All major US and most European equity indices closed higher,
while all major APAC markets were lower. US government bonds closed
mixed and benchmark European bonds were higher on the day. European
iTraxx closed almost flat on the day alongside CDX-NAIG, while
CDX-NAHY was tighter. Copper, gold, and natural gas closed higher,
while the US dollar, oil, and silver were lower on the day.
Please note that we are now including a link to the profiles of
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Americas
- All major US equity indices closed higher; Russell 2000 +1.7%,
Nasdaq +1.2%, S&P 500 +0.8%, and DJIA +0.7%.
- 10yr US govt bonds closed +1bp/1.26% yield and 30yr bonds
-1bp/1.87% yield.
- CDX-NAIG closed flat/50bps and CDX-NAHY -5bps/292bps, which is
+1bp and +8bps week-over-week, respectively.

- DXY US dollar index closed -0.1%/93.5.
- Gold closed +0.1%/$1,784 per troy oz, silver -0.5%/$23.11 per
troy oz, and copper +2.4%/$4.14 per pound.
- Crude oil closed -2.1%/$62.14 per barrel and natural gas closed
+0.5%/$3.85 per mmbtu. Crude oil closed lower for seventh
consecutive day, which is the longest losing streak since October
2019.
- Revenue per available room at US hotels last week was 93.4% of
the January 2020 level (our estimate based on weekly data from
STR). This is close to averages over recent weeks and consistent
with the airport passenger traffic data from TSA, which is
suggesting that travel activity has stalled just short of a full
recovery. Meanwhile, averaged over the last seven days, about
483,000 people per day received a first (or only) dose of a
COVID-19 vaccination, up somewhat from the prior week's rate of
about 472,000 per day. As of yesterday, 199.9 million US residents,
or about 60.6% of the population, were at least partially
vaccinated against COVID-19. The pace of vaccinations has risen in
recent weeks, likely in response to the rapid spread of the Delta
variant. At the current rate, the US would achieve widespread
vaccination (70-80%) by late this year. (IHS Markit Economists Ben
Herzon and Joel
Prakken)

- The US nut processor John B. Sanfilippo & Son, listed on
the New York stock exchange, reported net sales of $206.7 million
from April-June 2021, 1.2% more y/y, bringing FY2020-21 (July-June)
annual net sales to $858.4 million, 2.4% less y/y. (IHS Markit Food
and Agricultural Commodities' Jose Gutierrez)
- The fall in net sales was led by a 7.6% decrease in the
weighted average selling price per pound for nuts due to a fall in
commodity acquisition costs for all major tree nuts.
- Sales volume in the consumer distribution channel increased
2.5%, which was led by increased sales of private brand trail and
two snack mixes from new distribution at existing customers.
- Sales volume in the consumer distribution channel accounted for
73.2% of total sales volume in April-June 2021. The increase in
food-service sales volume was attributable primarily to the lifting
of indoor dining restrictions in restaurants. Sales volume
increased 19.1% in the contract packaging distribution channel
primarily due to the impact of increased foot traffic in
convenience stores on a major customer's business in this
channel.
- Fiscal 2021 net sales declined 2.5% to $858.5 million from
$880.1 million for fiscal 2020, while sales volume increased
1.6%.
- The decline in food-service sales volume was due to nationwide
restrictions on indoor dining at restaurants and a decline in air
travel due to Covid-19.
- General Motors (GM) has expanded its partnership with AT&T
to develop a fifth-generation cellular network architecture to
support connected vehicles with faster data speeds, according to a
company statement. Network enhancements will include improved
roadway-centric coverage, faster music and video downloads, faster
and more secure over-the-air software updates, faster navigation,
mapping, and voice services. Under this partnership, GM and
AT&T will be rolling out 5G connectivity in select Chevy,
Cadillac, and GMC vehicles from model year 2024. This will also
bring benefits for GM's current model year 2019 and newer vehicles,
which are equipped with 4G LTE. (IHS Markit Automotive Mobility's
Surabhi Rajpal)
- LiDAR startup Ouster is conducting advanced talks to acquire
rival Sense Photonics, Bloomberg reported. According to the report,
the value of the acquisition deal could not be determined
immediately. Ouster recently went public after merging with
Colonnade Acquisition Corporation, a special purpose acquisition
company. Ouster is engaged in the development of 3D sensing
solutions and LiDAR sensors for autonomous vehicles (AVs),
robotics, and drones. The company has raised USD142 million to
date. (IHS Markit Automotive Mobility's Surabhi Rajpal)
- The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has
announced that the administration of President Joe Biden and Vice
President Kamala Harris will invest more than USD19 million to
strengthen telehealth services in rural and under-served
communities, and to expand the quality and innovation of telehealth
across the country. The USD19-million investment will be
distributed to 36 award recipients via HHS's Health Resources and
Services Administration (HRSA). The investments will be made under
four separate telehealth programs (IHS Markit Life Sciences' Milena
Izmirlieva):
- Telehealth Technology-Enabled Learning Program (TTELP):
Approximately USD4.28 million is being awarded to nine health
organizations to build sustainable tele-mentoring programs and
networks in rural and medically under-served communities.
- Telehealth Resource Centers (TRCs): USD4.55 million is being
awarded to 12 regional and two national TRCs. The role of TRCs is
to provide information, assistance, and education on telehealth to
organizations and individuals who are actively providing or want to
provide telehealth services to patients.
- Evidence-Based Direct to Consumer Telehealth Network Program
(EB TNP): Approximately USD3.85 million is being awarded to 11
organizations to help health networks increase access to telehealth
services and to assess the effectiveness of telehealth care for
patients, providers, and payers.
- Telehealth Centers of Excellence (COE) program: USD6.5 million
is being awarded to two organizations to assess telehealth
strategies and services to improve healthcare in rural medically
under-served areas that have high chronic disease prevalence and
high poverty rates.
- Under the easing of public health restrictions, Canada's
nominal retail sales rebounded 4.2% month on month (m/m) to $56.2
billion in June. May was upwardly revised, by 0.2 percentage point
to a decline of 1.9% m/m. (IHS Markit Economist Evan Andrade)
- Core sales, which excludes sales at gasoline stations and of
motor vehicles and parts, rose a further 4.6% m/m.
- Price growth was modest as retail volumes were up a similar
4.1% m/m.
- While the preliminary estimate for July calls for sales growth
of 1.7%, this was based on significantly fewer survey responses
than usual.
- Retail growth was broad, with 8 of 11 retailer categories
expanding sales in June. The largest contribution came from the
49.1% m/m rise in clothing and accessories stores. This has been
the most volatile category over the past three quarters, due to
restrictions. With the sharp improvement, this category is now
equal to the sales made in October 2020—the last month before
second-wave regional restrictions were implemented.

- The National Statistics Office of Colombia (DANE) reports that
GDP contracted 2.4% in the second quarter as compared with the
previous one (quarter on quarter, q/q), with commerce,
construction, and manufacturing driving the decline. GDP had jumped
2.9% q/q in Q1 and, at the time, was half a percentage short of its
pre-pandemic level. (IHS Markit Economist Rafael
Amiel)
- In late April, a government proposal to raise taxes triggered
street protests, roadblocks, and riots, which led President Duque
to quickly withdraw the tax bill. Despite this, the protests
persisted through May and started waning in June because of the
increase in COVID-19 cases and to a lesser extent because the
government started talking to the protesters.
- The monthly index of economic activity (MIEA) dropped 5.4% in
May as compared with April (month on month, m/m), which was
slightly lower than March already.
- From an expenditure approach, the decline in GDP was driven by
plunging investment and net exports, as imports increased sizably
while exports decline. Oil production declined in Colombia in the
second quarter, hurting exports; other exports were also limited by
vandalism and blockades.
- The Central Bank of Brazil (Banco Central do Brasil: BCB) on 19
August approved a regulation allowing financial institutions to
deposit funds additional to their reserve requirements in their
central banks. According to the BCB, the tool will begin to be
implemented at the end of the current month if the tests carried
out 25 August are satisfactory. This policy tool is very similar to
the interest of excess reserves (IOER) implemented in several
advanced economies and, according to the BCB, it will be a more
flexible and cheaper tool than repo operations to control banks'
liquidity. (IHS Markit Banking Risk's
Alejandro Duran-Carrete)
- Argentina's economic activity advanced by 2.5% month on month
(m/m) in seasonally adjusted terms, after four months of declines.
The outlook beyond 2021 remains complicated, macroeconomic
imbalances have worsened during the pandemic and policy uncertainty
reduces incentives to invest. (IHS Markit Economist Paula
Diosquez-Rice)
- The economic activity index increased by 10.8% year on year
(y/y) in June 2021, while the seasonally adjusted data showed a
2.5% m/m increase during the month; the monthly rise in June comes
after four consecutive months of decline. Most of the categories in
the composite index show an annual rise in June.
- Construction, manufacturing, and mining posted the highest
annual expansion rates; the hospitality and restaurants sector rose
6.9% y/y, although the comparison base was extremely depressed. On
the other hand, the primary sector and the financial intermediation
services sectors posted an annual decline in June.
- Argentine construction costs increased almost 67% y/y in July
2021; the rise was driven by an 82% y/y increase in the cost of
materials, a 55% y/y rise in labour costs, and a 63% y/y rise in
general costs. The producer price index rose over 65% y/y in July;
the biggest increases were in lumber and non-furniture wood
products, and in non-machinery metal products.

Europe/Middle East/Africa
- Most major European equity indices closed higher except for
Italy flat; UK +0.4%, France +0.3%, Germany +0.3%, Italy flat, and
Spain +0.2%.
- 10yr European govt bonds closed higher; Italy -3bps, UK -2bps,
and France/Germany/Spain -1bp.
- iTraxx-Europe closed flat/47bps and iTraxx-Xover -1bp/237bps,
which is +1bp and +5bps week-over-week, respectively.

- Brent crude closed -1.9%/$65.18 per barrel.
- European cattle prices are continuing to track upwards, with no
end in sight to the supply shortfall which has seen prices rise
over the past 12 months to their highest levels since 2015. Prices
have been over the past week in all categories other than steers.
Processors are reported to be growing concerned about the pressures
which high livestock prices are putting on their profit margins,
but market analysts report that there is no scope in current market
dynamics for any significant discounts on current prices. There has
been little shift as yet in the general pandemic pattern of lively
demand for beef at retail level and less demand for beef consumed
in the restaurant and foodservice sectors. This in turn is tending
to favor consumption of fresh domestically produced beef over
imported frozen beef - although import volumes are starting to
catch up after a slow start to the year. In the first five months
of 2021, total EU beef imports were lagging 5.9% behind the same
period last year, with increased imports from Uruguay unable to
offset reductions in imports from both Brazil and Argentina. (IHS
Markit Food and Agricultural Commodities' Chris Horseman)
- In the week ending 15 August, meanwhile, the Commission's
overall benchmark price for A/C/Z R3 cattle was EUR386.64 per
100kg, up by 0.2% on the previous week. With one solitary
exception, the price has now risen in each of the last 15
weeks.
- The price for young bulls aged 12-24 months (A-R3) rose by 0.3%
week-on-week, to EUR389.8 per 100kg, while the price for male
cattle in the 8-12 month age category (Z-R3) jumped by 1.1%, to
EUR383.2 per 100kg.
- Steer (C-R3) prices fell by 0.4%, to EUR419.0 per 100kg, while
heifers (E-R3) rose by just 0.1% to EUR402.9 per 100kg.
- Cull cows (D-03) gained 0.8%, to EUR327.4 per 100kg.
- Over 600 local residents close to Tesla's new facility in
Grüenheide, Brandenburg (Germany), are said to have filed
objections to the site, reports Deutsche Presse-Agentur (DPA).
Frauke Zelt, spokesperson of Brandenburg's Environment Ministry,
told the news service that 619 objections had been submitted hours
before the deadline for objections closed last night (19 August).
These included 201 new objections to this location following the
automaker's announcement of its plans to manufacture battery cells
at the site. (IHS Markit AutoIntelligence's Ian Fletcher)
- Unipetrol (Prague, Czech Republic), a refining and
petrochemicals subsidiary of PKN Orlen (Plock, Poland), says it
will invest more than 30.0 billion Czech coruna ($1.4 billion) over
the next decade in projects to decarbonize the company's operations
and advance core developments in petchems, plastics recycling,
biofuels, and hydrogen. (IHS Markit Chemical Advisory)
- Unipetrol says it expects worldwide demand for petchem products
to keep rising, with the Orlen Unipetrol group seeing "significant
development potential." The company will leverage this potential
utilizing production from its new 270,000-metric tons/year
high-density polyethylene (HDPE) unit, called PE3, at Litvínov,
Czech Republic, construction of which was completed in April last
year, it says. PE3 replaced the company's ageing PE1 unit, and
operations at the 200,000-metric tons/day PE2 unit will continue.
Unipetrol spent CzK9.6 billion on the PE3 project.
- The company says it is also introducing a new product,
dicyclopentadiene (DCPD), to its portfolio, with a previously
announced new 26,000-metric tons/year production unit expected to
start operations by the end of 2022. Unipetrol is investing
approximately CzK831 million in the DCPD facility, which will
produce DCPD for potential application in products including
polymeric materials, resins, adhesives, dyes, packaging, and
optical fibers. The plant's 26,000-metric tons/year capacity would
account for approximately 25% of total current DCPD capacity in
Europe, according to the company. It expects DCPD demand to grow
20% by 2030.
- Unipetrol says that with these and other petchem-oriented
projects, it plans to boost its total petchems production from
900,000 metric tons/year to 1.2 million metric tons/year (MMt/y) by
the end of the decade. The recycling of plastic waste is planned to
account for up to 15% of the company's total polymer production by
2030, it says. In May, the company commissioned a pyrolytic test
unit for the chemical recycling of waste plastic at Litvínov to
"explore the possibilities of chemical plastic recycling and its
potential implementation in standard production in the next three
years," it said at the time.
- In its traditional oil and gas refining segment, Unipetrol
expects the volume of fossil-based products sold to decline from 5
MMt/y to 4.4 MMt/y by 2030. Volumes of advanced biofuels produced
will rise to 200,000 metric tons/year, it says. "These fuels will
be produced according to circular-economy principles by processing
plastic waste or organic waste," the company says.
- Unipetrol will continue decarbonizing its energy sources,
mainly through the replacement of coal-fired heating plants with
steam-and-gas facilities and solar sources, it says.
- Unipetrol is also planning to develop its activities related to
hydrogen as an energy carrier to be used in the company's
production processes, as well as in the energy sector and in
transportation. Besides producing hydrogen traditionally from oil,
it says it will use water electrolysis and membrane electrolysis
from chemical processes using renewable energy.
- According to Statistics Norway (SSB), growth returned in the
second quarter of 2021, with real GDP expanding by 1.1% quarter on
quarter (q/q), after a 0.6% q/q drop in the first quarter. (IHS
Markit Economist Raj
Badiani)
- SSB also confirms that the end of the national drinking ban at
bars and restaurants, and the reopening of restaurants in Oslo and
Viken provided a significant boost to spending on hospitality
services throughout the second quarter. Nevertheless, spending on
services in June remained at around 10% when compared with its
pre-COVID-19-virus level.
- Fixed investment expanded by 2.8% q/q in the second quarter,
offsetting the 2.9% q/q fall in the first. In annual terms, it
shrunk by 2.5% y/y in the first half of this year after a 3.8% drop
in 2020
- Total exports grew by 3.9% q/q during the second quarter, with
the sales of crude oil and natural gas being the strongest
performers, up by 8.9% q/q, while traditional goods edged up by
0.5% q/q.
- Imports of goods and services grew by 3.9% q/q for the second
quarter of 2021 because of stronger demand for fuel, automobiles,
and machinery in May.
- The economy in unadjusted terms contracted by 0.8% in 2020,
highlighting its resilience to the COVID-19-virus shock. On a
seasonally adjusted basis, Norwegian real GDP shrunk by 1.3% in
2020, compared with a 6.7% drop in eurozone GDP.
- Odfjell Oceanwind has received a NOK10 million (USD1.1 million)
grant from Norway's fund for climate change, Enova, to fund part of
its engineering and planning activities for its mobile offshore
wind unit (MOWU) concept. The project aims to connect the first
MOWU to oil and gas installations in the North Sea by 2024. The
floating MOWU will be fitted with Siemens Gamesa's 11 MW offshore
wind turbines and Odfjell Oceanwind's WindGrid hybrid system for
integrating the MOWUs into the host platform's power system. The
technology will allow the gas turbines on the host platform to
cut-off during periods of wind power production, this enabling up
to 70% reduction of CO2 emissions on the oil and gas platform. (IHS
Markit Upstream Costs and Technology's Melvin Leong)
- According to Vanguard News, liquidity in the interbank money
market plunged by 2,183% in the week ending 16 August, leading to
an increase in bank borrowing from the Central Bank of Nigeria
(CBN) by 2,500%. Furthermore, 86% or NGN420 billion (USD.102
billion) of banks' borrowing from the CBN were repurchase
agreements (repo), while the remaining 14% or NGN69 billion was
carried out through the Standing Lending Facility (SLF) of the CBN.
In addition, the interest rate on overnight lending rose by 3.6
percentage points to 17.25% from 13.7% on Monday. (IHS Markit
Banking Risk's Thea
Fourie and Ronel Oberholzer)
- The external liquidity shortage in the Nigerian economy has
persisted despite a stronger global oil price and stringent capital
controls. Foreign reserve holdings fell by a further USD1.7 billion
during the first half of 2021, reflecting a widening trade deficit
combined with less foreign direct investment and portfolio inflows
during the first quarter of 2021. OPEC+ oil production cuts
combined with less demand from India hampered Nigeria's export
performance.
- Bank-specific factors could also be contributing to the
shortage of liquidity, including higher provisioning costs and
uncertainty surrounding the resilience of smaller banks that have
persistently been accessing central bank funding lines since 2017.
However, a lack of up-to-date data releases from the CBN on most
banking-sector indicators hinders our ability to confirm this.
- The non-performing loan (NPL) ratio was at 6.1% in March 2021.
However, we believe that the reported NPL ratio understates the
weakness of asset quality given loan restructurings in multiple
sectors, particularly in the oil and gas sector, to which the
banking sector remains heavily exposed. We expect the NPL ratio to
rise further in 2021 on weak economic growth and exposure to
corporate lenders who sought relief for 40% of loans through CBN
forbearance measures in 2020.
- Employment in almost all sectors of the economy picked up
during January-June 2021 in the sub-Saharan African (SSA) region,
latest statistics in the Standard Bank and IHS Markit purchasing
managers' indices (PMIs) show. Using monthly PMI survey
information, IHS Markit compiled an aggregate weighted employment
PMI for SSA. A similar PMI for wages was compiled. Countries
included in the analysis were Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria,
South Africa, Uganda, and Zambia. (IHS Markit Economist Thea
Fourie)
- The aggregate SSA employment PMI shows that the recovery was
the strongest in the financial sector (banks, real estate, and
insurance), followed by the consumer services sector (media,
retail, and hotels and restaurants). Of this group, retail
employment showed the biggest gains. Employment conditions in the
basic metals (chemicals and resources), consumer goods (automotive,
household products, beverages, and food), and construction sectors
were less favorable, with the aggregate SSA employment PMI reading
for these sectors remaining below the 50-neutral level during the
first half of 2021.
- However, the jobs created in the sub-Saharan Africa region were
not enough to bring overall unemployment down to pre-COVID-19
pandemic levels. Initial indicators show that Nigeria's
unemployment rate remained at 33.3% in the fourth quarter of 2020,
from 27.1% in the second quarter of 2020. South Africa's
unemployment rate shot up to 32.6% in the second quarter of 2021,
from 27.6% in the second quarter of 2019. Angola's unemployment
rate averaged 30.5% in the first quarter of 2021, from 29.0% in the
third quarter of 2019. Of the smaller economies, Rwanda's
unemployment rate also increased, to average 17.0% in the first
quarter of 2021, from 15.0% in the second quarter of 2019.
- More detailed unemployment data in South Africa show that the
poorest in society - namely informal sector workers - have been
severely impacted. Informal sector employment fell by 14.3% year on
year (y/y) during the second quarter of 2021, compared with a 6.3%
y/y fall in formal sector employment.

Asia-Pacific
- All major APAC equity markets closed lower for the second
consecutive day; Australia -0.1%, India -0.5%, Japan -1.0%,
Mainland China -1.1%, South Korea -1.2%, and Hong Kong -1.8%.
- China will step up monitoring of projects supported by local
government special-purpose bonds (SPBs) and organize regular checks
on the use of bond funds, according to the Vice Minister of the
Ministry of Finance (MOF) at the 18 August National People's
Congress Standing Committee meeting. (IHS Markit Economist Yating
Xu)
- According to the vice minister, fund allocation will be
suspended for SPB projects that deviate from their performance
targets. Moreover, the provincial government will be allowed to
adjust the use of funds in a timely way for projects that cannot be
implemented owing to insufficient preparation.
- The move to tighten oversight of SPB projects is in line with
the government's escalating efforts to control local governments'
debt in recent months. The State Council in its annual report in
early June called for better oversight of local budgets and
spending and tighter monitoring of debt. In early July, the MOF
ordered that the allocation of SPB quotas be linked to performance
targets for the projects the bonds fund. The Banking and Insurance
Regulatory Commission also released a notice requiring further
tightening of local government financing vehicles loans related to
hidden debt.
- FAW Group is stepping up efforts in constructing the second
phase of its intelligent-connected vehicle (ICV) pilot project in
Changchun, China. The project, which will take two years for
completion, will be supported by the Jilin provincial government,
Changchun municipal government, and local authority of the
Changchun Automobile Economic and Technological Development Zone.
It will involve constructing 52.7 km of smart roads, an automated
operation center, a data center, and a factory dedicated to
scenarios research. FAW Group said it plans to deploy about 100
units of its Hongqing-branded ICVs for the yet-to-be-completed
pilot zone, Gasgoo reported. For the first phase of the
Changchun-based ICV pilot project, FAW Group has constructed 10.5
km of smart roads, deployed four Hongqi E-HS3 Level 4 intelligent
cars, built a cloud-based autonomous platform, and started pilot
operation of smart mobility services. (IHS Markit Automotive
Mobility's Surabhi Rajpal)
- Autonomous truck startup FABU.ai has raised CNY100 million
(USD15 million) in a Series B+ funding round from Cowin Capital and
DYEE Capital. The company plans to use the infused capital to
expand the deployment of its car-road-cloud integrated solution
into more scenarios such as port transportation and city shuttle
service, Gasgoo reported. (IHS Markit Automotive Mobility's Surabhi
Rajpal)
- BW Ideol has revealed that it has joined two commercial-scale
floating wind projects in Taiwan and Italy. The company signed a
design and engineering services contract in July for the Taiwan
project, followed by a Heads of Terms in August for the project in
Italy. The company has declined to disclose further details. The
company, a floating wind technology, engineering, and EPCI
contractor, is listed on the Oslo stock exchange. The company is
targeting a project portfolio of 10 GW by 2030, of which 1.5 GW
will be in operational. (IHS Markit Upstream Costs and Technology's
Melvin Leong)
- Taiwan's Ministry of Economic Affairs has announced the latest
allocation plan for 15 GW of capacity to be installed in a 10-year
period from 2026 to 2035. Of the allocation planned, 9 GW will be
added from 2026 until 2031, with a further 6 GW to be connected to
the grid from 2032 to 2035. Auctions for the wind farms will be
conducted starting in June 2022 for wind farms targeted for
commercial operations in 2026 to 2027. This will be followed by
auctions in 2023 for wind farms entering operations in 2028/29, and
auctions in 2024 for wind farms entering operations in 2030/2031.
As for the remaining 6 GW to be installed after 2031, auctions will
be announced at a later date, taking into consideration results
from the first auctions and technological developments. Potential
developers will first need to pass a performance ability review
before being allowed to participate in the auctions. To qualify for
the auctions, three other requirements to be fulfilled are the
feasibility approval for grid connection for Taipower, preliminary
approval for the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), and
agreement to the site. (IHS Markit Upstream Costs and Technology's
Melvin Leong)
- Japan's CPI in July rose by 0.2% month on month (m/m) on a
seasonally adjusted basis, but fell by 0.3% year on year (y/y). The
CPI, excluding fresh food, and the CPI, excluding food and energy
(the core-core CPI), rose by 0.4% m/m and 0.3% m/m, respectively,
but the y/y figures fell by 0.2% y/y and 0.6% y/y. (IHS Markit
Economist Harumi
Taguchi)
- The major reason behind the weakness was a 25.7% y/y drop for
communication. The index reference period of the CPI was revised
from 2015 to 2020, and the weighting for mobile-phone charges rose
from 2.3% to 2.7%. Accordingly, the negative effect from low
mobile-phone charges introduced by major carriers in April widened,
which lowered the annual change of the CPI for June by 0.4
percentage point from the 2015 base. The weakness was partially
offset by rises in prices for energy, non-fresh food (reflecting
higher import prices), accommodations (increased mobility), and
furniture and household utensils (extended stay-home
lifestyle).
- Higher import prices and the resumption of economic activity
will gradually lift the CPI, but it is likely to remain weak over
the short term. Lower mobile-phone charges have probably not
affected consumers' price expectations, given that prices of items
purchased frequently rose only modestly by 0.4% y/y, while prices
of household durables and other infrequently purchased items
increased by 0.7% y/y. However, weak demand will make it difficult
for companies to transfer costs to output prices despite a
continued rise in the corporate goods prices index (5.6% y/y in
July). The extension and expansion of the state of emergency will
also weigh on prices of non-essential goods and services.

- India's retail inflation, as measured by the consumer price
index (CPI), stood at 5.6% y/y in July - easing from 6.3% y/y in
June - helped by the reduced pressure on food and fuel prices, as
well as easing supply chain disruptions as states continued to ease
restrictions in response to declining daily COVID-19 infections.
(IHS Markit Economist
Hanna Luchnikava-Schorsch)
- Food inflation averaged 4.5% y/y, down from 5.6% y/y in June,
with some categories - including cereals, produce, and sugar -
experiencing deflation. Fuel inflation has also eased, with both
the fuel and light as well as transport and communication
categories falling from their peaks in June and May
respectively.
- In a separate statistical release, the base normalization led
to a slowing annual growth in the index of industrial production to
13.6% y/y in June from 28.6% y/y in May. However, on a sequential
monthly basis, industrial output grew 5.7% following two months of
contraction caused by the second wave of the COVID-19 virus
pandemic and state lockdowns.

- As per a report by ET Auto citing Union Minister Piyush Goyal,
the Indian government intends to become self-reliant by setting up
the semiconductor industry in India. He said, "There is a worldwide
shortage of semiconductors and the government is very much focused
on bringing the semiconductor industry to India... the government
is committed to supporting both these sectors." He added, "The
government is committed to supporting establishing the
semiconductor industry in the country which will also help in
reducing foreign exchange outflows." (IHS Markit AutoIntelligence's
Tarun Thakur)
- GoTo Group, an internet firm created through a merger deal
between ride-hailing company Gojek and e-commerce provider PT
Tokopedia, is reportedly in discussions to launch a pre-initial
public offering (IPO) funding round worth as much as USD2 billion.
GoTo has delayed its listing plans to early 2022 as the Financial
Services Authority (OJK) of the Southeast Asian country considers
new listing guidelines for tech firms to offer dual-class shares
with different voting rights, Reuters reported. (IHS Markit
Automotive Mobility's Surabhi Rajpal)

Posted 20 August 2021 by Ana Moreno, Director, Product Development, IHS Markit
and
Chris Fenske, Head of Capital Markets Research, Global Markets Group, S&P Global Market Intelligence
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