Events to Look Out for Next Week


  • Fed’s Chair Powell testimony (USD, GMT 18:00)
  • BoJ Monetary Policy Meeting Minutes (JPY, GMT 23:50) – The BoJ minutes should provide further guidance for 2021, after they extended today its pandemic funding relief program by six months, and maintained its ultra-accommodative policy setting, leaving the 10-year bond yield target unchanged at around zero, while maintaining the policy balance rate at -0.1%. We might see a repetition in minutes as well.

Wednesday – 23 June 2021


  • Markit Composite and Manufacturing PMI (EUR, GMT 07:30 & GMT 08:00) – The prel. German Composite PMI is expected to continue rising slowly to 57.1 from 56.2 in June. The prel. Eurozone Composite PMI is seen at 58.7 from 57.1. The manufacturing sector is still facing some near-term headwinds from supply chain bottlenecks, which are also adding to short-term inflation risks.
  • Market Services and Manufacturing PMI (GBP, GMT 08:30) –In the UK, there has been anecdotal evidence that the services sector in particular is struggling to recruit staff in a post Brexit world. The manufacturing sector is also rebounding, although as BoE officials have highlighted, we will have to wait until wage support measures have been phased out to be able to assess the full impact of the pandemic.
  • Retail Sales (CAD, GMT 12:30) – Canadian retail sales for May April expected to slow down to 2.3% m/m from 3.6% m/m.
  • Market Services and Manufacturing PMI (USD, GMT 13:45) –The US prelim. Service PMI should be seen at 70.0 from 70.4, while Manufacturing PMI at 61.5 from 62.1.

Thursday – 24 June 2021


  • European Council Meeting (EUR, GMT N/A) – The meeting will involve the Heads of State and Governments of member states.
  • German IFO (EUR, GMT 08:00) – The German IFO business reading is expected to decline slightly to 98.2 in June after it jumped to 99.2 in May.
  • Interest rate Decision, MPC Voting & Monetary Policy (GBP, GMT 11:00) – The economic data from the UK this week included a warmer than expected CPI print of 2.1% in the headline reading for May. Not exactly a game changer with regard to BoE policy expectations, but still the first time CPI has been above the central bank’s 2.0% target since mid-2019. The data that followed monthly labour data showed a sharp decline in the jobless claimant count alongside a forecast-beating 5.6% y/y spike in average household earnings. However, despite the increasingly optimism on the recovery, BoE is expected to remain cautious and stable.
  • Gross Domestic Product & Durable Goods (USD, GMT 12:30) – The Q1 GDP growth is expected to trim to 6.2% from 6.4%. The firm Q1 GDP gain documents the updraft from vaccine distributions and two rounds of fiscal stimulus during Q1, alongside a seasonal Q1 updraft after the Q4 downdraft attributable to the mismatch of seasonal factors with this year’s disrupted holiday activities. Durable goods orders are expected to bounce 3.0% in May with a 9.8% rise in transportation orders, after a -1.3% headline decrease in April that included a -6.6% transportation orders drop.

Friday – 25 June 2021


  • European Council Meeting Day 2
  • Personal Income/Consumption (USD, GMT 12:30) – A -7.5% headline pull back is anticipated for personal income after the -13.1% April plunge, with a 1.0% May rise in compensation after 0.9% gains in March and April.

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Andria Pichidi 

Market Analyst

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