Market Awaits Fed Comments & US Labor Reaction
This week the market awaits commentary from Fed speakers, including Bernanke, regarding future monetary policy. Economists are interested to see whether the Fed sees inflation as more of a risk than a weak economy ahead of future interest rate meetings. The question remains: can the US economy survive an inflation fighting rate hike without falling into recession.
This comes on the back of comments last week from the ECB. The Eurozone increased interest rates to 4.25% last Thursday but stated that they don’t expect any future need for further hikes. This resulted in ‘buy on rumour sell on fact’ trading in the EURUSD. Post data the currency pair fell from 1.5908 to a Thursday low of 1.5681.
Early focus in the new week will be on the reaction from US traders following the dismal US Labor market data. Non-Farm Employment Change was in negative territory once again (-62K), Unemployment Rate remained at 5.5% and Initial Jobless Claims climbed above 400K for the second time this year. US markets were closed on Friday for the Independence Day Holiday so it will be interesting to see how traders digest the news after the long weekend.
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday this week will see a 3-day G8 meeting in Hokkaido, Japan. The meeting is expected to be dominated by climate change, food and commodity prices. There have been pre-meeting comments from Japan and the US blaming a weak US Dollar for inflated energy prices. Traders are waiting to see if G8 members’ comments are strong enough to support a dollar rally on speculation of central bank intervention.
In other news this week, high volatility economic data from the US takes a bit of a breather. The main events will be Fed Chairman Bernanke speech at 13:00 on Tuesday and his testimony before the House of Representatives Committee on Financial Services on Thursday at 15:00. Traders will be looking for hints as to the Fed’s concern over inflation.
The US is also due Pending Home Sales at 15:00 on Tuesday, Initial Jobless Claims at 13:30 on Thursday (more volatility than usual is expected due to the +400K reading last week) and the Trade Balance and Preliminary Michigan Sentiment at 13:30 and 14:55 respectively. The only data that is expected to show any improvement is Initial Jobless Claims where a slight moderation to 397K is expected.
Elsewhere the Canadian economy steels the spotlight with no fewer than five high volatility releases due. Monday will see Building Permits (13:30) and the BOC Business Outlook Survey (15:00). Following this we will see Employment Change and Unemployment Rate at 12:00 and the Canadian Trade Balance at 13:30 on Friday.
Additional high volatility events this week are as follows (all times are UK DST):
Monday
UK Industrial Production (09:30)
NZIER Business Confidence (23:00)
Tuesday
Halifax House Price Index (NTS)
Wednesday
Australian Home Loans (02:30)
Thursday
Australian Employment Change (02:30)
Australian Unemployment Rate (02:30)
BOE Interest Rate Statement (12:00)
Tags: Ben Bernanke, BOC Business Outlook Survey, BOE Interest Rate Statement, Building Permits, ECB, Employment Change, EURUSD, G8, Halifax House Price Index, Home Loans, Industrial Production, initial jobless claims, Michigan Sentiment, Non-Farm Employment Change, NZIER Business Confidence, Pending Home Sales, trade balance, unemployment rate, US Dollar