This week's major U.S. economic reports (July 11 - July 15)
THIS WEEK'S MAJOR U.S. ECONOMIC REPORTS & FED SPEAKERS
TIME (ET) REPORT PERIOD ACTUAL MEDIAN FORECAST PREVIOUS
MONDAY, JULY 11
11 am 3-year inflation expectations June -- 3.9%
TUESDAY, JULY 12
6 am NFIB small-business index June -- 93.1
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13
8:30 am Consumer price index (monthly) June -- 1.0%
8:30 am Core CPI (monthly) June -- 0.6%
8:30 am CPI (year-over-year) June -- 8.6%
8:30 am Core CPI (year-over-year) June -- 6.0%
2 pm Beige book
2 pm Federal budget (comparison vs. year-ago) June -- -$174 billion
THURSDAY, JULY 14
8:30 am Producer price index final demand (monthly) June -- 0.8%
8:30 am Initial jobless claims July 9 -- xx
8:30 am Continuing jobless claims July 2 -- xx
FRIDAY, JULY 15
8:30 am Retail sales June -- -0.3%
8:30 am Retail sales excluding vehicles June -- 0.5%
8:30 am Import price index June -- 0.6%
8:30 am Empire state manufacturing index July -- -1.2
9:15 am Industrial production index June -- 0.1%
9:15 am Capacity utilization June -- 80.8%
10 am UMich consumer sentiment index (preliminary) July -- 50.0
10 am UMich 5-year inflation expectations (preliminary) July -- 3.1%
10 am Business inventories May -- 1.2%
https://www.chase.com/personal/investments/learning-and-insights/category/markets
Economic outlook
Up Next for the Markets: July 11 July 15
James Chen
Head of Content Studio, J.P. Morgan Wealth Management
Jul 06, 2022 | 3 min read
Inflation keeps pushing prices higher and the impact on consumer spending will be made clearer this week when the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for June and Consumer Sentiment for July are released.
Also on the agenda is the Producer Price Index and the NFIBs Small Business Optimism Index for June, giving investors a birds eye view into how higher prices are weighing on the broader economy.
Inflations impact on consumers will be on display this week with a slew of key economic data scheduled for release. On the consumer sentiment front, be on the lookout for the NFIBs Small Business Optimism Index for June and the University of Michigans Survey of Consumer Sentiment for July. Both data points will give investors more insight into how consumers are holding up in the face of 40-year high inflation and rising interest rates.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) for June is due this week as well. This is a highly significant datapoint that will draw investors close attention. With the Fed raising interest rates in an effort to tame the economy, any dip in the June CPI will be welcome news. Also on the agenda for the week is the Producer Price Index for June and jobless claims for the previous week.
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