U.S. employment rose at a steady clip in July and wages rebounded
after unexpectedly stalling in June, signs of an improving economy
that could open the door wider to a rate hike soon. But Friday's
data did not cement expectations the Fed will act next month.
"Because this report was not extraordinarily strong, it was simply
in line with expectations, that leaves the markets having to look
toward other data," said Paul Christopher, head global market
strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute in St. Louis.
July retail sales, expected on Thursday, will be the key number to
look for, while comments by policymakers Dennis Lockhart and William
Dudley will also be carefully scrutinized.
Atlanta Fed President Lockhart, a centrist who votes on the Fed's
policy-setting Open Market Committee, is due to speak on Monday,
with New York Fed President Dudley, seen as a dove and a close ally
of Fed Chair Janet Yellen, following on Wednesday.
On the other side of the pond, Greek bailout talks, UK labor market
figures and euro zone second quarter GDP data will dominate the
agenda in a week where most Europeans will be on summer holidays.
"Unemployment may creep higher again due to election uncertainty ...
but rising wages are likely to be the key focus, given the Bank of
England's gradual shift to more hawkish commentary regarding
medium-term inflation risks," ING analysts wrote in a note. Monthly
jobless and average earnings data are due on Wednesday.
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While there is nothing like the high drama of recent months in the
Greek saga, with signs of progress in the reform talks, negotiations
are entering a crunch period this week, with Athens keen to wrap
things up just after Aug. 15 to receive aid in time to make an Aug.
20 bond repayment to the European Central Bank.
The August reading of Germany's ZEW investor morale indicator on
Tuesday and second-quarter preliminary GDP data on Friday will gauge
the strength of recovery elsewhere in the euro zone after German and
French industrial output data disappointed.
Before that, investors will closely monitor a raft of Chinese data,
including July inflation published on Aug. 9 and July trade data a
day before.
"July's manufacturing PMIs failed to point to any meaningful pickup
in the Chinese economy, therefore a keen eye will be kept on the
official 'hard' data for clues on the health of the economy,"
Investec analysts said in a note.
(Additional reporting by Mike Dolan and Americas Economics desk;
Editing by Catherine Evans)
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