All Eyes On RBA and RBNZ Decisions, U.S. NFPs and OPEC+ Meeting

 | Oct 04, 2021 03:47AM ET

We have an exciting week ahead, with two central bank decisions on the agenda: the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ). While we expect The RBA to take no action, the RBNZ is expected to lift rates for the first time since the coronavirus pandemic.

Today, ahead of those decisions, the OPEC+ group meets to decide on oil output, while on Friday, we get the US employment report for September. Elsewhere, Chinese and South Korean Markets stay closed due to holidays, while no major indicators are scheduled on the calendar for the rest of the day.

Therefore, at first glance, it appears to be a quiet day for the markets. But, we have a meeting between OPEC and its allies to debate if they are to boost oil production or not.

In July, the OPEC+ group agreed to increase production by 400,000 barrels per day every month at least until April 2022, in a process to phase out 5.8 million barrel per day of existing cuts.

Lately, oil prices soared to a three-year high, driven by supply disruptions and recovering demand from the coronavirus pandemic, as well as due to gas supply shortages.

Last week, four sources told Reuters that the group was considering adding more, but there were no details on how much more or when any supply increases could occur.

Therefore, with that in mind, although October’s volumes are already decided, any decision pointing to more increases in the next few months may result in a decent downside correction in oil prices.

On the other hand, maintaining the existing deal and providing no clues as to whether a decision to increase output could be looming at one of the upcoming meetings could add further fuel to the fuel’s latest uptrend.

On Tuesday, during the Asian session, the RBA meets to decide interest rates. In September, the bank planned to taper purchases from AUD 5 billion to AUD 4 billion per week during the last meeting.

Still, it delayed the date for a new review from November 2021 to February 2022 due to a delay in the economic recovery and increased uncertainty associated with the outbreak of the Delta variant.

As for interest rates, officials stuck to their guns that they are likely to keep them at present levels until 2024.