23 septiembre 2019
Major economic events and indicators for the week – Deutsche Bank
Deutsche Bank's analysts point out major economic indicators and events, which are expected to influence the global markets' movements this week.
- Data: Japan preliminary September Manufacturing, Services and Composite PMI; France September manufacturing confidence, business confidence; Germany September Ifo business climate index; UK August public sector net borrowing; US July FHFA house price index, July S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller house price index; September Richmond Fed manufacturing index; September Conference Board consumer confidence.
- Central Banks: BoJ's Kuroda, ECB's Villeroy speak.
- Politics: General Debate of the United Nations General Assembly begins.
- Data: Japan August services PPI; Germany October GfK consumer confidence; France September consumer confidence; US weekly MBA mortgage applications, August new home sales
- Central Banks: BoJ minutes of July meeting; BoJ's Masai, ECB's Coeure, Fed's Evans and George speak.
- Data: Japan final August machine tool orders; Euro Area August M3 money supply; US third estimate Q2 GDP, personal consumption, core PCE, preliminary August wholesale inventories, weekly initial jobless claims, August pending home sales, September Kansas City Fed manufacturing activity
- Central Banks: Bank of Mexico decision; ECB publishes Economic Bulletin; Fed's Kaplan, Bullard, Clarida, Daly, Kashkari and Barkin, ECB's Draghi, BoE's Carney and Cunliffe speak.
- Data: UK September GfK consumer confidence; Japan September Tokyo CPI; China August industrial profits; France August PPI, consumer spending, preliminary September CPI; Italy September consumer confidence, manufacturing confidence, economic sentiment, August PPI; Euro Area September economic confidence, business climate indicator, industrial confidence, services confidence, final September consumer confidence; US August personal income, personal spending, preliminary August durable goods orders, final September University of Michigan sentiment
- Central Banks: BoE's Saunders, ECB's Guindos, Knot, Hernandez De Cos, Fed's Quarles and Harker speak.”