BoJ Decision, Australia, Eurozone CPIs And U.S. GDP In Focus This Week

 | Apr 25, 2022 03:44AM ET

There is only one central bank deciding on monetary policy this week, and this is the BoJ. Although no change is expected, we will closely monitor the statement for clues with regards to the yield curve control, as recently, yields have been stubbornly testing the upper end of the Bank’s target range.

With regards to the data, we get Australia’s and Eurozone’s inflation numbers for Q1 and April respectively, while from the US, we get the first estimate of GDP for Q1.

Monday appears to be a relatively light day in terms of economic releases. The only one worth noting is the German Ifo survey for April, but again, it is barely a major market mover. Just for the record, both the current assessment and business expectations indices are forecast to have slid somewhat, which is likely to drive the business climate index a little bit lower.

We had a relatively interesting opening, with the euro gapping up, perhaps due to Emanuel Macron’s victory in the French Election. That said, the joy was short-lived, with the common currency giving back those gains and trading even lower against peers the central banks are expected to proceed with aggressive interest rate hikes, the likes of the US dollar. Remember that last week, we already said that a Macron victory could prove positive for the euro, but we also highlighted that any gains are likely to be temporary and limited.

Now, passing the ball to the stock market, almost 180 companies listed in the S&P 500, are scheduled to report their earnings this week. Among them are the four largest firms by market capitalization: Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL).

Back to the economic agenda, on Tuesday, during the Asian session, Japan releases its employment report for March, while later in the day, from the US, we get durable goods orders for March, new home sales for the same month, and the Conference Board consumer confidence index for April.

On Wednesday, the most important economic data set due to be released is the Australian CPIs for Q1. The headline rate is forecast to have jumped to +4.6% YoY from +3.5%, while the trimmed mean one is anticipated to have risen to +3.4% from +2.6%. The Weighted CPI is also forecast to have inched north, to +3.3% from +2.7%.