We have quite a busy slate of event risk to get our teeth into this week. In addition to the Jackson Hole Symposium, an update from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) and the minutes from the previous US Federal Reserve (Fed) meeting claim some of the limelight, as well as inflation data, and manufacturing and services S&P Global PMIs (Purchasing Managers’ Indexes).
Fed Chair Powell in the spotlight
A considerable amount of interest will be on the Jackson Hole Symposium this week, and for good reason. The event takes place between 21 and 23 August, and reportedly, there is so much media heading there that there is not enough room; however, do not quote me on this!
As you can imagine, a rather large spotlight will be on the Fed Chairman Jerome Powell at Jackson Hole. The Fed Chief is expected to take the stage on Friday at 10 am EDT (2:00 pm GMT), where market participants will be closely monitoring his language regarding a timeline for policy easing. His speech will likely be no longer than 15 minutes, if last year’s address is anything to go by.
Although it is impossible to know what Powell will say, he may use the stage to underscore the Fed’s independence. Whatever the case may be, this will be a widely observed affair and could prove market-moving for major asset classes.
Ahead of the Jackson Hole Symposium, we’ll also get the minutes from the previous Fed meeting on Wednesday, which saw the central bank decide to leave the funds target rate on hold at 4.25% – 4.50%. You will recall that the previous meeting also witnessed two Governors dissent – Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman – which was the first time two Governors dissented since the 1930s.
Following a disappointing July payrolls report that showed some very chunky downside revisions to the data – and ultimately saw the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Erika McEntarfer, fired by US President Donald Trump who claimed the data was ‘rigged’ – money markets have now all but fully priced in a 25-basis point (bp) Fed rate cut for September.
Traders will be closely watching the minutes for more insight into the future rate-cut trajectory, following CPI inflation (Consumer Price Index), largely coming in line with market estimates, and wholesale inflation (PPI [Producer Price Index]), considerably beating expectations. Nevertheless, no one knows the full extent of tariff-induced inflation at this point. Still, the slowdown in the labour market data, as noted above, firmly swung the pendulum in favour of easing policy next month.