US Opening Call from Alpari UK on 6 November 2014
ECB and US data up next as BoE holds steady
• No change from BoE as expected;
• ECB press conference could bring more volatility;
• US jobless claims seen below 300k for eighth consecutive week;
• UK NIESR GDP estimate expected to stay around 0.7%.
As we near the end of the week things are expected to pick up significantly, with two major central bank decisions to come today and the US jobs report for October tomorrow.
Up first we had the Bank of England decision which we have become accustomed to viewing as a non-event due to the rarity of a policy change and the lack of a statement or press conference to accompany it, as we get from many other central banks. The same was true again today, as the BoE did not raise rates and is not expected to until at least the middle of next year. It has already stated that the asset purchase facility will not be reduced until after the first rate hike, so it’s no surprise that there was no change here. Once again we’ll have to wait a couple of weeks for the release of the minutes from the meeting that should reveal if there’s been any change in the voting or even a shift in attitude among the policy makers.
The ECB decision and press conference is almost always the bigger of the two central banks announcements and today is no different. Even though no change in monetary policy is expected from the ECB, the lack of conviction in the stimulus programmes they have announced over the last six months has left people anticipating further measures in the coming months, which makes the press conference hugely important.
The eurozone is teetering on the edge of deflation, something everyone except the ECB seems to be truly concerned about. The ECB may have responded in recent months with rate cuts, ABS purchase programmes and the end of sterilisation of bond purchases, among other things, but it is widely thought that this will not be enough and is in fact just a cop out. They are very reluctant to do quantitative easing and the markets are unwilling to accept anything less.
Mario Draghi has a tendency to cause hysteria in the markets even when he potentially doesn’t mean to. It only takes the slightest suggestion that further easing is likely, or that QE is a possibility, and the markets go wild. I see no reason to expect any different today.
It’s not all about the ECB today, there is plenty more data still to be released. On the US front we’ll get the latest weekly jobless claims number. This fell to a 14 and a half year low a few weeks ago in a sign of just how strong the economic recovery has been in the country. We’re expected another number below 300,000 again today, which would be the eighth in a row, a phenomenal feat. Alongside this we’ll also get non-farm productivity data as well as unit labour costs for the third quarter, which is something that the Fed is paying very close attention to right now, particularly the former, so this should not be overlooked despite not always being the release that everyone shouts about.
Finally we’ll get the UK NIESR GDP estimate for the three months to October. These numbers have been consistently strong, around 0.7-0.8%, and despite seeing some evidence that the economy is cooling a little, I see no reason why we’d see anything much below this.
The S&P is expected to open 2 points lower, the Dow 19 points lower and the Nasdaq 7 points lower.
ECB and US data up next as BoE holds steady
• No change from BoE as expected;
• ECB press conference could bring more volatility;
• US jobless claims seen below 300k for eighth consecutive week;
• UK NIESR GDP estimate expected to stay around 0.7%.
As we near the end of the week things are expected to pick up significantly, with two major central bank decisions to come today and the US jobs report for October tomorrow.
Up first we had the Bank of England decision which we have become accustomed to viewing as a non-event due to the rarity of a policy change and the lack of a statement or press conference to accompany it, as we get from many other central banks. The same was true again today, as the BoE did not raise rates and is not expected to until at least the middle of next year. It has already stated that the asset purchase facility will not be reduced until after the first rate hike, so it’s no surprise that there was no change here. Once again we’ll have to wait a couple of weeks for the release of the minutes from the meeting that should reveal if there’s been any change in the voting or even a shift in attitude among the policy makers.
The ECB decision and press conference is almost always the bigger of the two central banks announcements and today is no different. Even though no change in monetary policy is expected from the ECB, the lack of conviction in the stimulus programmes they have announced over the last six months has left people anticipating further measures in the coming months, which makes the press conference hugely important.
The eurozone is teetering on the edge of deflation, something everyone except the ECB seems to be truly concerned about. The ECB may have responded in recent months with rate cuts, ABS purchase programmes and the end of sterilisation of bond purchases, among other things, but it is widely thought that this will not be enough and is in fact just a cop out. They are very reluctant to do quantitative easing and the markets are unwilling to accept anything less.
Mario Draghi has a tendency to cause hysteria in the markets even when he potentially doesn’t mean to. It only takes the slightest suggestion that further easing is likely, or that QE is a possibility, and the markets go wild. I see no reason to expect any different today.
It’s not all about the ECB today, there is plenty more data still to be released. On the US front we’ll get the latest weekly jobless claims number. This fell to a 14 and a half year low a few weeks ago in a sign of just how strong the economic recovery has been in the country. We’re expected another number below 300,000 again today, which would be the eighth in a row, a phenomenal feat. Alongside this we’ll also get non-farm productivity data as well as unit labour costs for the third quarter, which is something that the Fed is paying very close attention to right now, particularly the former, so this should not be overlooked despite not always being the release that everyone shouts about.
Finally we’ll get the UK NIESR GDP estimate for the three months to October. These numbers have been consistently strong, around 0.7-0.8%, and despite seeing some evidence that the economy is cooling a little, I see no reason why we’d see anything much below this.
The S&P is expected to open 2 points lower, the Dow 19 points lower and the Nasdaq 7 points lower.