Canada And New Zealand CPIs, Powell Speech, And French Election In Focus This Week

 | Apr 18, 2022 03:36AM ET

No major central banks decide on monetary policy this week, but that is far from suggesting a quiet trading activity. We have several companies reporting their earnings results, while in terms of economic data, we get Canada’s and New Zealand’s CPIs for March and Q1, respectively.

Also, we get preliminary PMIs for April from the Eurozone, the UK, and the US, releases which could well reshape expectations around monetary policy. On Thursday, we will hear from Fed Chair Jerome Powell, while on Sunday, it is the second round of the French election, with incumbent President Macron racing against Marine Le Pen.

On Monday, during the Asian session, we already got China’s GDP for Q1, as well as the nation’s fixed-asset investment, industrial production, and retail sales, all for the month of March. Economic activity slowed somewhat in the first quarter, but not as much as the forecast suggested, something that took the YoY GDP rate up to +4.8% from 4.0%.

Industrial production and fixed asset investment also slowed by less than anticipated. Only retail sales came in worse than expected, with the YoY rate diving further into the negative territory. As for the rest of the day, we don’t have any major economic release on the agenda, as it is Easter Monday for most nations under our radar.

However, we do get some earnings results, with both the Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) and Bank of New York Mellon(NYSE:BK) (NYSE:BK) reporting today ahead of the US open. The season kicks into higher gear during the rest of the week, with reports including Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) on Tuesday and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) on Wednesday.

On Tuesday, the only items on the economic agenda worth mentioning are the US building permits and housing starts for March, with both expected to have declined somewhat. On Wednesday, the main item on the agenda is Canada’s CPIs for March.

The headline rate is forecast to have risen to +6.1% YoY from +5.7% YoY, but the core one is forecast to have slid to 4.5% from 4.8%. This could mean that the rise in the headline rate may be due to temporary factors, like food and energy. However, a core rate of +4.5% is still well above the BoC’s objective of 2%, and it is unlikely to alter the BoC’s policy plans.