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  1. EUR: Spain and Germany release inflation figures

    EUR: Spain and Germany release inflation figures

    The first round of inflation figures out of the eurozone will see the release of Spanish and German CPI this morning. In Spain, headline inflation should rebound marginally from low levels (2.3%), but all eyes will be on core inflation, which remains elevated. The consensus is for a slowdown from 6.2% to 6.0%. German’s figures will likely have the largest market impact: consensus is also centred for a deceleration from 6.2% to 6.0%.

    It is a crucial juncture for the euro. Markets approach the key risk event pricing in just slightly below 50% implied probability of another rate hike in September and 15bp in total. The EUR curve appears to largely agree with our view that if the ECB skips the September meeting, it will find it increasingly hard to raise rates again at all given the deterioration in the eurozone economic outlook.

    We expect markets to be very sensitive to even the smallest deviations from consensus, especially in Germany’s figures and the eurozone-wide numbers released tomorrow. We admit it’s a very close call, but our economists expect this week’s inflation reports to signal that core inflation remains too high for comfort and lead the ECB to one last rate hike in September.

    In our base case scenario, we see EUR/USD rally into the 1.0900-1.0950 area into the US payrolls on Friday.


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