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Top 5 things to watch in markets in the week ahead

Published 02/05/2023, 06:41 AM
Updated 02/05/2023, 07:01 AM
© Reuters

By Noreen Burke

Investing.com -- It’s set to be a much quieter week on the economic calendar, but there’s still plenty for markets to mull over after last week’s rate hike by the Federal Reserve and Friday’s unexpectedly strong U.S. nonfarm payrolls report. Earnings season continues with media and consumer stocks in the spotlight. The Reserve Bank of Australia is set to hike rates again, while data in the Eurozone and the U.K. will be closely watched. Here’s what you need to know to start your week.

  1. Powell speech

After Friday’s blockbuster U.S. jobs report forced investors to recalibrate expectations over how hawkish the Fed may need to be in its efforts to rein in inflation, markets will be closely watching an appearance by Fed Chair Jerome Powell on Tuesday.

The Labor Department reported Friday that the economy added 517,000 jobs in January, almost three times what was expected.

Last week Powell acknowledged progress in the fight again inflation, but the unexpectedly strong jobs data has potentially given the central bank more leeway to keep hiking rates.

Investors are fearful that the Fed’s aggressive rate hikes will plunge the economy into a recession.

There will be an update on the labor market with Thursday’s initial jobless claims numbers, while several other Fed officials are also scheduled to make appearances, including New York Fed President John Williams, Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari and Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic.

  1. Earnings season

Earnings season rumbles on with media and consumer industry stocks taking their turn at the fore.

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Walt Disney (NYSE:DIS), which faces a proxy battle over board representation, and News Corp (NASDAQ:NWSA), which scrapped a plan to reunite with Fox Corp, are reporting on Wednesday and Thursday, while the New York Times (NYSE:NYT) is also due to report on Wednesday.

Earnings from PepsiCo (NASDAQ:PEP) and Kellogg (NYSE:K) on Thursday will offer insight into how consumers are grappling with inflation. More than 90 S&P 500 companies are expected to post results in the coming week.

With 190 companies having reported, S&P 500 earnings are set to have declined 2.4% in the fourth quarter from a year ago - a steeper fall than the 1.6% drop predicted on Jan. 1, according to Refinitiv data.

  1. Central banks

Markets are expecting another quarter-point rate hike by the Reserve Bank of Australia on Tuesday after inflation surged to the highest level in 33 years in the last quarter, defying the RBA's aggressive tightening campaign.

Other economic data shocked the other way as retail sales fell by the most since during the pandemic and house prices suffered their biggest drop since at least 1980.

The Aussie dollar's outlook is untarnished: as long as China's reopening is on track, the currency should push higher.

Meanwhile, the Reserve Bank of India's inflation fight may be over, with economists forecasting another 25 basis point rate hike on Wednesday before a pause.

  1. Eurozone

Comments by European Central Bank officials will be closely watched after the ECB hiked rates by 50 basis points last Thursday and all but promised more of the same in March.

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ECB President Christine Lagarde cited high core inflation to explain why "we have more ground to cover and we are not done".

ECB Vice President Luis de Guindos and Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel are due to make appearances in the coming days, along with Germany’s central bank President Joachim Nagel.

Germany is to release January inflation data - delayed from last week - on Thursday, which economists expect to accelerate again.

Ahead of that, Germany is to release data on factory orders on Monday followed by a report on industrial production on Tuesday.

  1. U.K. to dodge recession

The U.K. is to release gross domestic product data on Friday, which is expected to show that the economy flatlined in the fourth quarter, narrowly avoiding a recession.

Last week the Bank of England said Britain remained set for a recession this year but it was likely to be "much shallower" than previously feared due mostly to lower energy prices and weaker market interest rate expectations.

The BOE hiked rates for the tenth meeting in a row last Thursday but said the tide was turning in its battle against inflation.

Britain's economy has been hard hit by the energy crisis after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. It has also suffered a fall in the size of its workforce along with low business investment and weak productivity growth in the wake of Brexit.

--Reuters contributed to this report

Latest comments

NFP's high is likely to correct next month? Good news is bad news. I doubt the Fed will get a lot more hawkish based on one number but if NFP's is up again then you can bet the Fed will get tougher. UK is not out of the woods yet!
stay tuned for rigged 101
👍🏻
End of the day the only thing to watch is manipulative news to trap.investors
90% of all stocks are owed by those in the top 10% of wealth
Goldilocks economy is here. massive stock mkt rally is to continue. healthy race between US bull mkt vs. China bull mkt. it will be neck and neck.
China market will be stronger, better say, stocks, traded in US, with substantial China exposure should perform better. Unless China gifts Brandon another balloon or more.
CPI is Thursday its the most important thing for US markets next week so Idk what people are crying about?
Don’t know what economic calendar you’re looking at. CPI data comes out Tuesday Feb. 14th - not this Thursday.
CPI duhh
CPI is Thursday you down. thumb r. e. t. a. r. d
The discrepancy between ADP and government payroll reports is huge, and this indicates huge decline in credibility of the US statistical numbers. Basically, they have dropped to China level, common for totalitarian countries. Propaganda supplants anything credible.
 Unlike the government, ADP tries to make it more credible. This makes the discrepancy even more glaring. Understood, Brandon?
You are confused.
Most DOL government employees are still working from home, and it shows.
I would bet on tech companies.
As a matter of fact, when you compare the last CPI and PCEPI with the key Fed rate, you all figure out that the actual rate is still negative means that although the Fed is Hawkish for several months, the return rates in businesses are still more than the safe investments (like the bond market)I believe that the game is started whenever the real rates get into positive territory
the numbers stated by the BLS are cooked!
Hmmm. Who to believe? Career professionals or Gayle Williams. Tough call.
Can anyone tell me how is copper gonna be this week
No one … but long term coper long , buy comapnies that their bussns is selling copper
Near-term future is hazy, as usual. However, copper prospects will improve markedly in 2024.
My crystal ball needs new batteries. Really? No one knows what the price will be in the future.
maybe powell would say time to consider cutting interest rates to keep economic momentum on solid ground. otherwise us economy would fall behind China's. more importantly, probably biden winning 2nd term is important.
Winning elections is largely a propaganda effort. One must not have a strong economy for this. Enough to brainwash masses, already brainwashed on past occasions, to believe that the economy is strong. Also, some attention should be paid to the process of counting votes. This is , actually, a more important practical point to win US elections than any economic issues.
Who said the fed is looking for more leeway to hike rates? What do you think they are going to start the cycle over because they want to kill jobs no matter how much inflation comes down?
standing up to Putin by doing what? Biden is a habitual liar who changes his story like the wind changes direction.
@Rob. My apologies. When you used the word lie, I thought you had an understanding of the definition of the word. I did not know you meant nonconformity with fevered hallucinations. Carry on and don't forget your tin foil hat.
Crickets from Allbright... typical!
anytime way better than a prorussian
US going to war with China
They dont have anyone to fight the war since they missed recruitment goals going woke
 trump = 4 years in the last 12 where Russia did not invade Ukraine.
LMAO - Biden is a tool, Trump was trash, why would anybody defend either one is beyond me !!
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