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Dear Reader,

 

Today's overview of economic news and market action

  • Equity markets moved higher on both sides of the Atlantic yesterday …
  • Currency-wise, the main FX pairs were range bound …
  • In level terms, EUR/USD opens today in the top half of $1.08-1.09 …
  • GBP/USD is operating in the upper half of $1.27-1.28 …
  • EUR/GBP remains just above the 85p threshold …
  • Today, the ECB is widely expected to cut rates by 25bps …
  • Attention will be on any guidance on further cuts, with the meeting statement, press conference and macro-projections in focus …
  • Data-wise, Eurozone retail sales (April) and latest US weekly initial jobless claims are due …

 
Today's Opening FX Rates
 
      % Change Day* End 2023
EUR/USD 1.0876   -0.03 -1.45
EUR/GBP 0.8504   -0.14 -1.89
GBP/USD 1.2787   0.10 0.46
GBP/EUR 1.1753   0.14 1.93
*versus Previous Day's European Open

 
 
AIB Ireland Services PMI: May 2024
 
 

The latest AIB PMI® survey data indicated a faster increase in Irish service sector activity in May, as new business growth strengthened. The 12-month outlook also improved, and this was reflected another robust rise in services employment. There was a notable rebound in the Technology, Media & Telecoms sector, while Financial Services continued to expand sharply.


 
 
 
AIB Ireland Manufacturing PMI: May 2024
 
 

AIB Ireland Manufacturing PMI® data signalled a broad stabilisation in operating conditions in May as the headline index from the survey ticked up to a three-month high. Softer and only marginal contractions in output volumes and incoming new work were recorded during the latest survey period.


 
 
New Episode of AIB's Market Talk Podcast
 
 

AIB’s Senior Economist John Fahey and AIB Treasury’s Jane Kavanagh discuss the latest Irish Purchase Managers Index reports for the Manufacturing and Service sectors, trends in inflation and growth in the sectors and what these mean for the Irish economy. 


 
 
AIB Economic Outlook - May 2024
 
 
  • Irish growth expected to continue at a more moderate pace than recent years, as the economy nears full capacity.
  • Labour market to continue to grow and employment to reach 2.8 million by 2026.
  • Central bank interest rate decreases will support real economy in the coming years.
  • Real wages to rise as inflation normalises.
  • Key trading partners’ performance provides a steady backdrop for the Irish economy.
  • Theme in Focus: The outlook for interest rates.