October 5, 2008
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act 2008 - Market Fallout
Last Week
Obviously last week’s major news was the rejection, modification and approval of the $700 billion credit market rescue plan in the US. President Bush finally signed the bill before the markets closed on Friday and the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (EESA) of 2008 was born.
Investors in the US remain unconvinced by the bill with the DOW and the S&P500 closing at lows for the week. The DOW closed down 1.5% on Friday at 10,325.38 and the S&P at 1,099.23, off by 1.35% on the day. This brings up staggering losses for the week of 7.3% and 9.4% for the DOW and S&P respectively.
This week traders will be keenly anticipating Monday’s market open. Will investors and institutions be encouraged by the EESA or does it signal the beginning of a financial winter?
This Week
Even though economic news might be taking a back seat to the US bailout, we still have a very busy week in store.
The first high volatility of the week should be seen when Canadian Building Permits are released at 13:30 on Monday. Permit approvals are expected to fall by 1.4% MoM compared to August’s 1.8% increase.
A little later at 15:00 we have the Ivey PMI, also from Canada. The Richard Ivey School of Business index should indicate weak expansion amongst the surveyed purchasing managers with a reading of 51, down from the 51.5 previous.
Towards the end of the day, at 22:00, the NZIER Business Confidence reading will be released. New Zealand is braced for more bad news after last month’s -64 reading.
Tuesday will be dominated by global interest rate news. First up we have the BOJ Interest Rate Announcement which is expected before 4am UK time. The BOJ is likely to keep rates on hold at 0.50% once again. Although this event is only regarded as medium impact news the BOJ Press Conference later in the day should be met with high volatility.
Prior to this press conference we will see the RBA Interest Rate Statement. Economists are predicting a half-point cut to 6.50% and any more/ less than this will likely bring massive volatility to an already high-impact event.
The first high volatility from the UK will be seen on Tuesday. The Halifax House Price Index is due, but this release is subject to change as we have seen before. Expectations are for a MoM decrease of 1.8%, the same as we saw for August.
One UK event that will not be subject to a schedule rearrangement is the Manufacturing Production number. MoM the industry is likely to have contracted by 0.2%, the same as in the previous reporting period.
High volatility will come from the US when Ben Bernanke talks about the economic outlook in Washington DC at 18:15. We can also expect high volatility from the FOMC Meeting Minutes due for release at 19:00.
Wednesday will begin with Australian Home Loans data. MoM economists are expecting a 1.0% fall in the number of new loans granted compared to a 0.2% fall in the previous month.
Canadian construction/ housing data will return to focus at 13:15 with Housing Starts expected. An annualized number of 207K new residential buildings are likely to have been started in the month of September. This can be compared to a number of 211K in August.
The US housing market is seen as key to economic strength so Pending Home Sales will be very closely watched at 15:00. Once again numbers are expected to have fallen on a monthly basis. For the month of September a negative figure of 1.5% is expected.
Early on Thursday morning Australia will release Employment Change and Unemployment Rate data at 01:30. This data could be key to the AUDUSD rate depending on the RBA rate decision earlier in the week. Economists are expecting the change in the number of employed people to remain flat in September and an unemployment rate of 4.3%.
At midday the BOE Interest Rate Statement will be released. The general consensus is for a rate cut to 4.75%. Some economists believe that this will be the beginning of a dovish cycle that takes the Official Bank Rate to 3.5% over the next 12 months.
A G7 Meeting has been pencilled in for either Thursday or Friday this week. It is to be held in Washington DC and traders should be aware that officials are likely to talk to the press throughout the day. These events can bring high volatility to the market.
Friday will bring another wave of Canadian and US high volatility. Beginning at 12:00 we will see the Canadian Employment Change and Unemployment Rate. The Canadian labour market is expected to have added 11.0K jobs in September while the Unemployment Rate is likely to have increased to 6.2%.
At 13:30 the US and Canadian Trade Balance figures will be released. The US deficit is expected to have contracted slightly to $59.5 billion from the 62.2B seen previously. Canadian trade surplus probably fell to CAD 4.6B from 4.9B in August.
As always our economic calendar will keep you up to date with the week’s data.
Filed under Australia, Canada, Economic Indicators, Eurozone, Japan, New Zealand, Stocks, United Kingdom, United States, Weekly Preview by admin