UK CPI, German ZEW, US Housing Starts

 | Mar 19, 2013 06:28AM ET

Questions about the wisdom of the European Union’s plan to impose a levy on Cypriot bank deposits will continue to roil markets and colour economic news elsewhere in the Eurozone. That includes today’s economic sentiment update from Germany via the ZEW survey. Meanwhile, the UK releases its February update on consumer price inflation today, followed by the February release for US housing starts.

UK CPI (09:30 GMT) Today’s number on consumer prices arrives shortly after the market’s inflation forecast touched a four-and-a-half year high. The bond market’s estimate for inflation in the decade ahead reached 3.36 percent last week, based on the “breakeven rate”—the yield spread between the nominal 10-year British government bond rate less its inflation-linked counterpart. One factor behind the rising inflation prediction is the crowd’s expectation that the focus on price stability will ease as a priority in Wednesday’s release of the government’s budget and make room for more efforts at stimulating growth.

As for the numbers published to date, CPI increased 2.7 percent for the year, well above the Bank of England’s two percent inflation target. Although inflation in Britain has long been running above target, the BoE has recently signaled, in somewhat stronger terms, that the country’s struggling economy must also be considered in regard to future monetary policy decisions. If this is a clue that the central bank will allow inflation to run hotter for longer, the market seems to be taking the message at face value by devaluing the pound. The GBP/USD has recently been trading near three-year lows. The bearish outlook will probably persist amid expectations that today’s above-target inflation forecast includes a quasi-commitment to let it ride for the foreseeable future.