• Eurostat published Q2 labour cost data today. They rose by 4.7% Y/Y for the euro area and by 5.2% Y/Y for the EU, respectively down from 5% Y/Y and 5.5% Y/Y in Q1. On a country level, the highest increases in hourly wage costs for the whole economy were recorded in Croatia (+17.6%), Bulgaria (+15.4%), Romania (+15.0%), Hungary (+13.2%) and Poland (+13.0%). Two more EU Member States recorded an increase above 10%, namely: Latvia (+11.0%) and Lithuania (+10.9%). In the EMU, the cost of hourly wages & salaries increased by 4.5% Y/Y while the non-wage component increased by 5.2% Y/Y. On a sectoral level, wages went up by 4.5% in services, by 4.8% in industry and by 5.3% in construction. Today’s data add to evidence that underlying price pressure in the euro area remains sticky, preventing the ECB from making monetary policy less restrictive at a rapid pace. • The National Bank of Poland today published core inflation data for the month of August. The Polish statistical office already published general CPI data earlier, with headline CPI at 0.1% M/M and 4.3% Y/Y. The NBP publishes four core calculations. Core inflation excluding food and energy prices came in at 0.3% M/M and 3.7% Y/Y (down from 3.8%). Other measures remained modest at 0.1% M/M for CPI ex administered prices (2.9% Y/Y), 0.1% M/M also for the series excluding most volatile price components (4.8% Y/Y) and the 15% trimmed mean average at 0.2% M/M and 4.0%. The NBP targets inflation at 2.5% with a 1.0% +/- tolerance band. Polish headline inflation in July jumped above the NBP’s tolerance band as the government phased out some inflation shield measures. Higher headline inflation, a loose budget and strong wage growth are mentioned by the NBP as factors preventing a rate cut in the near term. Still some MPC members recently opened de door to start discussion in the first quarter of next year. • The Bank of International Settlements (BIS) published its quarterly review, titled “carry off, carry on”. One of the main lessons is that the unwinding of leveraged positions, including carry trades, which triggered short-lived bouts of extreme market volatility and FX movements early August isn’t going the be a one-off. “It’s part of the bigger picture, the inevitable withdrawal symptoms that markets suffer as they transition away from the extraordinary period of exceptionally low interest rates and ample liquidity”, according to BIS head of the monetary and economics department Borio. Markets have become hypersensitive to growth-related news surprises and the associated revisions to expectations of the policy stance ahead. In contrast to equity markets, volatility in credit markets remained subdued and conditions generally benign.
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