by Kim | Aug 18, 2025
The key events shaping the week commencing 18 August 2025 are: the annual Jackson Hole Symposium on Central Banking, Prelim S&P PMIs August, Global Inflation: UK, Canada, Euro area, and Japan.
Recap from last week: Paving the Way to Jackson Hole
Last week, US economic data provided another important update on tariff impacts feeding into domestic inflation. The latest inflation reports intensified the debate over the trajectory of US inflation and the Fed’s response. The US CPI report was mixed, but initially offered some comfort on tariffs, despite rising core inflation. This, however, was followed by a much hotter-than-expected PPI report, which served as a reality check on the potential impact of tariffs. This highlights the Fed’s primary challenge: distinguishing between persistent, underlying inflation and the potentially temporary but still-concerning effects of tariffs. While the overall growth picture remained mixed, the full impact of tariffs on the broader economy remains a key unknown. All eyes will now be on the US Fed Chair this week at the Jackson Hole symposium for signals on how the Fed will navigate these unknowns.
To better understand these dynamics, the week’s US data provided three key perspectives on domestic inflation, starting with the consumer perspective. Headline CPI came in as expected – with food inflation easing slightly over the year, and energy prices falling – while underlying core inflation accelerated. Core inflation has two factors to disentangle: the impact of tariffs on core goods inflation and a further acceleration in core services inflation. On the core goods front, the tariff effect did not appear to worsen, with core goods prices rising again by +0.2% over the month and increasing to +1.1% over the year. While this seems low, context is important: core goods are no longer providing a deflationary offset like they did before the pandemic. This may complicate the Fed’s task of getting inflation back to the 2% target. Core services inflation remained firm at +3.65% and has stalled at this pace for the last five months, despite continued moderation in shelter prices.
Last month, we were concerned that consumer inflation pressure had broadened out among categories. From a shorter-term perspective, the monthly trimmed mean and median inflation rates eased in Jul, despite the firmer core CPI, suggesting somewhat less broad-based inflation pressure compared to Jun. However, the trend in the annual rates of trimmed mean and median inflation accelerated to new YTD highs this month. This could be an important indicator that inflationary pressures have become broader and remained more persistent than at the start of the year. This was also potentially reflected in some of the firming of consumer inflation expectations data from the prelim Michigan survey for Aug. In other words, consumer-facing inflation pressures are likely still persistent.
The second perspective was the PPI. This measures the average change in the selling prices received by domestic producers for their output. This month, the PPI came in much higher than expected, with both headline and core PPI increasing by +0.9% over the month and accelerating to +3.3% and +3.7% respectively. The release of the report provided a reality check on the potential for tariff impacts. All key areas of PPI final demand prices accelerated this month: goods, food, energy, and services prices. This has been the first month since the introduction of tariffs where the increase in the PPI has accelerated in a meaningful way, and potentially marks a shift where tariff and inflation impacts may be feeding into the system.
The final view is the import price index, which we are using as a proxy to understand whether importers, exporters, or both are bearing the cost of tariffs. The import price index measures the price of imported goods before any duties are applied. The index is used to deflate international trade statistics in the National Accounts data. If import prices are falling, then it’s likely that exporters are lowering prices to help offset the effect of tariffs on their products. If import prices are rising or little changed, then it’s likely that domestic importers are bearing the tariff duty. On aggregate, exporters to the US did not lower prices in Jul. The important index to focus on is the import prices excluding fuels. In Jul, import prices excluding fuels increased by +0.3%, after falling by -0.3% in Jun (revised lower). Over the year, import prices ex fuels were +0.9% in Jul, up slightly from +0.8% in Jun. The 3-month annualized pace is 0%. This suggests, on aggregate, that the burden of tariffs is falling on domestic importers.
Beyond the inflation data, this week’s releases provided a crucial read on the state of domestic demand and the labor market, the other side of the Fed’s balancing act. For the Fed, spending data last week showed a resilient consumer holding things together. Retail sales growth in Jul was relatively good, coming in at +0.5% as expected, with a positive upside revision for Jun to 0.9%. The Atlanta Fed GDPNowcast for the US Q3 GDP growth run rate was steady at +2.5%. The positive contribution from the spending report helped to offset some of the weakness in industrial output in Jul. Initial jobless claims have shown little change in the broad trend of low initial claims, with continuing claims remaining stubbornly elevated.
The broader global growth backdrop stepped down last week. Euro area and UK GDP growth slowed in Q2 as expected – likely reflecting a slowdown after tariff front-running activity in Q1. Japan’s GDP firmed at +0.3% after 0% in Q1. Key data out of China also reflected slower investment growth, slower retail sales growth, and slower industrial output growth for Jul. Even the latest RBA decision cautioned that trade policy developments were “expected to have an adverse effect on global activity”. With new reciprocal tariffs and trade agreements now in place for many, but not all, key trading partners, the crucial question for markets is how economies will adapt to the new tariff regime.
The overall inflation picture still poses a challenge for the Fed, with inflation remaining persistent and additional tariff effects likely, due to their lagged introduction and business uncertainty over final rates. Last week, a rising chorus of calls for a 50bps rate cut by the Fed in Sep was quickly swept aside after the hotter PPI data. The market is still holding onto more aggressive pricing for a rate cut, but the probability has been pared back markedly (Source: CME FedWatch). This diverges from the Fed’s cautious stance, though even within the Fed, there is dissent – mostly over the timing of the path forward. Our focus now shifts to the important Jackson Hole symposium this week.
Outlook for the week ahead: Jackson Hole, Prelim S&P PMIs August, Global Inflation: UK, Canada, Euro area, & Japan.
This week, the focus will shift from data to commentary. The market will be looking to Fed Chair Powell for clarity and guidance on the path of monetary policy. His speech at the annual Jackson Hole Symposium will provide an important lens for how the Fed is thinking about the inflation-labor market dual mandate amid the still notable unknowns on tariffs and complicated by dissent within the Committee and a hostile political backdrop.
Key factors & events to watch this week:
Jackson Hole Symposium, the US Federal Reserve, and the Monetary Policy Outlook.
- The Jackson Hole Symposium is the key event this week from 21-23 August, with the theme “Labor Markets in Transition: Demographics, Productivity, and Macroeconomic Policy”.
- US Fed Chair Powell’s speech is the key highlight, and this is scheduled for Friday, 22 August – the topic of his speech is the Economic Outlook and Policy Framework Review. While he is unlikely to give explicit forward guidance, it will be an opportunity to explain how he is weighing the recent data (persistent inflation versus weaker payrolls), the uncertainty over tariffs, and signalling on the path of policy settings.
- Other central bank speeches may also provide some context for expectations of a global slowdown amid rising tariffs.
- The FOMC Minutes of the last meeting will be released. Of interest in the last meeting was the dissent among committee members regarding the policy decision.
- Other speeches; notably, Vice Chair (Supervision) Bowman and Governor Waller will be speaking earlier in the week at the Blockchain Symposium.
US Domestic Demand and Activity.
Key housing data for Jul will be released this week and will provide an important input into the view of Q3 growth momentum.
- Building permits for Jul are expected to be little changed at 1.39m annualized, from 1.39m in Jun.
- Housing starts (will feed into the GDP nowcast run rate) are expected to moderate further in Jul to 1.3m annualized, from 1.32m in Jun.
- Existing home sales for Jul are expected to be little changed at 3.92m annualized, down slightly from 3.39m in Jun.
- Of note has been the recent rebound in mortgage applications – last week increasing by +10.9% as mortgage rates have begun to moderate. Most of this increase was led by refinance applications.
- US initial claims are expected to remain low at 227k for the wk ending 16 Aug, up slightly from 224k in the prior week. We will continue to watch the level of continuing claims, which remain elevated at 1.953m people.
Global Central Banks and Inflation.
- The RBNZ will meet this week and is expected to cut rates by a further 25bps.
- Global CPI reports will be in focus for several important central banks.
- Canada’s headline CPI for Jul is expected to be little changed at +1.9% over the year, with the monthly rate expected to increase by +0.4% in Jul from +0.2% in Jun. Measures of core inflation are expected to stay firm with the trimmed mean at +3% and the median at +3.1%.
- UK CPI for Jul is expected to edge higher to +3.7% in Jul, after rising to +3.6% in Jun. Rising domestic inflation has been led by key government policy changes.
- The Euro area final CPI for Jul is expected to confirm the prelim headline inflation rate at +2%, with core inflation remaining at +2.3%. Services inflation is expected to slow to +3.1% in Jul.
- Japan National CPI for July is expected to show that the main BoJ measure of underlying inflation, core CPI ex fresh food, moderated from +3.3% in Jun to +3% in Jul.
S&P Flash PMIs for August
S&P Flash PMIs for August will be released later in the week, providing further insight into tariffs’ effects on global output, trade, prices, and business sentiment.
This week, the US Treasury will auction and settle approx. $490bn in ST Bills, raising approx. $89bn in new money. The US Treasury will also auction the 20-year Bond and 30-year TIPS this week, and both to settle at the end of the month.
QT this week: Approx $12bn of ST Bills will mature on the Fed balance sheet and will be reinvested.
More detail (including a calendar of key data releases) is provided in the briefing document – download the pdf below:
Comments and feedback are welcome. Please email me at kim.mofardin@marscapitalpartners.net
by Mofar2016 | Aug 18, 2025
NB: Apologies, but there will be no MCP Market Update next week as we will be on vacation. Last week, the bull trend in equities extended immediately higher invalidating the near term top (as warned). While the bull trend continued to make higher highs and higher lows, bearish momentum divergence continued to build across multiple […]
by Kim | Aug 11, 2025
Summary; The key events shaping the week commencing 11 August 2025 are: US inflation; CPI, PPI, Import Price Index, US Retail Sales, Global Growth; UK, Japan, and Euro area GDP Q2, and the RBA Monetary Policy Meeting.
Recap from last week: Testing US Economic Resilience at the Start of Q3
While it was a light data week last week, economic releases continued to point to a cautious, moderating US economy at the start of Q3. Further US labor market data showed signs of softening, and divergence in key surveys pointed to an economy with uneven momentum. The backdrop of business hesitation and moderating activity sets the stage for the next critical phase, as the effects of the new tariff regime begin to manifest in official data.
The US PMI surveys for Jul showed more of a two-speed economy, with manufacturing activity continuing to weaken, but offset by expansion in the services sector. However, the two services PMI reports differed somewhat: the ISM survey showed an almost stalled services sector in Jul while the S&P survey showed an accelerated expansion in output. Diving deeper into the S&P US composite PMI for Jul, showed output growth “narrowly led by surging demand in the tech sector alongside rising financial services activity”. The details underlying the stronger services report, and all the PMI reports for July, showed continued subdued optimism in the outlook, caution over hiring, and firmer input and output price increases amid rising tariffs.
This cautious business outlook was reflected in lending standards and demand for credit in the latest US Senior Loan Officer Survey for Q2. Tighter lending standards and weaker demand for credit were reported for commercial and industrial loans and commercial real estate loans. On the consumer front, demand for household mortgages was weaker, standards for credit card loans tightened, and demand for credit card and other consumer loans softened. Demand for auto loans, however, strengthened, consistent with the spike in auto purchases in March and April to front-run tariffs.
Last week’s limited labor market data continued to show a cautious, low-hiring, slow-firing environment. The Conference Board Employment Trends report for Jul reflected that companies have “become hesitant” amid tariff uncertainty, noting, though, that firms have been “pressing pause” rather than leaning into layoffs. The latest initial claims report supports this, but the report shows a concerning trend. While initial claims have fallen back to lower levels, the pool of continuing claims increased further in the latest week, indicating that it still may be difficult to find new work. This increase in continuing claims, which began in late May/Jun, has not yet cleared, and the number reached another near-term high since 2021, of 1.974m in the prior week ending 26 Jul.
A key driver of this elevated caution and moderating activity has been related to the uncertainty around the new tariff regime. Last week, reciprocal tariff rates went into effect, which may reduce some of the uncertainty for firms. The crucial question will be how firms will respond and adapt to tariffs, especially regarding pricing, margins, and sourcing decisions. However, there are still many moving parts on the tariff front. This includes the important trade agreement still under negotiation with China, sectoral tariffs under investigation by the U.S. Trade Representative, and the likely announcement of more sectoral tariffs in the next week or two. In addition, there is the threat of additional tariffs being used as sanctions to achieve geopolitical objectives.
In light of the recent weaker labor market data, moderating activity, and continued uncertainty, it wasn’t surprising that the tone of Fed officials shifted this week. Some speeches noted that the weak jobs data was “concerning” and could signal a “turning point” in the economy. They explicitly discussed the challenges of making policy in a world of tariffs and a two-sided risk of both slowing growth and persistent inflation. Markets are continuing to price in at least two rate cuts by the FOMC for the remainder of the year (source: CME FedWatch).
Outlook for the week ahead – US inflation; CPI, PPI, Import Price Index, US Retail Sales, Global Growth; UK, Japan, and Euro area GDP Q2, and the RBA Monetary Policy Meeting
This week’s focus will be on the central narrative around the tug of war between persistent US inflation and slowing growth. US data will provide further insight into how tariffs are impacting inflation, as well as the first robust input for the Q3 GDP outlook, with key spending and output data for July. Outside of the US, economic growth will also be in focus, offering a view of the tariff impact from a global perspective.
Key factors & events to watch this week
US inflation will be the most important theme of the week:
The US CPI, PPI, and import price index reports will provide three important perspectives on inflation, a detailed update on how tariff effects may be rippling through inflation data, and who is bearing the burden of those tariffs. It will likely be too early to get a read on the ‘finalised’ reciprocal tariffs announced last week.
- US headline CPI is expected to ease over the month to +0.2% in Jul, from +0.3% in Jun. Over the year, headline CPI is expected to edge higher to +2.8% in Jul from +2.7% in Jun.
- Core CPI is expected to increase over the month to +0.3% in Jul from +0.2% in Jun. Annual core CPI is also expected to increase to +3% in Jul from +2.9% in Jun.
- US headline PPI is expected to increase by +0.2% over the month in Jul, from 0% in Jun. Annual headline PPI is expected to increase to +2.5% in Jul from +2.3% in Jun.
- Core PPI is expected to increase by +0.2% over the month in Jul, up from 0% in Jun. Annual core PPI is expected to increase by +2.9% in Jul, up from +2.6% in Jun.
- The import price index is expected to be unchanged at 0% in Jul, after increasing by +0.1% in Jun. Annual import prices would then fall by -0.4%. However, the more important measure of import prices is excluding fuels. This has remained firm over the last few months, with the 3-month annualized rising to +1.9%, now above the annual rate of +1.2% growth in import prices ex fuel imports.
- The export price index is expected to moderate slightly over the month to +0.3% in Jul from +0.5% in Jun.
US domestic demand and activity:
Key data releases will provide a further update on the health of the US consumer and manufacturing activity.
- US retail sales for Jul are expected to increase by +0.5% in Jul, after increasing by +0.6% in Jun. Last week, US vehicle sales for Jul came in stronger than expected, likely helping to boost retail sales. The core retail control group, which feeds into the GDP result, will be important: in Jun this increased by a more robust +0.5%.
- US industrial production growth is expected to be flat in Jul at 0%, after increasing by +0.3% in Jun.
- Initial claims are expected to moderate to 220k last week from 226k in the week prior. The direction of continuing claims will be important after reaching a near-term high of 1.974m in the prior week.
US Fed speeches:
Will be limited this week.
Global growth will also be in focus this week:
Data will provide some insight into growth headwinds from the new trade and tariff regime.
- The prelim Euro area GDP for Q2 is expected to be unchanged at +0.1% over the quarter.
- The prelim GDP for Japan in Q2 is expected to increase by +0.1% over the quarter, up from 0% in Q1.
- The UK GDP for Q2 is expected to moderate to +0.1% growth from +0.7% in Q1.
Aussie data and the RBA monetary policy meeting:
- The RBA will meet this week and is expected to cut rates by 25bps. Last week’s CPI data for Q2 likely helped to ease some of the inflation concerns, with underlying trimmed mean inflation coming in lower than expected, and the annual rate moving further into the RBA’s target band of 2-3% inflation for the second quarter in a row. The RBA outlook and guidance for the path of rate cuts will be a key focus.
- After the meeting, the Aus labour market data for Jul is expected to show some improvement, with net employment increasing by +25k after a more modest +2k increase in Jun. The unemployment rate is also expected to ease from 4.3% in Jun to 4.2% in Jul.
US Treasury auctions:
This week, the US Treasury will auction and settle approx. $615bn in ST Bills, Notes, and Bonds, raising approx. $132bn in new money.
QT this week: Approx $60bn of ST Bills, Notes, and Bonds will mature on the Fed balance sheet and will be reinvested. Approx $3.2bn in Notes and Bonds will be redeemed and roll off the Fed balance sheet.
More detail (including a calendar of key data releases) is provided in the briefing document – download the pdf below:
Comments and feedback are welcome. Please email me at kim.mofardin@marscapitalpartners.net
by Mofar2016 | Aug 11, 2025
Last week, equity markets rebounded more strongly than expected and the lack of downside follow through calls into question the intermediate term top. While the near term rally is overlapping and not clearly impulsive, the potential remains for both an immediate bullish extension higher (green case) or corrective retracement in wave (c) of 4 down […]
by Kim | Aug 4, 2025
Key events this week: US & global Services PMIs, US Factory Orders, Fed speeches, BoE Monetary Policy Meeting
Recap from last week: Growth Concerns Mount as US Labor Market Softens
This past week delivered a pivotal set of US data that challenged the narrative of a resilient US economy. At its meeting last week, the FOMC kept policy settings unchanged, maintaining a “modestly restrictive” stance. This decision was based on the premise that, while growth had slowed in the first half of the year, inflation remained somewhat elevated, and the labor market was at or near maximum employment. However, the subsequent release of weaker-than-expected payroll data for Jul may have shifted that baseline, indicating that the economy is transitioning from the tariff sentiment shock to more tangible growth and inflation risks.
Not everyone on the committee agreed with the Fed’s decision to stay on hold. Two dissenting voters, Waller and Bowman, both preferred to cut rates by 25bps at this meeting. They cited the need to move policy towards a more neutral setting to “proactively hedge against a slowing economy,” arguing that tariff inflation effects were likely to be temporary. Both members also specifically cited risks to the labor market amid slowing growth, with Waller noting that the Fed’s “wait and see” approach was ‘overly cautious’ and risked policy falling behind the curve.
The dissenters’ concerns were arguably validated by the Jul jobs report. Non-farm payroll growth came in weaker than expected at 73k (below expectations of 108k), but it was the net revisions of -258k payrolls to May and Jun that caught everyone’s attention. As a result, the 3-month average was revised to a mere 35k payrolls in Jul, a notable drop from the 3-month average of 150k reported in Jun. The Jul growth was entirely driven by private payrolls in the services sector, while goods-producing industries and government payrolls declined.
Despite the weakness in headline payrolls, there were some nuances in the data. The more intense weakness in payroll growth appears to be centered in Jun (with only 3k growth in private payrolls), which is consistent with the sharp fall in aggregate hours worked for that month. Some good news in this report was that aggregate hours worked rebounded strongly in Jul, fully reversing the Jun decline. Similarly, average hourly wage growth also increased versus Jun, suggesting some rebound in nominal income for Jul. The slowdown in payroll growth is consistent with the story from initial claims, which spiked through Jun and then slowed through Jul. However, the accumulation of continuing claims has yet to clear, remaining elevated at around 1.95 million continuing claims. This indicates that a weakness in hiring is persisting. Further, the hiring rate in the JOLTS data for Jun fell to 3.3, approaching the pandemic low of 3.1. Low/falling hiring is an important determinant for the potential of the unemployment rate to rise in the future. The unemployment rate has continued to edge higher, from 4.1% in Jun to 4.25% in Jul, but remaining within the same range of the last year. The overall employment-to-population ratio, also a key metric, has fallen over the last three months to 59.6% in Jun, and is back on par with Dec 2021 levels.
The weaker labor market data is now consistent with the broader slowdown in growth seen in the first half of the year. The US Q2 GDP (advance release) increased by a seemingly robust +3% annualized, but this was primarily led by a positive contribution from net exports, which was an unwind from tariff front-running in Q1. The real story was the underlying domestic demand, which has continued to slow. The final sales to domestic purchases, a proxy for domestic demand, slowed to a +1.1% annualized pace in Q2, down from +1.5% in Q1 and +3% in Q4 2024. At the same time, US PCE inflation was also more persistent in Jun, providing a further challenge for the Fed as it balances its dual mandate. Inflation has been edging higher over the last few months, with firming underlying inflation led by core goods price growth that continued to accelerate in Jun. A key highlight was the median and trimmed mean measures of underlying inflation both increasing at the same time, signalling that underlying inflation pressures firmed in Jun and likely became more pervasive.
The forward-looking picture for growth is equally mixed. The final S&P PMIs for Jul so far indicate that US manufacturing momentum slowed at the start of Q3 as the pre-tariff unwind continues. This comes against a backdrop of slowing global manufacturing activity in Jul, with the S&P global manufacturing output PMI falling back to a stalled pace. The final S&P services PMIs will be released this week, helping to complete the picture of private sector activity in Jul. With further reciprocal tariff rates announced last week and more announcements to come, expectations are shifting for slow growth to continue into the second half of the year.
By the end of the week, markets had digested the growth, labor market, and inflation data, going from pricing in only one rate cut for the remainder of the year to three (Source: CME FedWatch). This suggests that slow growth is currently the primary concern over lingering inflation. These rate-cut expectations will continue to evolve. There are several more labor market and inflation reports, as well as the Fed’s Jackson Hole symposium, between now and the Sept Fed meeting.
Outlook for the week ahead: US & global Services PMIs, US Factory Orders, Fed speeches, BoE monetary policy meeting
A somewhat quieter week on the data front with the key highlights being the ISM and S&P services PMIs for Jul – helping to build out the view of private sector momentum amid slowing manufacturing activity and the new tariff regime. We expect continued headline risk around tariff announcements.
Key factors & events to watch this week:
Central Banks
- US Fed speeches will be in focus this week, mostly to gauge Committee reactions to the weaker US labor market data. Of note is a speech scheduled for Michele Bowman for Saturday. Initial reactions from Committee interviews on Friday indicated they were not surprised by the slowing labor market amid the tariff-led disruptions and slowing growth, and some suggested that the revisions may point to a broader weakening of the economy (source: Bloomberg).
- The BoE will meet this week and is expected to cut rates by 25bps, supporting its guidance of a gradual withdrawal of policy restraint. Recent data suggests both growth and hiring have slowed amid domestic policy changes, while inflation has recently firmed somewhat.
US data will feature mostly manufacturing and services activity.
- US Factory Orders for Jun are expected to fall by 4.9% in Jun after stronger growth in May (+8% – led by larger aircraft orders).
- The ISM services PMI for Jul is expected to increase from 50.8 in Jun to 51.5 in Jul. This will feed into an early read of the Atlanta Fed GDP nowcast for the Q3 growth run rate.
- The full report for international and wholesale trade for Jun will be released.
- Initial and continuing jobless claims will remain in focus. Initial claims are expected to edge slightly higher to 221k last week, up from 218k in the previous week.
The remainder of the S&P Global Services PMIs will be released this week, providing further insight into private sector activity after the weaker manufacturing PMIs last week.
China’s trade data for July will be released this week and should provide some insight into any effects from tariff-led disruptions.
Labor market data:
- Canada’s labour market report for Jul will be released at the end of the week. Employment growth is expected to continue to moderate, increasing by 15k in Jul after increasing by 83k in Jun. The unemployment rate is expected to increase to 7% from 6.9% in Jun. Last week, the BoC kept rates on hold as expected. The Committee did guide that, amid the unpredictable tariff situation facing Canada, there may still be a further need for a reduction in the policy interest rate.
- NZ Q2 employment is expected to fall slightly by -0.1% over the quarter, down from +0.1% in Q1.
This week, the US Treasury will auction and/or settle approx. $535bn in ST Bills, raising approx. $116bn in new money. The US Treasury will also auction the 3-year and 10-year Notes and the 30-year Bond this week, and will settle next week.
QT this week: Approx $17bn of ST Bills will mature on the Fed balance sheet and will be reinvested.
More detail (including a calendar of key data releases) is provided in the briefing document – download the pdf below:
Comments and feedback are welcome. Please email me at kim.mofardin@marscapitalpartners.net