• European session review: EUR weakens after Eurozone's February inflation data, Germany's January retail sales statistics

Market news

2 March 2021

European session review: EUR weakens after Eurozone's February inflation data, Germany's January retail sales statistics

TimeCountryEventPeriodPrevious valueForecastActual
07:00United KingdomNationwide house price index February-0.2%-0.3%0.7%
07:00United KingdomNationwide house price index, y/yFebruary6.4%5.6%6.9%
07:00GermanyRetail sales, real adjusted January-9.1%-0.3%-4.5%
07:00GermanyRetail sales, real unadjusted, y/yJanuary2.8%1.3%-8.7%
08:55GermanyUnemployment ChangeFebruary-37-139
08:55GermanyUnemployment Rate s.a. February6%6%6%
10:00EurozoneHarmonized CPI, Y/YFebruary0.9%0.9%0.9%
10:00EurozoneHarmonized CPI ex EFAT, Y/YFebruary1.4%1.1%1.1%
10:00EurozoneHarmonized CPIFebruary0.2% 0.2%
13:30CanadaGDP (m/m) December0.7%0.3%0.1%
13:30CanadaGDP QoQQuarter IV8.9% 2.3%
13:30CanadaGDP (YoY)Quarter IV40.5%7.5%9.6%

EUR fell against most of its major counterparts in the European session on Tuesday, as investors digested the flash estimate of Eurozone's CPI for February and Germany's retail sales for January, while the overall market sentiment remained dented by the comments from China’s top banking regulator, which expressed concern about bubbles in global financial markets.

The flash figures from Eurostat revealed that Eurozone's consumer price inflation was steady at 0.9 percent y-o-y in February, unchanged from the previous month's 11-month high. This was in line with economists' forecast as well. Meanwhile, core inflation, which excludes prices of energy, food, alcohol & tobacco, decelerated to 1.1 percent y-o-y from 1.4 percent y-o-y in January. This also matched economists' estimates.

Destatis reported that Germany's retail sales decreased 4.5 percent m-o-m in January, following a downwardly revised 9.1 percent m-o-m plunge in December. Economists had expected only a 0.3 percent m-o-m decline.  In y-o-y terms, retail sales fell 8.7 percent after an upwardly revised 2.8 percent climb in the previous month.  This was the first annual drop since April 2020 and much worse than economists' forecasts of a 1.3 percent raise. According to Destatis, the poor January readings can be explained by the second coronavirus lockdown, which led to a partial retail closure starting on December 16, 2020. Germany's lockdown will reportedly be extended until March 28.

Market Focus
Material posted here is solely for information purposes and reliance on this may lead to losses. Past performances are not a reliable indicator of future results. Please read our full disclaimer
Open Demo Account & Personal Page
I understand and accept the Privacy Policy and agree to my name and contact details being used by TeleTrade to contact me about this.