Main Macro Events This Week
United States: Global markets will remain pre-occupied with assessing risks for a June Fed rate hike, and will focus on Fedspeak, data, and international economic and financial conditions for more insight. Chair Yellen’s conversation with Greg Mankiw on Friday will be the highlight of the week. Data will be important for the Fed outlook. Decent results on housing, durable orders and PMIs will be necessary but not sufficient to underpin rate expectations. The second reading on Q1 GDP (Friday) will be of interest as growth is central to the FOMC outlook. Growth is forecast to be revised higher to 0.9%, almost double the 0.5% initial reading. April new home sales (Tuesday) are projected to rebound 1.8% to a 520k pace. April new durable orders (Thursday) should rise another 0.5% after March’s 0.8% rebound from February’s 3.1% drop. The advance trade report on goods (Wednesday) is expected to post a $58.6 bln April deficit after narrowing to -$56.9 bln in March. The final May consumer sentiment report (Friday) is expected to inch up to 96.0 from the 95.8 preliminary print. Markit’s flash May readings on manufacturing (Tuesday) and services (Thursday) are due, along with the May Richmond Fed index (Tuesday) and the KC Fed survey (Thursday), the FHFA home price index for March (Wednesday), and April pending home sales (Thursday).
A busy Fedspeak week, topped by Chair Yellen on Friday also includes: Monday with St Louis Fed’s Bullard (a voter) speaking on normalization, he is also speaking on Thursday. SF Fed’s Williams, a non-voter, is also on tap (Monday). Philly Fed centrist-hawk and non-voter Harker (Monday). He’ll be back at the podium Wednesday speaking at a forum on the economy. Minneapolis Fed’s Kashkari (Wednesday) speaks on energy and monetary policy also Wednesday Dallas Fed’s Kaplan and Fed governor Powell.
Canada: Markets are closed Monday for Victoria Day. There is a BoC policy announcement (Wednesday). We expect no change in the current 0.50% rate setting alongside a constructive outlook. Average weekly earnings (Thursday) feature on a very thin data docket this week. We expect earnings to expand 0.2% m/m in March after the 0.3% gain in February.
Europe: Greece and an almost full round of May survey data will take centre stage this week. Eurozone Finance Ministers will meet once again on Tuesday to discuss the progress of the Greek bailout review. Data releases include the detailed reading of German Q1 GDP, which is likely to confirm overall growth at 0.7% q/q. The week starts with preliminary PMI readings for May (Monday) where we are looking for a rise in the manufacturing reading to 51.9 from 51.7 and an improvement in the services reading to 53.3 from 53.1. Germany has both ZEW investor confidence and the Ifo reading for May (Tuesday). ZEW Economic Sentiment is seen improving to 11.4 from 11.2. The Ifo Business Climate reading, meanwhile, should benefit from the robust orders trend in the last couple of months and ongoing strong consumer demand and we are looking for a rise in the overall reading to 106.8 from 106.6. The calendar also has final Spanish Q1 GDP, German retail sales as well as French business confidence numbers. The Eurogroup meeting aside, events include ECB speak from Praet, Knot, Villeroy and Constancio among others, which are likely to confirm the central bank’s wait and see stance.
UK: This Wednesday will mark the four-weeks-to-go point until the June 23 referendum on EU membership. Support for the UK remaining in the EU seemed to advance last week, with the FT’s Brexit poll tracker on Friday showing 47% favour Remain versus 41% favouring Leave. The bookmaker Ladbrokes was on Friday giving 79% odds for the UK stay in the single market, up from 71% at the start of the week. The week’s calendar starts with monthly government borrowing figures and the CBI’s May survey on retail and wholesale sales (Tuesday). The latter is expected to improve to a +8 reading in the headline. The second estimate of Q1 GDP data (Thursday) is expected to remain unrevised at +0.4% q/q and 2.1% y/y. April BBA mortgage approvals and the May Gfk consumer sentiment (Friday) round out the week, with both expected to dip slightly from respective prior-month outcomes.
China: China’s calendar is empty. However, traders will closely monitor CNY. The yuan was fixed slightly higher late last week with many interpreting the action as a sign from the PBoC that it wants to maintain stability if the dollar were to gain further.
Japan: Already published earlier today a series of weaker than expected data: Manufacturing PMI down to 47.6 from 48.2, All industry activity improved to 0.1% from -1.2% but was well below expectations of 0.7% and the Leading Economic indicator fell from 98.9 to 93.3. next data release is not until Thursday when April services PPI data will be released, expected up 0.2% y/y, unchanged from March. April national CPI (Friday) is seen at -0.4% y/y overall, from the prior -0.1%, and -0.4% y/y from -0.3% on a core basis. Tokyo April CPI should slip to -0.5% y/y overall from -0.4%, and fall to -0.5% y/y from -0.3% on a core basis.
Australia: A thin docket of economic data features Q1 private new capital expenditures (during the week), seen improving 1.0% following the 0.8% gain in Q4 (q/q, sa). Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Stevens delivers a speech (Tuesday). Assistant Governor (Financial Markets) Debelle has a busy end to the week. He has public engagements Thursday and two on (Friday) in New York.
Janne Muta
Chief Market Analyst
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