and an uptrend in crude oil prices as geopolitical
tensions grow in the Middle East, but the pace of growth is expected to be the
slowest in nearly two years.
Producer inflation, measured by the corporate goods price
index (CGPI), is seen rising 2.1 percent on the year in February, slowing from
a 2.3 percent increase in the previous month, when the pace of growth eased to
the weakest since April 2024.
On a month-on-month basis, the CGPI is seen rising a slim
0.1 percent, marking a sixth straight monthly increase after a 0.2 percent gain
in January.
Germany CPI for February (Wed 0800 CET; Wed 0700 GMT;
Wed 0300 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, M/M: 0.2%
Consensus Range, M/M: 0.2% to 0.2%
Consensus Forecast, Y/Y: 1.9%
Consensus Range, Y/Y: 1.9% to 1.9%
Consensus Forecast, HICP - M/M: 0.4%
Consensus Range, HICP - M/M: 0.4% to 0.4%
Consensus Forecast, HICP - Y/Y: 2.0%
Consensus Range, HICP - Y/Y: 2.0% to 2.0%
No revision expected from the flash with CPI up 0.2 percent
on month and 2.0 percent on year.
US CPI for February (Wed 0830 EDT; Wed 1230 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, CPI - M/M: 0.3%
Consensus Range, CPI - M/M: 0.2% to 0.3%
Consensus Forecast, CPI - Y/Y: 2.4%
Consensus Range, CPI - Y/Y: 2.4% to 2.6%
Consensus Forecast, Ex-Food & Energy - M/M: 0.2%
Consensus Range, Ex-Food & Energy - M/M: 0.2% to 0.3%
Consensus Forecast, Ex-Food & Energy - Y/Y: 2.5%
Consensus Range, Ex-Food & Energy - Y/Y: 2.4% to 2.5%
Inflation chugs along about the same as usual with CPI up
0.3 percent on the month and 2.4 percent on year versus 0.2 percent and 2.4
percent a month earlier.
Thursday
Canada Merchandise Trade for January (Thu 0830 EDT;
Thu 1230 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Balance: -C$0.9 B
Consensus Range, Balance: -C$1.0 B to -C$0.8 B
The trade balance is seen barely in deficit at C$0.9 billion
in January versus C$1.308 billion in December.
US Housing Starts and Permits for January (Thu 0830 EDT;
Thu 1230 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Starts - Annual Rate: 1.340 M
Consensus Range, Starts - Annual Rate: 1.309 M to
1.370
Consensus Forecast, Permits - Annual Rate: 1.410 M
Consensus Range, Permits - Annual Rate: 1.347 M to
1.433 M
Starts expected to sag to 1.340 million in January from
1.404 million I December and permits seen at 1.410 million versus 1.448
million.
US International Trade in Goods and Services for January (Thu
0830 EDT; Thu 1230 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Balance: - $67.9 B
Consensus Range, Balance: -$80.0 B to -$65.0 B
The deficit expected narrower at $67.9 billion from $70.3
billion in December.
US Jobless Claims for Week 03/07 (Thu 0830 EDT; Thu 1230
GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Initial Claims - Level: 217K
Consensus Range, Initial Claims - Level: 208K to 220K
Claims seen rising to 217K after holding at 213K in the
previous week.
Friday
France CPI for February (Fri 0745 CET; Fri 0645 GMT;
Fri 0245 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, M/M: 0.7%
Consensus Range, M/M: 0.7% to 0.7%
Consensus Forecast, Y/Y: 1.0%
Consensus Range, Y/Y: 1.0% to 1.0%
The consensus looks for no revision in the final from the
flash with CPI up 0.7 percent on month and 1.0 percent on year.
Eurozone Industrial Production for January (Fri 1100
CET; Fri 1000 GMT; Fri 0600 EDT)
Consensus Forecast, M/M: 0.5%
Consensus Range, M/M: 0.5% to 0.9%
Consensus Forecast, Y/Y: 1.4%
Consensus Range, Y/Y: 1.3% to 1.5%
Output expected up 0.5 percent on month and 1.4 percent on
year in January after falling 1.4 percent on the month and rising 1.2 percent
on year in December.
Canada Labour Force Survey for February (Fri 0830 EDT;
Fri 1230 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Employment - M/M: 10K
Consensus Range, Employment - M/M: -15K to 50K
Consensus Forecast, Unemployment Rate: 6.6%
Consensus Range, Unemployment Rate: 6.6% to 6.7%
Jobs expected up by 10K after declining 25K a month earlier
as employment reflects a weak, uncertain economy. The jobless rate is expected
up to 6.6 percent from 6.5 percent a month ago.
Canada Manufacturing Sales for January (Fri 0830 EDT;
Fri 1230 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, M/M: -3.3%
Consensus Range, M/M: -3.3% to -3.3%
As usual, forecasters agree with Statistics Canada's
preliminary estimate which calls for a drop of 3.3 percent on the month in
January after rising 0.6 percent in December.
US GDP for Fourth Quarter (Fri 0830 EDT; Fri 1230
GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Quarter over Quarter - Annual Rate:
1.4%
Consensus Range, Quarter over Quarter - Annual Rate: 1.3%
to 1.5%
The consensus sees no revision from a growth rate of 1.4
percent in the previous report.
US Durable Goods Orders for January (Fri 0830 EDT;
Fri 1230 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Durable Goods Orders - M/M: 0.5%
Consensus Range, Durable Goods Orders - M/M: -2.0% to
1.7%
Orders expected up 0.5 percent after falling 1.4 percent on
weak aircraft orders a month earlier.
US Personal Income and Outlays for January (Fri 0830
EDT; Fri 1230 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Personal Income - M/M: 0.5%
Consensus Range, Personal Income - M/M: 0.2% to 0.6%
Consensus Forecast, Personal Consumption Expenditures -
M/M: 0.3%
Consensus Range, Personal Consumption Expenditures - M/M:
0.0% to 0.4%
Consensus Forecast, PCE Price Index - M/M: 0.3%
Consensus Range, PCE Price Index - M/M: 0.2% to 0.4%
Consensus Forecast, PCE Price Index - Y/Y: 2.9%
Consensus Range, PCE Price Index - Y/Y: 2.7% to 3.0%
Consensus Forecast, Core PCE Price Index - M/M: 0.4%
Consensus Range, Core PCE Price Index - M/M: 0.3% to
0.4%
Consensus Forecast, Core PCE Price Index - Y/Y: 3.0%
Consensus Range, Core PCE Price Index - Y/Y: 3.0% to
3.1%
Income expected to outpace spending with income up 0.5
percent and spending up 0.3 percent on the month.
US Consumer Sentiment for March (Fri 1000 EDT; Fri 1400
GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Index: 56.2
Consensus Range, Index: 53.0 to 57.5
Forecasters expect sentiment nearly unchanged at a
relatively gloomy 56.2 in the initial March report versus 56.6 in the final for
February.
US JOLTS for January (Fri 1000 EDT; Fri 1400 GMT)
Consensus Forecast, Mlns: 6.750
Consensus Range, Mlns: 6.675 to 6.800
The consensus sees job openings back up at 6.750 million in
the delayed January report after a surprise drop to 6.542 million in December.
|