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Top 5 Things to Watch in Markets in the Week Ahead

Published 04/03/2022, 07:09 AM
Updated 04/03/2022, 07:10 AM
© Reuters

By Noreen Burke

Investing.com -- The highlight of the coming week will be Wednesday’s minutes of the Federal Reserve’s March meeting, which will be scrutinized amid widespread expectations for a half percentage point interest rate hike next month. Along with concerns over the economic impact of tighter monetary policy, developments around the war in Ukraine will remain front and center. While stocks have shrugged off concerns over the outlook for growth, the bond market is flashing warning signs. The European Central Bank will also publish minutes, while the Reserve Bank of Australia is to meet. Meanwhile, oil prices will remain in the spotlight after their steepest weekly decline in two years. Here’s what you need to know to start your week.

  1. Fed minutes

Wednesday’s minutes of the Fed’s March meeting will give investors an update on how officials view the monetary policy outlook and may also contain more details on plans to shrink the central bank’s $9 trillion balance sheet.

The Fed hiked rates last month by a quarter of a percentage point, the first step in a monetary tightening cycle aimed at curbing inflation, currently at a four-decade high. Since the March meeting several Fed officials, including Chair Jerome Powell, have indicated that they are prepared to hike rates more aggressively to prevent high inflation from becoming entrenched.

Friday’s solid employment report paved the way for a half percentage point rate hike from the Fed at its next meeting on May 4.

Several Fed officials are also due to make appearances during the week, including Fed Governor Lael Brainard, Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari, New York Fed President John Williams and St. Louis Fed President James Bullard.

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  1. Bond market flashes red

A closely watched part of the U.S. Treasury yield curve inverted again on Friday after the strong U.S. jobs report solidified expectations for bigger rate hikes by the Fed.

An inversion of the yield curve, when shorter-dated yields rise above longer-dated ones, is a phenomenon that has predicted past recessions.

Stock markets have seemingly shrugged off concerns that tighter monetary policy and uncertainty arising out of the war in Ukraine could tip the economy into recession, but bond investors seem to have taken a more pessimistic view.

However, some analysts think the reliability of yield curve inversions as an indicator of recession has decreased, particularly as the Fed’s massive bond purchasing programs are keeping long-dated yields suppressed.

  1. Oil price volatility

Both Brent and U.S. crude oil ended last week down around 13%, their largest weekly declines in two years after U.S. President Joe Biden announced a release of 1 million barrels per day of oil for six months from May, in what is to be the largest ever release from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine has seen oil prices rise around 30% in the first quarter, with soaring energy costs becoming a key driver of inflation expectations.

But energy market analysts appeared skeptical of the plan’s success.

“The knee-jerk selloff from the SPR announcement of the release of 1-million barrels a day from the SPR over the next six months won’t have a lasting impact on oil prices, so if geopolitical risks continue to intensify, oil will recover most of this week’s losses,” said Ed Moya, analyst at online trading platform OANDA.

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  1. Economic data

Apart from Wednesday’s Fed minutes, the economic calendar is light for the coming week with the main focus likely to be Tuesday’s ISM services PMI.

Economists are expecting the index to rebound to 58.0 from what was a twelve-month low of 56.5 in March. The effects of the Omicron wave saw the index fall from an all-time high of 69.1 reached in December and concerns over soaring inflation may now limit consumer demand.

The U.S. is also to release factory orders, initial jobless claims, and trade balance.

  1. Central banks

The ECB is to publish the minutes of its March meeting, with slightly more than a week to go until its upcoming meeting on April 14. The ECB surprised markets last month when it announced that it was speeding up plans to withdraw stimulus measures.

Since then, data showed that Eurozone inflation hit a fresh record high of 7.5% in March, adding to pressure on the ECB to act to curtail inflation even as economic growth is slowing amid the lingering effects of the pandemic and fallout from the war in Ukraine.

Elsewhere, the Reserve Bank of Australia is expected to keep its rate on hold at its latest policy setting meeting on Tuesday.

The Bank of Canada is to publish its business outlook survey on Monday and an upbeat reading could cement expectations for a half percentage point rate hike at its next meeting on April 13.

--Reuters contributed to this report

Latest comments

depleting the US oil reserves to combat the Brandon price increase is absolutely the worst thing ever. Those reserves are called Reserves for a reason and because the current administration has created a problem they should just fix what they have destroyed, our energy independence
The market often rallies at unexpected times.
Futures red guess.big money wants you.to sell.sellSELL.
Any thoughts on gold miners this week?
FED rate hike are overrated..reducing FEd balance sheet(9T) n how quickly is done is the key. FEd ask for this situation bc they kept saying inflation was transitory for months knowing it wasn't since they have all the world financial #s in their books.
Who are these people that wake up every morning and panic sell every time there is a negative headline? Why did they buy and how much conviction could they have?
That's why people with patience always...or almost always make money....and the jumpy ones lose😉😎
Market transactions are like 90%+ done by machines, or some ridiculous number like that.
Great info
If anybody is jumping in the stocks now thinking they can reprise the 2021 run is quite likely to be surprised. This year is not for the stocks. As I see it Nifty will be rangebound between 16k-18k for the next 9 months
Okay keep your money in a savings account and let us worry about investing?
Abhishek ,i think your comments are shallow without any backing but throwing some range that is a common knowledge already. There is no dearth of such unwarranted analysis
The market didn't "shrug off" anything. why should anyone sell now over a recession that is 2 years out if it happens at all?
Lmao people are literally upset and but hurt that the correction wasn't longer. They refuse to believe the market can do anything but go down this year. They know the future and it's the apocalypse
Nothing "paved the way" for a half point hike. Jpow said he would do that "if necessary" at a future meeting. He didn't say guaranteed half point next meeting and everyone blew it out of proportion
People are upset if you say there won't be 6 half point rate hikes in a row. They know everything
What is going to happen to DJ And other indices
it's going to be a flattish week to slightly positive
I expect the market to be poised for a 200 point move in either direction and it will be a decisive move. 2 camps are ready to buy or sell with conviction. I don't see a consolidation.
brainard and bullard 🙄 they are going to be "hawkard"
The fed member speech every week are worthless only Jpow makes decisions
good nickname
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