US data to push yields higher? - ING

Rob Carnell, analyst at ING explained that the US housing starts were soft in January – though this is a month of very low housing construction activity typically, and the seasonals can distort very small underlying changes.

Key Quotes:


"Bad snowfalls in January may account for much of the decline, and we wouldn’t get too carried away with what appears to be a slight softening in the trend for this sector until we get another month’s data. Still, it is another warning light for US activity, so not to be ignored.

But PPI data came in unexpectedly strong, rising 0.1%mom against expectations for a 0.2% decrease, and core PPI measures were also stronger than expected. Strong results in the services sector seem to account for all of the good news, with trade, transport and warehousing all coming in strongly above zero, helped too by the “other” category.

This price data is probably helping bond yields to rise on a day when sentiment seems slightly more upbeat than recently. Normally, it would be a mistake to read too much into what PPI means for the CPI release on the 19th Feb, as the overlap between these two series is limited. That said, with the services sector accounting for a large chunk of CPI, the risks for CPI coming in higher than the expected -0.1% mom decrease look to have improved, and could push yields a little higher by the end of the week."

Russia Producer Price Index (YoY) down to 7.5% in January from previous 10.7%

Russia Producer Price Index (YoY) down to 7.5% in January from previous 10.7%
Leer más Previous

USD/CAD weaker, breaches 1.3800

The Canadian dollar is now appreciating further vs. its American neighbour, relegating USD/CAD to sub-1.3800 levels, or daily lows...
Leer más Next