| Time | Country | Event | Period | Previous value | Forecast | Actual |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09:30 | United Kingdom | Producer Price Index - Input (MoM) | January | 0.9% | -0.4% | 0.9% |
| 09:30 | United Kingdom | Producer Price Index - Input (YoY) | January | 0.9% | -0.1% | 2.1% |
| 09:30 | United Kingdom | Producer Price Index - Output (YoY) | January | 0.9% | 1% | 1.1% |
| 09:30 | United Kingdom | Producer Price Index - Output (MoM) | January | 0% | 0.1% | 0.3% |
| 09:30 | United Kingdom | Retail Price Index, m/m | January | 0.3% | -0.6% | -0.4% |
| 09:30 | United Kingdom | HICP ex EFAT, Y/Y | January | 1.4% | 1.6% | |
| 09:30 | United Kingdom | Retail prices, Y/Y | January | 2.2% | 2.6% | 2.7% |
| 09:30 | United Kingdom | HICP, m/m | January | 0% | -0.4% | -0.3% |
| 09:30 | United Kingdom | HICP, Y/Y | January | 1.3% | 1.6% | 1.8% |
| 10:00 | Eurozone | Construction Output, y/y | December | 1.4% | 1.4% | -3.7% |
GBP traded little changed against most major currencies in the European session on Wednesday, recovering from its early losses, helped by the release of higher-than-expected UK's consumer inflation data, which raised hopes that the Bank of England (BoE) would maintain its rates unchanged in the near-term perspective.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) reported the UK consumer price index increased 1.8 percent y-o-y in January, following a 1.3 percent yo-y gain in December. Economists had expected a 1.6 percent y-o-y advance. That was the highest reading since July 2019. Housing and utilities (+2 percent y-o-y), transport (+1.8 percent y-o-y), restaurants and hotels (+2.2 percent y-o-y), clothing and footwear (+0.2 percent y-o-y), and miscellaneous goods and services (+2.4 percent y-o-y) made upward contributions to inflation in January, while food and non-alcoholic beverages (+1.4 percent y-o-y) were dragged. Meanwhile, core inflation which excludes energy, food, alcoholic beverages and tobacco, accelerated to 1.6 percent y-o-y in January from 1.4 percent y-o-y in December. Economists had forecast core inflation of 1.5 percent y-o-y.
EUR traded flat against most major counterparts. Market participants received data from Eurostat, which showed that Eurozone construction output declined 3.1 percent m-o-m in December, following a 0.7 percent m-o-m advance in November. In y-o-y terms, the construction output fell 3.7 percent in December after a 1.4 percent increase in the previous month. That was the biggest annual decline since January 2017 and contradicted economists' forecast for a 1.4 percent gain. The decline was driven by a 4.6 percent y-o-y slump in building construction, while civil engineering rose 0.9 percent y-o-y.