Sunday Jun 7 2020 06:51
7 min
As has become the norm, we can expect a slew of dire economic data over the coming week. We’ll be looking at the figures for clues on how long the economic recovery could take, and also if projections for the expected Q2 collapse look like they were dire enough.
The FOMC could bring back its economic projections, and may also provide some additional clarity on the policy outlook with a shift towards implicit forward guidance.
Traders, economists, businesses, and policymakers across the globe are still uncertain what shape the post-lockdown recovery will take. Many are still hoping for a sharp rebound, but it seems unlikely.
Amongst all this uncertainty, business and consumer sentiment is a useful indicator of how people on the ground feel about the road ahead. Unsurprisingly the surveys so far have been deeply pessimistic.
But economies are reopening, lockdown measures are being eased, and some semblance of normal life is returning for people in many countries. Has this translated into a more positive outlook, or has taking the first step simply highlighted how far we have left to travel on the road to recovery?
US inflation data is due this week. The headlines recently have been impressive – April saw the biggest drop in price growth since December 2008, and core inflation posted the largest drop since the data series began in 1957.
A single month of sharp price declines isn’t going to worry policymakers too much, but the big worry is that we’re entering an extended period of deflation. Interest rates are already at rock bottom, but another below-zero reading for price growth could see markets questioning how much longer the FOMC can leave it before pushing rates negative.
The Federal Open Market Committee announces its latest policy decisions on Thursday.
Markets will be hoping for more direction from the FOMC this time around. April’s meeting, and the subsequent minutes, failed to provide any concrete outline of how monetary policy could evolve in the future to respond to worsening economic conditions. Members had discussed establishing targets for unemployment and inflation, and also for setting a threshold date before which rates would not be increased.
We’re likely to see the Summary of Economic Projections make a return; this was dropped in March, because the outlook for the economy at the time was too uncertain to call. This, and a move towards implicit forward guidance, will give markets a more accurate picture of Fed policy going forwards.
A slew of UK data for April gives us a glimpse of the dreaded Q2 performance. It’s accepted that this quarter will be dire, but monthly GDP and industry production figures will show whether even the worst-case scenarios have been gloomy enough.
The GDP average for the three–month period ending in April is expected to print at -12%, down from -2% in April. On a monthly basis, growth is forecast down -24%, while the year-on-year drop will be around -29%. Manufacturing production is likely to have fallen almost -30%. We’re in the midst of what is supposed to be the worst of it, but there are still questions over just how badly the economy has been hit.
With earnings season over, the corporate calendar is looking decidedly thin, although Adobe could prove an interesting highlight.
The company’s software is cloud-based, much to the relief of many of the businesses who rely on it but have employees stuck at home away from their work computers. The fact its products are sold on a subscription model could help to keep revenue relatively stable, although like most companies Adobe is likely to report a hit to business during the quarter.
Read the full schedule of financial market analysis and training.
07.15 UTC | Daily | European Morning Call |
17.00 UTC | 08-June | Blonde Markets |
From 15.30 UTC | 09-June | Gold, Silver, and Oil Weekly Forecasts |
17.00 UTC | 10-June | FOMC Preview with chief market analyst Neil Wilson |
14.45 UTC | 11-June | Master the Markets with Andrew Barnett |
Watch out for the biggest events on the economic calendar this week:
06.00 UTC | 08-Jun | German Industrial Production |
08.30 UTC | 08-Jun | Eurozone Sentix Investor Confidence |
01.30 UTC | 09-Jun | AU NAB Business Confidence |
09.00 UTC | 09-Jun | Eurozone Final Employment Change / Revised GDP (Q/Q) |
00.30 UTC | 10-Jun | Westpac Consumer Sentiment |
01.30 UTC | 10-Jun | China CPI |
12.30 UTC | 10-Jun | US CPI |
14.30 UTC | 10-Jun | US EIA Crude Oil Inventories |
18.00 UTC | 10-Jun | FOMC Rate Decision |
18.30 UTC | 10-Jun | FOMC Press Conference |
Pre-Market | 10-Jun | Dollarama – Q1 2021 |
12.30 UTC | 11-Jun | US Unemployment Claims |
14.30 UTC | 11-Jun | US EIA Natural Gas Storage |
After-Market | 11-Jun | Adobe – Q2 2020 |
06.00 UTC | 12-Jun | UK GDP (M/M), Manufacturing/Industrial Production (M/M), Construction Output (M/M) |
14.00 UTC | 12-Jun | Preliminary University of Michigan Sentiment Index |