China showing further signs of stabilizing
Adding to the risk appetite seen in early trade this week are China’s March external trade figures, which were released at the end of last week and helped ease some of the concern over a decline in the nation’s economic momentum. China’s exports for the month surprised to the upside, suggesting that global demand for trade remains intact and that the Chinese economy will find solid footing as a result.
China’s Q1 GDP, as well as March’s industrial production and retail sales data, are all due for release on Wednesday. These will be treated as tier-one economic releases from China and the data should offer a further indication as to how the world’s second largest economy is holding up. Note that the IMF recently revised China’s forecasted growth higher, in contrast to the lower projections for global growth.
Should the “China-stabilizing” narrative gather momentum, complemented by evidence of stimulus measures feeding into China’s economy in the months ahead, this should offer room for more gains in emerging market assets over the near-term.
Dollar steadies as markets await the latest US data
The United States is also slated to announce its March industrial production and retail sales data this week, along with the latest Markit Purchasing Managers Index (PMI). Markets are expecting the US economy to showcase its resilience, especially for retail sales, which are hoping to rebound following February’s slump.
However, any data announcement that undershoots market expectations will be seen as a threat that will weigh negatively on the Dollar Index.
Given the Federal Reserve’s already dovish tone, further hints of a steeper slowdown in the US economy could hasten speculation of a Fed rate cut and may give Dollar bears reason to break the Greenback’s recent resilience around the 97 mark.