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ECONOMICS COMMENTARY
Mar 13, 2026
Week Ahead Economic Preview: Week of 16 March 2026
The following is an extract from S&P Global Market Intelligence's latest Week Ahead Economic Preview. For the full report, please click on the 'Download Full Report' link.
Central bank war impact assessments in focus as rate setters meet
The week ahead is dominated by interest rate decisions at the world's largest central banks, which will reveal policymaker reaction to the Middle East war.
Central bank policy meetings take place in the US, eurozone, Japan, UK, Canada, Switzerland, Australia, Brazil, Sweden, Taiwan and Indonesia. Markets will be looking to see how policymakers gauge the risks to their economies from the Middle East war. The central banks of the US, eurozone and UK in particular will need to decide whether to 'look through' the near-term inflationary impact of the energy price rise, and focus instead on shoring up economic growth amid the heightened geopolitical uncertainty, or whether to turn more hawkish to ward off another step-up in inflation.
Stubbornly above target inflation in the US and UK has already caused concern over scope for more rate cuts, and some eurozone policymakers have already turned more hawkish. Likewise, in economies such as Canada, where rate cuts had been anticipated due to lacklustre growth, the energy price shock is encouraging speculation that rates might now be on hold.
In contrast, in economies such as Japan and Australia, where markets have penciled-in more rate hikes, there is now uncertainty as to whether rates might need to be held steady while the potential for economic damage from a prolonged war is assessed. Japan's Prime Minister, for example, has recently urged the central banks to take a more cautious approach in its hiking cycle.
Much will of course depend on the duration of the war and any disruptions to global energy markets and shipping, meaning the news flow from the Middle East will continue to steer policy expectations. In the meantime, there is also a flurry of economic data to watch over the coming week. This notably includes industrial production numbers for both the US and mainland China, with the latter also releasing retail sales and investment data.
In Europe, inflation data for the eurozone are accompanied by labour markets statistics in the UK. The jobs market in the UK will be especially important to watch, as steep job losses in recent months have been a key concern among dovish policymakers, mirroring labour market concerns in the US. These disappointing employment trends are also evident up to February from the PMI surveys, which underscored how high costs and low business confidence are stymieing hiring in many economies despite global economic growth having returned to its long-run trend rate. That was, of course, prior to the outbreak of war.
Chart of the week: Global business optimism improved ahead of the Iran war
The S&P Global Business Outlook Survey - based on responses from a panel of 12,000 companies - showed business optimism at a one-year high in February. While the war in the Middle east has superceded the survey, the upturn in business confidence pointed to some encouraging resilience of the global economy ahead of the crisis which could bode well for economic growth should the war prove short-lived, a scenario which - as of early March - fund managers were broadly anticipating according to the Investment Managers' Index survey.

Read more about recent global PMI trends here.
Key diary events
Monday 16 Mar
Americas
Mexico Market Holiday
- Canada Inflation (Feb)
- US NY Empire State Manufacturing Index (Mar)
- US Industrial Production, Capacity Utilization (Feb)
EMEA
- UK Consumer Sentiment Index* (Feb)
APAC
- China (Mainland) House Price Index (Feb)
- China (Mainland) Industrial Production, Retail Sales, FAI
(Jan-Feb)
- India WPI (Feb)
- India Balance of Trade (Feb)
Tuesday 17 Mar
Americas
- US ADP Weekly Employment Change
- US NAHB Housing Market Index (Mar)
- US Pending Home Sales (Feb)
EMEA
Saudi Arabia Market Holiday
- Eurozone ZEW Economic Sentiment Index (Mar)
- Germany ZEW Economic Sentiment Index (Mar)
APAC
- Singapore Non-Oil Domestic Exports (Feb)
- Australia RBA Interest Rate Decision
- Indonesia BI Interest Rate Decision
Wednesday 18 Mar
Americas
- US PPI (Feb)
- Canada BoC Interest Rate Decision
- US Factory Orders (Jan)
- US Fed FOMC Interest Rate Decision and Economic Projections
- Brazil BCB Interest Rate Decision
EMEA
Saudi Arabia Market Holiday
- Eurozone CPI (Feb, final)
APAC
Indonesia Market Holiday
- South Korea Unemployment Rate (Feb)
- Japan Balance of Trade (Feb)
Thursday 19 Mar
Americas
- US Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index (Mar)
- US New Home Sales (Jan)
EMEA
Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Türkiye Market Holiday
- UK Labour Market Report (Jan)
- Sweden Riksbank Rate Decision
- Switzerland SNB Interest Rate Decision
- UK BoE Interest Rate Decision
- Eurozone ECB Interest Rate Decision
APAC
Indonesia Market Holiday
- Japan Machinery Orders (Jan)
- Australia Employment Change (Feb)
- Japan BoJ Interest Rate Decision
- Malaysia Inflation (Feb)
- Malaysia Balance of Trade (Feb)
- Japan Industrial Production (Jan, final)
- Taiwan CBC Interest Rate Decision
Friday 20 Mar
Americas
- Canada New Housing Price Index (Feb)
- Canada Retail Sales (Feb)
EMEA
Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Türkiye, UAE Market Holiday
- Germany PPI (Feb)
- Italy Balance of Trade (Jan)
- Eurozone Balance of Trade (Jan)
APAC
Japan, Indonesia Market Holiday
- New Zealand Balance of Trade (Feb)
- China (Mainland) Loan Prime Rate (Mar)
- Thailand Balance of Trade (Feb)
- Taiwan Export Orders (Feb)
- Hong Kong SAR Inflation (Feb)
* Access press releases of indices produced by S&P Global and relevant sponsors here.
This article was published by S&P Global Market Intelligence and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.
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