September 29, 2008

The Fed to Cut Rates in October?

Traders go into this week with the $700 billion credit market bailout casting a shadow over the economic data schedule. However, this should be resolved early in the week as the US Treasury tries to push the deal through.

Interestingly, a look at interest rate futures tells us that there is currently an 80% chance that the Fed will cut rates by 0.25% in their October meeting. The dust from the credit bailout will hardly have time to settle before traders start looking at this week’s massively important data. But will the economic indicators support the need for a cut or serve to reduce it?

This Week
The first high volatility event of the week will come from New Zealand on Sunday evening at 22:45. The New Zealand Trade Balance is expected to expand its deficit from 781 million Dollars to 912 million.

Monday will be reasonably quiet on the data front with the Core PCE Price Index from the US worth a watch. However, this is classed as a medium volatility event. The only high volatility news scheduled for Monday will come from New Zealand once again. Building Consents are due at 22:45 and are coming off the back of a 4.7% MoM increase for the month of July.

Tuesday will be very busy beginning with Building Approvals and Retail Sales Trend at 02:30 from Australia. Building Approvals are expected to fall by 1.0% MoM following a 2.3% decline in June. The Retail Sales Trend number is set to post a 0.1% increase, inline with the previous month’s number.

At 03:00 New Zealand will follow with its third high volatility event of the week. The National Bank of New Zealand Business Confidence indicator is due. Last month’s reading was -20.5 and traders will be keen to see if a recovery has taken place.

Next up at 09:30 is UK Current Account. The data is expected to come in at -9.7billion GBP compared to -8.4billion previous.

Later in the day the economic focus will shift to the opposite side of the Atlantic with Canada and the US reporting. Canada will release their monthly Gross Domestic Product. Last month’s data posted a modest gain of 0.1% with 0.2% expected this time.

The first high volatility event of the week from the US will be the Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence. The index is expected to worsen slightly from 56.9 to 54.6.

Wednesday will be slightly quieter with 4 high volatility events scheduled compared to Tuesday’s 5. The US economic machine will really kick in but Japan’s Tankan Large Manufacturers Index is due first at 00:50. The index came in at 5 last time but it is expected to turn negative at -2 this time.

The UK’s Manufacturing PMI is due to be released at 09:30. Once again the index is likely to show industry contraction with a reading of 45.0 expected.

At 13:15 the first of the week’s important US employment data is set to be released. ADP Non-Farm Employment Change is expected to show 55K fewer jobs in September. This data will be very closely watched as it leads the official government figure by two days.

Later on at 15:00 the ISM Manufacturing PMI will be released. Last month the index was 0.1 below the expansion/ contraction threshold of 50.0 and it is expected that this number will deteriorate to 49.5 for September.

On Thursday at 02:30 the Australian Trade Balance is due. Last month it came in at -0.72B billion AUD. This deficit is expected to be reversed to a slight surplus of 0.26 billion.

This will be followed by the UK’s Nationwide House Price Index at 07:00. The data is expected to show a 1.6% decline for the month of September after a 1.9% fall in August.

One of the main events of the week will be the ECB Interest Rate Announcement and the accompanying ECB Press Conference. The rate announcement is considered a medium volatility event with no change expected. However there is more of a risk to the downside and a rate cut may not be completely unexpected. The Eurozone Minimum Bid Rate currently stands at 4.25%.

The ECB Press Conference is regarded as a high volatility event as traders watch closely for Trichet’s explanation of the rate decision. The language used in the press conference is scrutinized very closely for clues to future rate moves.

Ahead of the Non-Farm Employment Change data due on Friday, Initial Jobless Claims will be closely watched. Last week’s new claims exploded to 493K with the number expected to fall slightly to 475K this week.

Friday will be dominated by news from the US but prior to this UK Services PMI is expected to create high volatility. The service sector is expected to show contraction in the month of September with a reading of 48.0 expected when compared to August’s 49.2.

At 13:30 US employment data will take centre stage. Non-Farm Employment Change is likely to show 100k fewer jobs compared to -84k in August. After increasing from 5.5% 3 months ago, US Unemployment Rate is likely to remain firm at 6.1%.

At 15:00 the final high volatility event of the week is due. This time it showcases the US non-manufacturing sector. ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI is expected to fall to the expansion/ contraction zone for the month of September, deteriorating from 50.6 the month before.

For full updates please see this week's economic calendar.

Filed under Australia, Canada, Economic Indicators, Eurozone, Japan, New Zealand, United Kingdom, United States, Weekly Preview by admin

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