Germany said import price inflation fell to its lowest in
two years at 2.8% in February. Core inflation in Tokyo slowed in
for the second month in a row in March to 3.2%, even though
higher than forecast and still above Bank of Japan targets.
Britain's house prices fell at an annual rate of 3.1% this
month - the fastest drop since the real estate and banking crash
14 years ago.
And the latest business surveys from China cast some doubts
on the speed of the manufacturing recovery there.
Broadly speaking, financial markets were steady on Friday.
Two-year Treasury yields briefly hit a one-week high
of 4.168% before slipping back and Treasury volatility ebbed to its lowest since March 13. Asia and Europe stock
indices were steady to higher and Wall St futures were likewise.
The dollar is ending a relatively quiet quarter on
the front foot and rose on Friday.
In politics, attention was on the expected court appearance
next week of former U.S. President Donald Trump- still
frontrunner to be Republican nominee for the 2024 election -
after he was indicted over a probe into hush money paid to a
porn star.
Key developments that may provide direction to U.S. markets
later on Friday:
* U.S. Feb personal spending/income and PCE inflation gauge,
March Chicago business survey; University of Michigan final
March reading on consumer sentiment; Canada Jan GDP
* New York Federal Reserve President John Williams, Fed Board
Governor Chris Waller and Fed Board Governor Lisa Cook all
speak; European Central Bank President Christina Lagarde speaks
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2023 asset performance US housing sector gets some reprieve Global M&A volumes IPO drought weighs on global ECM ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(By Mike Dolan, editing by XXXX mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com.
Twitter: @reutersMikeD)
A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike
Dolan
Global investors seem keen to put the March bank shock behind
them, but inflation's grim persistence makes it difficult to
clear the horizon.
The final day of the month and first quarter - and the
approach of Easter breaks in parts of the world - allows many
markets to bookend the banking turbulence to some degree as the
storm damage to wider economy is assessed. But for most major
stock and bond investments beyond the banking sector itself, the
quarter remained a pretty upbeat one overall.
As the Federal Reserve's emergency lending to banks
stabilised at high levels in the week to Wednesday, Fed
officials appear to have reverted to 'wait and see' mode on
further interest rate rises and will weigh up a final quarter
point hike now meeting to meeting.
While all seem to chime with the view that a hit to lending
from the regional bank disturbance may now do some of the Fed's
job for it, they remain uncomfortable about inflation.
"Inflation remains too high and recent indicators reinforce my
view that there is more work to do," said Boston Fed chief Susan
Collins.
Although somewhat dated now given this month's events,
Friday sees a February update for the Fed's favoured PCE measure
of inflation - the annual core rate that is expected to have
stuck last month at 4.7% and more than twice the Fed target.
Heavy hitters from the Fed's board and policymaking council
are also on the speech trail later in the day. Futures markets
are still broadly split on the chances of another Fed hike in
May, but leaned a bit more on Friday to one more quarter point
move.
Beyond America, a picture of slowly ebbing but sticky
inflation was also in evidence.
Flash euro zone inflation for March surprised with a
larger-than-expected 1.6 percentage point drop during the month
and fell below 7% for the first time in a year. But core
inflation, excluding energy and unprocessed food, ticked up as
forecast to a new record high for the bloc at 7.5%.
But - like much else in the macro economy at the moment -
the data picture remains fuzzy around the world.
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