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UK GDP and US Retail Sales Drive Markets

UK GDP and US Retail Sales Drive Markets

UK GDP beats forecasts while US retail sales and jobless claims data drive market attention in Thursday’s session.

The UK GDP report served as the sole highlight of the European session, delivering a modestly positive surprise. The economy expanded 0.1% in May, driven primarily by a rebound in the services sector. More encouragingly, the three-month rolling GDP reading came in at 0.7%, surpassing the 0.5% consensus estimate and pointing to broader underlying resilience across the UK economy.

Despite the beat, the figures are unlikely to shift the Bank of England’s policy calculus in any meaningful way. Traders continue to price in a rate hike by year-end, and Thursday’s GDP release does little to either accelerate or delay that expectation. The central bank remains firmly focused on inflation dynamics and labour market conditions as the primary drivers of its next policy decision.

UK GDP and US Retail Sales Drive Markets

The American session delivers two closely watched data releases. Analysts expect US Retail Sales to post a 0.2% gain for the month, marking a notable step down from the 0.9% recorded in the prior period. The Ex-Autos measure looks set to slip by 0.1%, retreating from a previous reading of 0.8%, while the Control Group points to a further easing toward 0.5% from 0.7%. Together, the broad slowdown across all three measures signals cooling consumer momentum following a period of stronger spending.

Retail Sales is a notoriously volatile indicator, and while it carries market-moving potential on release, price reactions tend to fade relatively quickly. The data rarely establishes lasting directional trends on its own, meaning traders will likely look for confirmation from other incoming data before making significant positioning shifts.

On the labor market front, Initial Jobless Claims are expected at 217K, marginally above the prior reading of 215K. Continuing Claims are forecast at 1,817K, up from 1,814K previously. The US labor market continues to hold up well overall, and the modest uptick in claims, if confirmed, would not represent a material change in conditions. At this stage, employment remains a source of stability rather than concern for Federal Reserve policymakers.

Central Bank Speakers

Two hawkish Fed voices take the podium later in the session. Fed’s Logan speaks at 16:30 GMT, followed by Fed’s Schmid at 17:25 GMT. Both carry a hawkish leaning, and any remarks touching on inflation, the pace of tightening, or the future rate path will draw close attention from traders already navigating a sensitive policy environment. Their tone could add incremental volatility to the US dollar and broader risk assets into the close of the session.

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