Week ahead – Race to face the Don

Key Economic Releases and Events

The week ended on a more anxious note after all the optimism a week earlier, when investors were lauding the decelerating new coronavirus cases. There’s still optimism that the corner has been turned but now it’s the corporate side that’s spooking investors.

This week, Apple and others were quick to warn about the economic consequences of the last month, although few details were given at the time. More will likely follow in the coming weeks which may continue to spoil the party for investors, all-too-used to records at this point.

It’s election year in the US and while we’re all already looking to November, we first have to find out who US President Trump is going to be facing first. On Tuesday, the candidates will go head-to-head once again and Mike Bloomberg will be hoping to come away with a few more plaudits this time.

Monday, Feb 24th

Start Date (GMT) Country Relevance Indicator Name Period Reuters Poll
23 Feb 2020 New Zealand Medium Retail Qrtly Vs Yr Ago Q4
24 Feb 2020 Thailand Medium Customs-Based Trade Data Jan -0.80B
24 Feb 2020 Singapore Low Core CPI YY Jan 0.8%
24 Feb 2020 Singapore Medium Consumer Price Index YY Jan 0.90%
24 Feb 2020 Denmark Low Retail Sales YY Jan
24 Feb 2020 Germany High Ifo Business Climate New Feb 95.1

 Tuesday, Feb 25th

25 Feb 2020 Germany High GDP Detailed QQ SA Q4 0.0%
25 Feb 2020 Germany High GDP Detailed YY NSA Q4 0.3%
25 Feb 2020 Germany Not Rated GDP Detailed YY SA Q4 0.4%
25 Feb 2020 Mexico Medium GDP YY Final Q4
25 Feb 2020 Mexico Medium GDP QQ Final Q4
25 Feb 2020 Hungary High Hungary Base Rate Feb 0.90%
25 Feb 2020 Hungary High O/N Deposit Rate Feb -0.05%
25 Feb 2020 United States Not Rated API weekly crude stocks 17 Feb, w/e

 Wednesday, Fed 26th

26 Feb 2020 Thailand Medium Manufacturing Prod YY Jan
26 Feb 2020 Singapore Medium Manufacturing Output MM Jan
26 Feb 2020 Singapore Medium Manufacturing Output YY Jan
26 Feb 2020 Norway Medium Labour Force Survey Dec 4.0%
26 Feb 2020 Hong Kong Low GDP Final QQ Q4
26 Feb 2020 Hong Kong Low GDP Final YY Q4
26 Feb 2020 Mexico Low Retail Sales YY Dec
26 Feb 2020 United States High New Home Sales-Units Jan 0.705M
26 Feb 2020 United States Not Rated EIA Weekly Crude Stocks 21 Feb, w/e
26 Feb 2020 New Zealand Medium Trade Balance Jan

 Thursday, Fed 27th

27 Feb 2020 South Korea High Bank of Korea Base Rate Feb
27 Feb 2020 Hungary Low Unemployment Rate 3M Jan
27 Feb 2020 Sweden Medium Retail Sales YY Jan
27 Feb 2020 Mexico Low Jobless Rate Jan
27 Feb 2020 United States High Durable Goods Jan -1.5%
27 Feb 2020 United States High GDP 2nd Estimate Q4 2.1%
27 Feb 2020 United States High Initial Jobless Claims 22 Feb, w/e 212k
27 Feb 2020 South Korea Medium Industrial Output YY Jan
27 Feb 2020 Japan High CPI Tokyo Ex fresh food YY Feb 0.6%
27 Feb 2020 Japan High CPI, Overall Tokyo Feb
27 Feb 2020 Japan High Unemployment Rate Jan 2.2%
27 Feb 2020 Japan Medium Retail Sales YY Jan -1.1%

 Friday, Feb 28st  

28 Feb 2020 Turkey Medium Trade Balance Jan
28 Feb 2020 Denmark High GDP QQ Prelim Q4
28 Feb 2020 Denmark High GDP YY Prelim Q4
28 Feb 2020 Denmark High Unemployment Rate Jan
28 Feb 2020 Switzerland Medium Retail Sales YY Jan
28 Feb 2020 Thailand Medium Trade Account Jan
28 Feb 2020 Thailand Medium Current Account Jan
28 Feb 2020 France High GDP QQ Final Q4 -0.1%
28 Feb 2020 France Not Rated GDP YY Final Q4
28 Feb 2020 Switzerland High KOF Indicator Feb 97.5
28 Feb 2020 Switzerland High Official Reserves Assets CHF Jan
28 Feb 2020 Hungary Medium GDP YY Final Q4
28 Feb 2020 Sweden High GDP QQ Q4 0.2%
28 Feb 2020 Sweden High GDP YY Q4 0.7%
28 Feb 2020 Germany High Unemployment Chg SA Feb 5k
28 Feb 2020 Germany High Unemployment Rate SA Feb 5.0%
28 Feb 2020 Norway Medium Reg’d Unemployment SA Feb
28 Feb 2020 Norway Medium Reg’d Unemployment NSA Feb 2.3%
28 Feb 2020 India Medium Fiscal Year GDP 17/18 2019
28 Feb 2020 India High GDP Quarterly YY Q3 4.7%
28 Feb 2020 South Africa Medium Trade Bal (Incl. Region) Jan
28 Feb 2020 United States Medium Personal Income MM Jan 0.3%
28 Feb 2020 United States Medium Personal Consump Real MM Jan
28 Feb 2020 United States High Consumption, Adjusted MM Jan 0.3%
28 Feb 2020 United States Medium Core PCE Price Index MM Jan 0.2%
28 Feb 2020 United States Low Core PCE Price Index YY Jan 1.7%
28 Feb 2020 United States Low PCE Price Index YY Jan
28 Feb 2020 Canada Low GDP QQ Q4
28 Feb 2020 Canada High GDP QQ Annualized Q4 0.2%
28 Feb 2020 Canada Not Rated GDP YY Q4
28 Feb 2020 Canada High GDP MM Dec 0.2%
28 Feb 2020 United States High U Mich Sentiment Final Feb 100.9

Country

UK

The UK political scene was quiet this week, with MPs on recess, giving the rest of us a break. They all return next week, as Labour leadership hopefuls take to the stage to convince the rest of us they can’t do any worse than Corbyn.

Data this week brought some reprieve for the Bank of England, as inflation bounced back more impressively than expected. Traders weren’t too deterred though and continue to price in a 60% chance of a rate cut this year, which seems a little hopeful and pointless to me.

US

Michael Bloomberg arrived fashionably late to the party this week and his entrance was, reportedly, far from extraordinary. Other candidates rounded on him and his billions, most notably Bernie Sanders who is looking like a strong contender at this stage. Bloomberg has plenty left in the bank though and his first appearance may not have been one to remember but you don’t become a billionaire and New York Mayor by accident. The Democratic Party may be the biggest thing standing between him and the White House.

China

The hot topic is still CoVid-19 and its impact for Asia and the global economy as a whole. We’ve now been through two iterations of the methodology for reporting the number of cases which now, on the face of it, appear to be slowing, even though a bit of scepticism is creeping in among observers. We are waiting for WHO comments on the latest change.

Meantime Asia is responding with economic stimulus measures and rate cuts. China dropped its Loan Prime Rate on Thursday on the back of earlier cuts to its medium-term lending facility (MLF). China and Singapore have laid out stimulus measures to mitigate the economic impact of the virus. Anecdotal evidence out of China shows small private companies cutting wages, delaying salary payments or even not paying staff at all. We can expect more of these kind of reports in coming weeks.

Data takes a backseat under these circumstances but for the record next week we have retail sales data and industrial production for January with the PMIs for February on the last day of the month, Saturday.

A reversal in the slowdown of the number of new cases would take the edge off risk appetite, capping the current equity rally, at least temporarily, and forcing flows into the usual safe havens of gold, the yen, Swiss franc, the US dollar and US Treasuries. It would again be negative for oil and industrial metals.

Hong Kong

Hurt by the protests and now CoVid-19, the Hong Kong economy is falling apart, with tourist arrival collapsing and hotels with only 25% occupancy. We see Q4 GDP numbers next Wednesday, and they are unlikely to be good. The economy is already in technical recession and facing the prospect of a third quarterly contraction in a row. There haven’t been any announcements of fiscal stimulus measures yet.

The Hong Kong 33 index is holding up well, as is the local dollar, despite the coronavirus effect and a firmer US dollar. Weak GDP data are likely to pressure local equities and could pull USD/HKD back up to the middle of its trading band.

Australia

Thursday’s employment report for January showed an uptick in unemployment but strong jobs creation. Given the RBA’s focus on unemployment, the higher rate saw Australian yields lower and the Aussie under pressure.

The focus now is on a dovish RBA, which could turn at any moment, and whilst this in place will continue to pressure the Aussie.

Japan

Q4 GDP data came in worse than expected, showing the first quarterly contraction in a year, which was blamed on the CoVid-19 threat. The economic toll is mounting, not to mention the bad news from the cruise ship quarantined off Japan. Data next week includes industrial production, retail trade and unemployment.

With no end to the CoVid-19 situation in sight, Japan markets could trade negatively with the yen in demand if we see another spike in cases.

Singapore

Singapore’s close links with China have brought the city state to the forefront of coronavirus news, and this week’s budget introduced measures to mitigate the economic impact. The wider budget deficit is not an issue for its AAA rating, said Fitch.

The MAS has already said there is room within the NEER trading band to ease policy and we may see an inter-meeting adjustment given the next policy meeting is not scheduled until April. The Singapore dollar weakened to the lowest level since May 2017 versus the US dollar this week. An early policy easing amid rising virus cases would pressure the SGD further.

Market

USD

The US dollar index came within touching distance of 100 on Thursday, spurred on in recent weeks by everything from safe haven flows to the outperformance of the US. Whatever is happening, dollar is king. It’s fallen just short of that psychological barrier though at the first time of asking but still finds itself at a near-three year high.

Oil

It’s been another good week for oil prices but the rally quickly ran out of gas after the inventory data on Thursday. The report gave Brent one final kick higher before the profit taking kicked in at $60 and since then its been in paring mode. The more downbeat end to the week isn’t helping, with crude slipping more than 1% on Friday. Oil prices have been heavily punished throughout the outbreak though so if we really are in containment mode, traders may become more interested in the dips once again.

Gold

Gold is heading for its best week since August as it capitalized on growing insecurity in the stock market to charge through its $1,600 resistance and burst higher. The yellow metal is now testing $1,650 and packing a punch. With investors growing ever more fearful about the corporate fallout of the coronavirus, the path of least resistance for gold looks upwards. It’s been quite a strong week though so a little profit taking in the near-term wouldn’t be outrageous, with $1,650 possibly offering a logical zone for this.

Bitcoin

I’m not sure bitcoin enthusiasts even know if it’s a safe haven at this point but regardless, it’s hovering around $10,000 and as long it in, around or being linked to the news in any way, it seems capable of finding a reason to rally. It’s consolidated over the last couple of weeks but there’s no major signs of weakness there at the moment. The halving in May could keep prices elevated in the coming months.

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Former Craig

Former Craig

Former Senior Market Analyst, UK & EMEA at OANDA
Based in London, Craig Erlam joined OANDA in 2015 as a market analyst. With many years of experience as a financial market analyst and trader, he focuses on both fundamental and technical analysis while producing macroeconomic commentary. His views have been published in the Financial Times, Reuters, The Telegraph and the International Business Times, and he also appears as a regular guest commentator on the BBC, Bloomberg TV, FOX Business and SKY News. Craig holds a full membership to the Society of Technical Analysts and is recognised as a Certified Financial Technician by the International Federation of Technical Analysts.