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Abstract:It has been a bearish morning for the EUR/USD, with the ECB Economic Bulletin highlighting the economic pitfalls of bringing inflation to target.
It was a busier day for the EUR/USD on the economic calendar. Italian industrial production figures drew interest this morning.
Production slid by 1.8% in September versus a 2.3% rise in August. Economists forecast a 1.5% decline. Year-over-year, industrial production was down 0.5% versus a 2.9% increase in September. Economists forecast a 0.9% increase, year-over-year.
However, investors brushed aside the numbers, which coincided with the ECB Economic Bulletin.
This morning, the ECB released issue 7 of the 2022 Economic Bulletin. Investor concerns over the economic outlook and inflation have given the Economic Bulletin more voice in recent months.
Salient points from the Bulletin included,
Inflation remains too high and will stay above the target for an extended period.
Global economic activity contracted in Q2 2022, with survey data pointing to subdue growth momentum near-term.
Economic activity in the euro area is likely to have slowed significantly in Q3 2022.
The Governing Council expects further weakening in the remainder of 2022 and the beginning of 2023.
High inflation continues to weigh on spending and production, with demand for services slowing and new orders in the manufacturing sector waning.
Geopolitical uncertainty persists amid tighter financial conditions and worsening trade terms. Prices paid for imports are rising at a faster pace than those received for exports.
While labour market conditions remained steady in Q3, weaker economic activity could lead to higher unemployment.
Looking more closely at inflation,
While supply bottlenecks are easing, the effects of pent-up demand are still pushing prices higher in the services sector.
Depreciation in the EUR has exasperated the inflation problem.
Strong labour market conditions are likely to push wages higher.
According to the Bulletin, incoming data confirms that risks to the economic growth outlook are on the downside. A long-lasting war in Ukraine remains a significant risk. The ECB also sees the possibility of confidence deteriorating and supply-side constraints worsening again.
The ECB also noted that energy and food prices could remain persistently higher than expected. A weakening global economy could become an additional headwind for euro area growth.
Additionally, risks to the inflation outlook are primarily to the upside, with another rise in energy prices a risk.
There were few surprises in the Economic Bulletin, with Wednesdays pre-Economic Bulletin release touching on inflation in response to the Consumer Expectations survey.
The EUR/USD fell from $0.99918 to a post-Bulletin low of $0.99758.
Todays Bulletin followed comments from ECB President Lagarde on Monday, who reiterated that inflation was too high and that rates would rise to combat inflation and bring it to target.
The bulletin highlighted the challenges that the ECB and other central banks face in taming inflation amid a weakening economic environment. This has resulted in increased volatility, as the markets attempt to second guess the next moves.
At the time of writing, the EUR/USD was down 0.29% to $0.99828. While down for the session, the US CPI report for October could prove pivotal later today. The markets are betting on a Fed pivot. A strong CPI report could see the EUR/USD test buyers at $0.99.
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