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Economic Calendar - Top 5 Things to Watch This Week

Published 05/31/2020, 06:55 AM
Updated 05/31/2020, 06:56 AM
© Reuters.

By Noreen Burke 

Investing.com - Heightened tensions between the U.S. and China will mean that risk sentiment remains fragile this week, while the highlight of the economic calendar will be Friday's May non-farm payrolls report. Ahead of that, investors will have the chance to parse other economic data, including initial jobless claims and factory orders. The European Central Bank is widely expected to top-up its emergency asset purchasing program and the UK and European Union are to hold another round of virtual Brexit talks. Here’s what you need to know to start your week.

  1. U.S. unemployment seen soaring to near 20%

Friday's U.S. jobs report is expected to show that the unemployment rate rose to 19.7% last month with employers forecast to have cut 8.25 million jobs, compared with the record 20.5 million jobs lost in April.

While some encouraging signs in the employment picture have emerged in recent weeks as some workers rejoin jobs with businesses starting to reopen in the second half of the month, these changes are unlikely to be reflected in the May data.

Any positive surprise, however, is likely to be cheered by stock market bulls eager to grasp at signs of a rebound from the coronavirus induced economic slump.

  1. Jobless claims, ISM data

While Federal Reserve officials are now in the traditional blackout period ahead of their next policy meeting in June the calendar this week features ISM manufacturing data Monday, Thursday’s jobless claims report and reports on factory orders and private sector hiring.

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In the euro zone investors will be looking at figures on German factory orders for April while the UK calendar has the final manufacturing PMI on Monday and then the final services PMI on Wednesday.

  1. U.S.-China standoff

The standoff between the worlds two largest economies over Beijing’s new security legislation for Hong Kong, which investors fear could erode the city's freedoms, looks set to continue this week.

U.S. President Donald Trump has vowed to end Hong Kong's special status if Beijing imposes new national security laws on the on the Asian financial center, but China's state media has pushed back, saying this would hurt the United States more than China.

Whether Trump goes so far as to scrap his Phase 1 trade deal with China or merely takes some symbolic steps around sanctions and visas for Hong Kong citizens could determine how long the latest global stock market rally will last.

  1. ECB to boost stimulus program

While on the face of it the announcement of the 750 billion euro EU plan to prop up economies hit by the coronavirus pandemic has eased some pressure on the ECB, officials are still expected to unveil fresh stimulus on Thursday.

The EU recovery fund will take time to set up and will likely face hurdles on the way and the ECB is burning through its emergency asset purchases, which will likely run dry by October - unless expanded.

The ECB is widely expected to announce a 500 billion-euro ($555 billion) increase to its Pandemic Emergence Purchase Program and extend is duration until mid-2021.

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The central bank will also publish updated economic projections which could confirm President Christine Lagarde’s assessment that the bloc’s economy is in the midst of a much-deeper downturn than initially believed.

  1. Brexit talks

Another round of Brexit talks get underway on Tuesday ahead of the June 18-19 EU summit by which time London needs to make up its mind about asking for an extension to the transition agreement.

There's not much time left until the December 31 Brexit deadline, when the two sides will part ways - with or without a trade deal in place.

Negotiators have not made much progress and the EU has urged Britain to make a bigger effort and be more realistic about what it can achieve in talks.

The resulting uncertainty has pinned sterling close to its lowest levels in almost 30 years. And as if a potentially messy Brexit was not enough, the British currency is also battling with the prospect of negative interest rates and a prolonged recession.

--Reuters contributed to this report

Latest comments

So bullish Lol. Anyone who predicts with such certainty in the midst od so many risk factors is talking out of their rear end
Top 1 thing. Fed simulation will keep the market up
In my opinion, the riots might effect the market. We will see.
They should, if they don't then the market is an illusion
Lol, the market IS an illusion beyond that one detail. Theres SO MUCH more destruction in the economy not priced in right now that its not even funny.. a second crash is coming soon. S&P 2,500*
GBP/USD at major resistance now, accompany that by the negative situations, price surely to retrace..
fix the typo. "on the on the Asian financial center". Others will follow
next will be rise us vs eu
NASDAQ
Ever notice how liberals destroy everything they touch? Just look atound! Families, businesses, towns, cities, states! Incompetent fools.
Lunatic
Agree greg!
Look at every blue state
On Friday Trump promised to strong-arm American protestors and kiss Dictator rear.
How many hopes do we have this week?
I've decided to start up a barbed wire fence company to protect the wealthy from the starving 100 million Americans that don't realize what's happened to them yet. Get that fence ready!! How 'bout Armed Security? Even if the company is a bust, doesn't matter. I pull some repo loans, let the Fed pump my stock. Cash and move to Barbados.
U.S. stocks finished mostly higher on Friday after President Donald Trump announced measures against China in response to new security legislation that were less threatening to the U.S. economy than investors had feared. https://worldabcnews.com/wall-street-ends-mostly-higher-as-u-s-china-spat-simmers/
What are your thoughts on how this uncertainty will affect Gold?
Goal is Collapsing But somehow the trading stopped Last Friday due to an unknown reason.
Gold will fly. Buy JNUG.
Please watch the behaviour of the gold last two hours before market stop. !! I was not able to buy and to sell.Usually thousand Ouns Required 9000 security but last two hours it was requiring more than 25,000 security which is impossible to trade!
Riots in the US is another thing to watch...
they don't even bother to mention it... and maybe, maybe it doesn't matter right now, but some day it will...
Shhhh.... what riots? Stonks.
how do you thing the riots in the us will affect the market?
SpaceX launch might offset the effects of riots in the market
no one can work right now anyway with covid, riots dont change that just extend it slightly
riots aren't going to do anything to the markets ... we were at the peak 20% unemployment... you have to wait 2 months from now to see the numbers change to what they really are with the reopening ... market news is a month behind and stock prices are 6 months ahead .. so if you are looking at the markets now and looking at the data now you will always be confused as to what will effect the markets.. we have the most powerful army in the world no riot will grow to be that bad ... especially when you have even at today's data 80% working .. but really that number is more like 90% ... yes that is still 13 million people unemployed but that is a much more manageable number for the fed. as the summer moves on more things will open and I think we can get to that number down to 7 percent by the fall
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