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Top 5 Things to Watch in Markets in the Week Ahead

Published 04/10/2022, 07:20 AM
Updated 04/10/2022, 07:21 AM
© Reuters

By Noreen Burke

Investing.com -- It’s set to be a busy week in markets, despite being a short one, with U.S. inflation data due and the first quarter earnings season getting underway. Inflation could hit fresh highs, while bank earnings are expected to decline. The ECB is to meet as it grapples with record high euro zone inflation and economic uncertainty stemming from the war in Ukraine. Central bank meetings in both Canada and New Zealand this week will also underline the worldwide effort to contain inflation. Here’s what you need to know to start your week.

  1. U.S. CPI

February's consumer price inflation reading of 7.9% was the largest annual increase in 40 years and U.S. data on Tuesday is expected to show that CPI rose by an annualized 8.5% in March as the war in Ukraine sent commodity prices sky high.

A strong inflation reading would bolster the case for more aggressive rate hikes by the Federal Reserve, likely adding to investor concerns that tighter monetary policy could act as a drag on the economy.

The Fed hiked rates by a quarter of a percentage point in March and last week’s minutes from that meeting indicated that more substantial rate hikes and a balance sheet runoff are probably on the cards in the coming months as policymakers try to prevent high inflation from becoming entrenched.

  1. Economic data

Aside from the CPI numbers, the U.S. is set to release data on producer price inflation on Wednesday. The latest figures on initial jobless claims are due for release on Thursday along with data on retail sales and consumer sentiment.

Figures on industrial production and the Empire state manufacturing index will be release on Friday, which will be the Good Friday holiday.

Several Fed policy makers are also scheduled to speak during the week.

Fed Governor Michelle Bowman, Fed Governor Christopher Waller, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic and Chicago Fed President Charles Evans will be speaking Monday.

Fed Governor Lael Brainard and Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin are to deliver remarks at events on Tuesday, while Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester and Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker are to speak on Thursday.

  1. Bank earnings

Big U.S. banks will kick off the first quarter earnings season this week and analysts are expecting financial sector earnings to decline from a year ago. Investment bank revenues are taking a hit in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, while some banks are making provisions for losses related to Russia.

JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM), the largest U.S. bank, is reporting on Wednesday, while results from Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS), Citigroup (NYSE:C) and Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) will follow on Thursday.

Bank shares have performed badly so far this year, losing 11% against the S&P 500's 6% decline.

Bank executives will likely be pressed for their view on whether the U.S. economy can continue to grow against the background of the economic fallout from the war in Ukraine and a more aggressive Federal Reserve.

  1. ECB

The ECB is to hold its latest policy setting meeting on Thursday and while euro area inflation is running at a record high 7.5%, fueled in large part by accelerating energy costs, policymakers are reluctant to tighten policy amid uncertainty over the impact of the war in Ukraine on the bloc’s economy.

But with inflation still showing no signs of peaking, calls for rate hikes by the more hawkish members of the ECB’s governing council may become more difficult to ignore.

Market watchers increasingly expect the ECB to raise interest rates this year.

In March the central bank announced a reduction in its bond buying stimulus program that would see the program end in September. At the same time, it said an interest rate increase could follow “some time” after the end of bond purchases.

  1. Inflation fight

Central banks in both Canada and New Zealand are both set to meet on Wednesday, with market watchers expecting officials at both banks to deliver their largest rate hikes in 20 years amid soaring inflation worldwide.

According to data compiled by Reuters, markets are pricing in a 90%-plus chance of a half a percentage point rate hike from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and a better-than-80% likelihood of the Bank of Canada does the same.

With Canadian inflation seen above target until 2024, another half percentage point hike may come in June. New Zealand delivered a quarter percentage point rate hike in February -- its third -- and flagged the possibility of bigger rises ahead.

--Reuters contributed to this report

Latest comments

Lot of bad english here.
anyone seen Fed Mester TV show chat? She wants to lower the cost of inflation by raising the costs of demand making it too expensive. One was cars and used cars are inflated because not enough new cars.Tell me this isn't contradictory.is more about decreasing jobs and wages.
Dr. Jerome Bubble Powell admitted in a congressional hearing, pointing his finger to himself, that he caused the inflation. He caused the Ukraine situation, PutinOPEC, and children will have to have a story in their Book, Dr. Jerome Bubble riding the stimulus lion 🦁, how the lion got him or vice versa...
Helicopter money end. Ukraine crisis its perfect reason for Powel. That its.
I am The mind of Jerome Bubble Powell; let me reveal myself. I can soft land or hard land the market and GDP but I must land because I have been up in the air for too long. I will land at a speed of my own cockamamie analysis and choice. If I land hard or soft will make little difference. So I will choose my Speed and time
Falling stock prices cause inflation resultantly; so more inflation is ahead not less. Even if Fed raises rates to 5% tomorrow, inflation will not go away. This current inflation is here to stay, this is called the Covid inflation that is more sticky than Covid itself
Falling stock prices cause inflation resultantly; so more inflation is ahead not less. Even if Fed raises rates to 5% tomorrow, inflation will not go away. This current inflation is here to stay, this is called the vivid inflation that is more sticky than vivid itself
Ooooopsss
Market priced in nothing... inflation data will be higher n will have some dovish n Hawkish fed comment just to have iV high.. I'm stay Puts on every bounce.
CPI is Tuesday according to investing.com so it's 50/50
.50% rate hikes are fully priced in even though the FED never said they would do it every meeting like the talking heads say. There is also good reason to believe the fed will not do a half percent rate hike and start unwinding the balance sheet at the same meeting. Harker made that clear they feel doing both is hitting the break to fast. Everyone is spreading doom and gloom because they know how most react to it. Every article including this has a negative slant. "Inflation could get worse" yes it can also get better.
as long as the 10 year 3months yield curve which is currently high doesn't invert then no recession meaning no bear market meaning quality stocks and the main indices will go higher
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