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Welcome to the Investors Trading Academy economic calendar of the week. Each week our news analysts
review the upcoming economic events that you should be monitoring during the week. The
week starts off with a US holiday, the official end of the summer vacation season. Traders
will all be back in their offices with a roar on Tuesday to start off the last quarter of
the year. Markets will be glued to the Federal Reserve meeting next week. Jobs data released
on Friday gave no clear indication for a Federal Reserve decision. The rest of the week is
relatively light in economic data terms. Sterling watchers and loonie followers will get rate
decisions from the UK and Canada during the week, while China data will be particularly
useful following the volatility of the past month and the reopening of the stock market
there following the WWII commemorations. Equity news is light too, although housebuilders
will be in focus. Having been hit by recent turmoil, investors will be hoping that fundamentals
can shine through and justify current valuations. Also on the list is supermarket Morrison’s,
which will be hoping that an update on sales will allow the share price to stage a recovery.
In the US, the key economic data isn’t released until late in the week. And in China key economic
data is released on Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, covering trade, inflation, and production,
investment and retail sales. In China, the week kicks off on Tuesday when
China releases its trade data. Economists expect that exports fell at a 5 per cent annual
rate in August, while imports are tipped to slide by 6 per cent. Overall the trade surplus
is expected to have lifted from $43 billion to $51.1 billion in August.
On Thursday, China’s National Bureau of Statistics issues inflation data for August
-- both consumer and producer prices. Inflation is well contained at present with producer
prices still falling, not rising. Economists expect that producer prices fell 5.5 per cent
over the year to August while consumer prices grew 1.9 per cent over the period.
On Sunday the monthly batch of Chinese economic indicators are released -- retail sales, production
and investment. There are signs that Chinese economic activity is gaining pace and investors
would want to see further confirmation of that trend. Expect annual retail sales growth
near 10.6 per cent with production near 6.3 per cent and investment near 11.2 per cent.
The risk is that the results print on the weaker side of expectations -- especially
given that China closed down heavy manufacturers and restricted transport in Beijing due to
the World Athletic championships. We would expect activity levels to lift in coming months.
In the US, the week kicks off on Tuesday with consumer credit figures, the NFIB small business
index and employment trends index. Economists expect that consumers continue to warm to
low borrowing costs with credit tipped to have expanded by US$18 billion in July after
a lift of US$20.7 billion increase in June.