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Top 5 Things to Watch in Markets in the Week Ahead

Published 03/07/2021, 06:48 AM
Updated 03/07/2021, 06:49 AM
©  Reuters

By Noreen Burke

Investing.com -- Investors will be closely watching the progress of President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion pandemic relief plan through Congress this week against a backdrop of concern over what such a large stimulus package could do to inflation and interest rates. Market participants will be focusing on U.S. inflation figures with a report on the consumer price index due out on Wednesday and the producer price index scheduled for Friday. In Europe, the European Central Bank will hold its latest policy meeting on Thursday. Meanwhile, the UK is to publish January growth figures which will reflect a return to a full national lockdown at the start of the year as well as the fallout from Brexit. Here’s what you need to know to start your week.

  1. Stimulus: a double-edged sword?

After the Senate passed President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion stimulus package on Saturday it will move to a vote in the House on Tuesday. After its passage by the House, it will be sent to Biden, who hopes to sign the bill before enhanced jobless benefits expire on March 14.

The pandemic relief package will give a powerful boost to the economic recovery and to the stock market, but optimism has been offset by fears over rising inflation and interest rates.

Investors have taken the recent run-up in bond yields - which has propelled the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield to levels not seen since before the pandemic - as a sign of potentially damaging inflation expectations.

But U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen indicated Friday that higher long-term Treasury yields were a sign of expectations for a stronger recovery, not of increased inflation concerns.

  1. U.S. inflation figures

Investors will be closely watching U.S. inflation figures on Wednesday and Friday amid worries over the potential implications of rising price pressures.  

Last week Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said that even if prices jump as anticipated this spring, "I expect that we will be patient," and not change monetary policies that need to remain supportive until the economy is "very far along the road to recovery".

This week Fed officials will be in the traditional blackout period ahead of the central bank’s next meeting on March 16-17. Other reports to watch this week include Thursday’s figures on initial jobless claims and an update on consumer sentiment.

  1. Buy the dip?

With U.S. technology shares sliding, investors are debating whether the decline is an opportunity to buy the dip or a sign of more pain to come for stocks that have driven market gains for years.

Taking advantage of pullbacks in names like Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) has been a winning strategy over the last decade.

Some market participants, however, worry the current decline could be longer-lasting than previous dips, as expectations of a robust U.S. economic recovery fuel a shift away from the “stay-at-home” trade towards stocks set to benefit from the economy reopening. Surging bond yields are accelerating that rotation.

Last week the Nasdaq posted its third straight weekly decline, but reversed losses late Friday to end up 1.6% in a sign some bargain-hunters may have already swooped in after a bumpy week.

  1. ECB meeting

Thursday’s ECB meeting is the main event for the euro zone after extended lockdowns in the first quarter. Policymakers will assess the damage to economic growth against a background of a vaccination rollout that is struggling to gain traction, particularly compared with similar efforts in the UK and the U.S.

ECB head Christine Lagarde will also announce the bank’s new quarterly forecasts at the post policy meeting press conference.

Besides the ECB meeting, the euro zone will release figures for January industrial production on Friday, which are expected to contract.

  1. UK GDP

The UK is set to release January growth figures on Friday, and it will come as no surprise that these are expected to point to a sharp contraction at the start of the year as the country returned to a full national lockdown and the effects of Brexit hit trade.

GDP growth will take a hit from the closure of several consumer service sectors.

But there will also be a hit from manufacturing as the change in EU trade terms kicked in. The jury is still out on how big the economic impact from the change in trade terms could be.

--Reuters contributed to this report

Latest comments

New money goes to stocks. They accumulate most of inflation. Stay invested. It is the only way left to protect your wealth in relative terms.
They have to print, raise tax or issue bonds for all these spending. Usd rallied lately, meaning they stop printing. Tax is not raising. The only one left is gov bonds. The media is telling u # all the time.
TAXES TO DA MOON!!!!!
to Mars.
Heh this is crazy. I'm getting out of stocks while I'm winning.
Btw I think a LOT of people here weren't around 2018 which was basically "yesterday" so they are very fresh to believe that another crash can happen after Covid 2020.
The Covid crisis has been used to control and deal with that second crash. it will happen, but it will take years. And will likely happen very differently than we expect.
i sold my stocks on Friday only to see them rebound right after.
ok tks admin !
Buy oil and hold till August/September. Buy banks and financials that profit on rising interest rates. The rest is conversation.
What's your broker I don't have that many stocks
Very good advice! Appreciate that!
Callon petroleum up 147 percent this month, oh ******you were not lying
no economic is rising on higher prices of commodity. no buyer on higher prices
I disagree, there was a heavy surge of newcomers into this months trading. Psychology will scare a few away but will somehow encourage some to buy the "DIP"
I expect markets move sideways this week. Next week would be volatile, as the markets will force the FED to be clear on actions for rising inflation / US Treasury yields. So my strategy this wee is cash in any profits as soon as it arises and then wait till uncertainty diminishes next week after FED.
buy bitcoin
I find the bid and ask price spread in bitcoin too large to trade with little risk
Who knows? But I expect a knee jerk stimulus spike up Monday.
What about the Dow? How Is the stimulas going to affect it? How is is it going to react to it on Monday? What do you guys think?
The stimulus has been priced in for weeks.Don't expect big moves on the upside with the Dow. It might pop a little on Monday take your profit if it happens. Fear of inflation is dominant
if oil keeps rising inflation worries will set in more
 Only because OPEC+ didn't raise production near as much as expected. Might be a different story next month.
Trump was best than Biden. commodity prices was not high like today . doble prices of edible oil , wheat, corn, copper, crude
sometimes...the smart thing to say......is nothing at all
-- BTW, IMO we're not yet done on the recent downside of the indices. I wouldn't be surprised if there was a gonzo up-gap on Monday March 8th followed by another move lower before we snap into a range bound market -- What do you guys 'n gals think?
yes, its a temporary upside and more, I mean a lot more pain on the way till at least APR
if investing seeing this messages than give some relief to poor people of world
huh?
printing more money for the poor. hmm?
don't jokes for the poor people. time is not equal every time
we've all been down and have taken any hand we can to come back up. even you.
poor people are facing problem on higher prices commodity like edible oil and crude oil in world
Huh?! What do you mean by edible oil? why are olive oil and vegetable oil going up?
yes
Yeilds go up because Biden issues too much gov bonds. It Doesnt matter. Fed does matter. If the central bank stops buying gov bonds, market goes down.
Kaveh Sun, Biden has nothing to do with issuing government bonds. That's not something that the president does.
where does Biden get money for all his policies? Tax is 1. The other is bonds.
u think? Chairman will b out if he doesnt do what the whitehouse want.
Don't let the new actions make you fotget the old one, in the final 2018 yiled got up and the growth stocks got down and instead of Corona war you need to.put China war in that time. so what happen after, the growth stocks rose strong and broke the yield. History never forget.
You are right .. money makes world go round and when people het money they spend and that alone rises the economy .. thsts why they call it a stimulas packet stimulate the economy common sense just like you .. make it simple for everyone to umderstand
Right. It is the money that people need to invest in crypto and stocks in order to make some of them. Unemployment benefits and the stimulus checks. That is what the stimulus package is all about.
 -- Except that we've been living off the profits of this 1.9tn stim package since about October 2020 and it's been priced into the market already a few times over.
simple logic lies here.If package 1.9 trillion comes out, market will go up.supply of money increases in the market.supply and demand theory.no need to go further.
not that simple
liquidity trap works in the field of debt market not in capital market my friend!
you better go through essentials of economics once more!
I think Nasdaq has been abandoned by the Fed, and if the high yield does not affect anything on US economy, then the Fed won't go check the high yield
So Market go down side is possible????
yes market go deeply down
its not a tech bubble, just a sign of the times now. nasdaq will go up again next week, onwards and upwards to new highs
big cap stocks are a bubble. historical high valuations. this will tank
big cap stocks are a bubble. historical high valuations. this will tank
Market crash soon, specially on Tech Stocks.
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