Dear Reader,
Today's overview of economic news and market action
- Quiet macro calendar yesterday
- There was some improvement in risk appetite
- Evident in solid gains on equity markets
- Currency-wise, the dollar posted some modest gains
- EUR/USD below the midpoint of $1.10-1.11
- Meanwhile, EUR/GBP continues in a tight range under midpoint of 84-85p
- Aside from already released UK labour market data, remainder of today’s calendar is quiet
Continue Reading
|
|
|
|
Today's Opening FX Rates
| |
|
|
% Change Day* |
End 2023 |
| EUR/USD |
1.1037 |
|
-0.34 |
0.01 |
| EUR/GBP |
0.8438 |
|
-0.05 |
-2.65 |
| GBP/USD |
1.3078 |
|
-0.31 |
2.74 |
| GBP/EUR |
1.1848 |
|
0.05 |
2.73 |
| *versus Previous Day's European Open |
All rates quoted are indicative market rates.
|
|
|
|
Weekly Market Brief - 9-13 September
Moderate growth beneath volatile Irish GDP data
This week’s Irish GDP data provide the first full breakdown of the economy in Q2 2024. Beneath the perennially volatile GDP data (-1% q/q, -4% y/y), the domestic indicators point to a moderate growth picture so far in 2024.
Read More
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AIB Ireland Manufacturing PMIĀ® - August 2024
The headline AIB Ireland Manufacturing PMI® edged up to its highest level since February and signalled a marginal overall improvement in business conditions. An upturn in manufacturing sector performance mostly reflected sustained production growth and a faster rise in employment numbers. Survey respondents often commented on efforts to boost capacity in line with long-term business expansion plans.
Read More
|
| |
|
AIB Ireland Services PMIĀ® - August 2024
Irish services activity continued to rise solidly in August, AIB PMI® survey data indicated. Growth of both new business and employment accelerated, and outstanding work increased at the strongest rate in nearly a year. Less positively, the overall 12-month outlook was the weakest since November 2022.
Read More
|
| |
|
Irish Economy Watch - August 2024
House prices continue to trend sharply higher. They were up 8.6% YoY in June. Consumer prices rose by 0.2% in July, amid further increases in transport and hospitality costs. Revisions to the data show the unemployment rate averaged 4.4% in Q2’24 up from 4.3% in Q1’24. The preliminary reading indicates GDP expanded by 1.2% in Q2’24, but it remained 1.4% lower in YoY terms.
Read More
|
|
|
|
|
|