US and UK inflation data in focus this week

US and UK inflation data in focus this week

In the United States, inflation has been a central concern for policymakers and investors alike. The year-on-year inflation rate remained unchanged at 3.7% through September, while the core measure, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, eased to 4.1%. Forecasts for October suggest a further cooling of inflation to 3.3%, with the core measure expected to dip to 4.0%. Comments from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell regarding possible policy tightening have already impacted the US dollar, bond yields, and major equity indices. The upcoming inflation data is particularly critical; deviations from expectations might trigger a shift in rate hike forecasts.

The UK is also set to release its Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation data. Analysts predict a deceleration in the year-on-year inflation rate to 4.8% in October, down from 6.7% in September, largely due to base effects from utility prices. Similarly, core inflation is projected to slow from September’s 6.1% to 5.8%. These figures come after the Bank of England’s decision to hold the Bank Rate steady at 5.25%, marking the second consecutive meeting without a rate change.

Beyond these key inflation reports, the week is filled with additional tier-1 data releases that are expected to influence markets across different regions:

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