Take Five: Taking in the vistas from Jackson Hole
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[August 20, 2022] (Reuters)
- Jackson Hole, Wyoming, is the focal point
for markets in the coming week as investors zero in on the Federal
Reserve's annual confab.
Business activity indicators in the euro zone and an inflation gauge in
the United States are also on tap, while rate cuts may be looming in
China.
Here is a look at the week ahead from Tommy Wilkes and Marc Jones in
London, Kevin Buckland in Tokyo, Ira Iosebashvili and Lewis Krauskopf in
New York, Riddhima Talwani in New Delhi, Sumanta Sen in Mumbai and
Vineet Sachdev in Bengaluru.
1/JACKSON HOLE JAMBOREE
How big will future rate hikes be? How strong is the economy? What about
quantitative tightening?
Investors hope the Federal Reserve may shed light on those questions
when central banking heavyweights meet on Aug. 25-27 for their annual
symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
U.S. stocks have screamed higher this summer, despite Fed warnings that
expectations of a peak in inflation and a so-called dovish pivot from
the central bank may be premature.
Some investors believe Chairman Jerome Powell will push back against the
market’s optimism again, reminding investors that there is one more
inflation report and another jobs number before the Fed’s September
meeting.
Also in demand are further details on the Fed’s reduction of its $9
trillion balance sheet, known as quantitative tightening, which some
investors have flagged as a potential risk to market liquidity.
2/MORE PMI PAIN?
Concerns the euro zone economy is hurtling toward recession are
building. Flash purchasing managers index survey data should shed some
light on how soon that might happen.
The August numbers, due on Tuesday, may show another month of business
activity contraction after S&P Global's final composite Purchasing
Managers' Index (PMI), seen as a good gauge of economic health, fell to
a 17-month low of 49.9 in July.
Euro zone businesses are struggling from soaring energy prices and
shortages, surging inflation and expectations of higher interest rates.
An economic sentiment index for euro zone powerhouse Germany recently
showed investor sentiment falling in August as fears grow that the
rising cost of living will hit private consumption.
Tuesday will also include the release of flash PMI numbers for the
United States and Britain.
3/CHINA'S LIQUIDITY TRAP
More rate cuts loom in China, but analysts and investors doubt they will
give any support to an economy ravaged by a property crisis and
strangling COVID-19 lockdowns.
The People's Bank of China sets the so-called Loan Prime Rate for
one-year and five-year borrowing on Monday - the basis for business
loans and mortgages, respectively - after recently surprising markets by
cutting key bank lending rates.
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Teton Mountain Range is pictured from
the windows of Jackson Lake Lodge during the three-day "Challenges
for Monetary Policy" conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, U.S.,
August 23, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Crosby
The move stoked slowdown fears that sent the yuan sliding to a two-month low.
The PBOC is prodding banks to lend more, and pouring money into the financial
system. But demand to borrow simply is not there, with corporates fretting about
the economic outlook and consumers wary with property prices plunging.
4/PRICE POINTS
With markets twitching on any inkling that surging inflation has peaked or
remains at four-decade highs, the U.S. Federal Reserve's preferred measure of
prices is due on Aug. 26.
The release of the personal consumption expenditures price index for July comes
after another key inflation measure, the consumer price index, was flat on a
monthly basis in July, the largest month-on-month deceleration of price
increases since 1973, a result that heartened stock investors.
In the 12 months through June, the PCE price index advanced 6.8%, the largest
increase since January 1982.
With recession fears lingering and investors eager for any clues about the
economy's strength, data on new home sales hits on Tuesday and durable goods on
Wednesday.
5/SIX MONTHS OF WAR
Wednesday marks the six-month anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, or
special military operation as Moscow called it.
Not only has it been a humanitarian tragedy and plunged the world into a new
Cold War, it has also been a key driver of mounting recession worries,
especially in Europe where a gas crisis looms large.
The region's gas prices have nearly tripled since June alone. Rationing in
powerhouse economies like Germany may well be needed, but the ECB, Bank of
England and others are adamant they simply must crush the inflation it is
fuelling.
Other highly sensitive markets have proved remarkably elastic. Wheat and corn -
of which Ukraine and Russia are both huge suppliers - have swooped right back
down, while Moscow's main source of income, oil, is now selling for less than
when the invasion started.
(Compiled by Lewis Krauskopf in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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