The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz referenced last week proved to be very short lived, with both the US and Iran reinstating blockades and restrictions. Market optimism was impacted as a result. Front month crude oil rose more than 13% for the week to close around $95/bbl, a headwind for equities and the more risk-sensitive EUR and AUD, while bond yields increased. Attention now turns to next week where the Fed, ECB and BoE are all due to hold policy meetings. Higher inflation is yet to show through in the data, so all central banks are likely to remain cautious - though the longer the crisis persists, a hawkish repricing of the rates outlook becomes a stronger possibility.
The flash PMI readings for April were mildly consistent with stagflationary conditions - the main fear of markets surrounding the conflict - though growth was also displaying resilience, led somewhat surprisingly by the manufacturing sector despite surging fuel prices. The composite PMIs for the US (52) and UK (52) signalled an expansion in economic activity, having risen from March. Services activity rose, but the manufacturing sector was the key driver, with firms likely increasing output and restocking inventories in anticipation of supply disruptions. But there are questions going forward: confidence collapsed and input costs soared due to higher fuel prices. In the euro area, the composite PMI slipped into contractionary territory (48.6), but again the manufacturing sector saw an uptick.
Data in the US highlighted concerns around the consumer. The University of Michigan Survey confirmed sentiment in April collapsed to a record low. With fuel prices the obvious concern, inflation expectations for the year-ahead (4.7%) and long run (3.5%) horizons increased, a key point to keep in mind ahead of next week's Fed meeting. Markets still price some degree of easing this year, and the FOMC's own forecasts have one cut in the 2026 profile, but if there is concern around higher inflation expectations that could shift the narrative next week. Fuel prices underpinned a larger than expected 1.7% rise for retail sales in March, though the control group (that excludes fuel) at 0.7%m/m also surprised - the question is how durable that proves to be given the weakness in sentiment.
In the UK, headline inflation in March lifted above consensus rising by 0.7%m/m (vs 0.6%) to 3.3%Y/Y, though the full impact of the energy shock will come through household electricity and gas prices in later months. Core CPI eased a touch to a 3.1% annual pace, and that likely means the BoE will retain its wait-and-see stance at next week's meeting. Labour market weakness has been a key concern for the BoE, but there was some better news on that front. The unemployment rate declined to 4.9% from 5.2%, while earnings growth (ex-bonuses) also cooled to a 3.6% annual rate.





















