Global markets remain near highs as investors weigh inflation data, interest rate expectations and key economic releases across major economies.
United States (US) equity markets extended their powerful rally from late March lows, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 carving out fresh all‑time highs on their way to a seventh consecutive week of gains. Solid corporate earnings, strong demand for artificial intelligence (AI)‑related stocks, and resilient economic data enabled investors to largely shrug off the ongoing Middle East stalemate and elevated oil prices.
Date: Wednesday, 20 May at 2.00pm SGT
For March, headline CPI inflation rose to 3.3% YoY, up from 3.0%, while the core rate (excluding energy, food, alcohol and tobacco) eased to 3.1% from 3.2%.
April’s print will be the first inflation report since the Bank of England’s (BoE) April monetary policy report, which incorporated the initial energy‑price shock from the Middle East conflict and lifted near‑term CPI projections by 1.4% to 3.3% in the third quarter (Q3).
The report outlined three energy‑price scenarios:
Governor Bailey highlighted risks skewed to the upside, while policymakers noted they ‘stand ready to act’ depending on the scale and duration of the shock.
A stronger‑than‑expected print would reinforce the roughly 60 basis points (bp) of tightening priced into UK rates markets by year end.
Date: Thursday, 21 May at 9.45pm SGT
For April, the S&P Global US flash composite PMI rose to 51.7 from 50.3 in March. The Manufacturing PMI rose to 54.5 from 52.3 in March – its strongest reading since May 2022. New orders rose at the fastest pace in four years, while output accelerated sharply on stockpiling efforts to mitigate the impact of the energy shock.
The Services PMI recovered to 51.0 from the three‑year low of 49.8, though new business intake fell for the first time in two years on war‑related uncertainty and tariff concerns. Input price pressures remained elevated across both sectors due to higher energy and staffing costs.
The May figures due next week will be closely watched for signs that this resilience is holding – particularly after this week’s hotter‑than‑expected inflation data has lifted the odds of the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) next move being a hike early next year.
The US rates market is set to finish the week pricing in around 10 bp of Fed hikes for the rest of 2026, with a full 25 bp hike 80% priced for April 2027.
Date: Friday, 22 May at 7.30am SGT
Last month, Japan’s national CPI rose 1.5% YoY in March, with the core measure (excluding fresh food) holding steady at 1.8%. Consensus forecasts for April’s release point to a headline CPI print of 1.7% YoY, while the core ex‑fresh food measure is expected to remain around 1.8%.
Markets will be watching closely for signs that underlying pressures from Japanese yen weakness and higher imported costs are keeping the core trend firm. This comes after the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) 27 to 28 April meeting, where policymakers kept rates steady at 0.75% but delivered a sharp upward revision to their fiscal year (FY) 2026 core CPI forecast, lifting it to the 2.5% - 3.0% range.
A CPI print in line with or above expectations next week would reinforce the case for a 25 bp rate hike to 1% as early as June. Any meaningful downside surprise, however, could revive talk of delayed tightening and weigh on the yen.
US first‑quarter (Q1) 2026 earnings season continues next week with a solid lineup of reports from major technology, retail and consumer names. Highlights include:
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