30 junio 2023
Investors continued to err on the side of caution, taking on board yet another round of hawkish signals from central bankers and incoming data pointing to lingering inflationary pressures and a strong US economy.
Evolution of the international financial markets and evaluation of the main events and economic indicators of the previous day session. Available in English.
Investors continued to err on the side of caution, taking on board yet another round of hawkish signals from central bankers and incoming data pointing to lingering inflationary pressures and a strong US economy.
The outlook for monetary policy and inflation remained the key themes during a session with mixed results. On the one hand, risk appetite was lifted by a softer-than-expected inflation print in Italy (the headline HICP eased from 8.0% y/y in May to 6.7% in June). On the other, sentiment was spurred by hawkish signals from central bankers in Sintra.
Investors' risk appetite increased on Tuesday as some upbeat economic data in the US (where new-home sales rose at the fastest pace in over a year in May and consumer confidence rose to its highest level since early 2022 in June) balanced out a fresh round of hawkish comments from several central bank officials.
Fears of a global economic slowdown continued to weigh on investor sentiment at the start of the week, following a new batch of disappointing economic survey data and concerns about recent geopolitical developments in Russia.
Investors closed the week with yet another risk-off session, as recession fears returned to the fore following weaker-than-expected economic survey data across advanced economies.
The hawkish stance of central banks in advanced economies continued to center the stage in yesterday’s session. On the one hand, the Bank of England surprised with a 50 bp hike (25bp were expected by the consensus) to set the official interest rate at 5%, the highest level since 2008.
Yesterday’s session was marked by speeches from several central bankers. In the US, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell noted in his speech to Congress that he would not characterize last week’s decision as a pause, noting that additional 50 bp rate increases are a good guess of where monetary policy is headed, in line with the updated Dot-Plot.
In yesterday’s session, investors continued to err on the side of caution amid hawkish rhetoric from ECB officials and mixed economic data.
In the first session of the week, investors traded cautiously in the absence of relevant economic data releases while continuing to digest last week's Fed and ECB monetary policy meetings. With the US markets closed due to a holiday, attention centered to messages from ECB officials.
In the last session of the week, investors weighed better-than-expected economic data releases in the US with a hawkish tone from Federal Reserve officials. In particular, Christopher Waller and Thomas Barkin highlighted that inflation remains too high and stubbornly persistent, which might prompt a 25bp rate hike at the July meeting.
Yesterday’s session was dominated by the ECB’s 25bp hike, which brought the deposit facility rate to 3.5%, and by a hawkish tone from President Lagarde. She strongly hinted at a further 25bps hike in July, stating that the bank still had some ground to cover and was not considering a pause.
As widely expected, the Fed held policy interest rates unchanged at the range of 5.00%-5.25%, although officials signalled that further hikes (of around 50bp by the end of the year) were likely to be needed, following upward revisions in their macro outlook for GDP growth, inflation and the labour market.