Commodities Week Ahead: Will Jackson Hole Be Boon Or Bane For Oil And Gold?

 | Aug 19, 2019 04:47AM ET

Will the Fed lend a helping hand to commodity markets this week? Or will it kick oil and gold prices down the alley?

The Federal Reserve holds its annual gathering in Jackson Hole from Thursday through Saturday, with Chairman Jerome Powell addressing the forum on Friday. Prior to that, on Wednesday, the central bank will publish minutes of its July meeting, where it cut interest rates for the first time in a decade.

What Will The Fed Do To Address Recession Risks?/h3

For the global financial calendar, the Jackson Hole retreat is as big as it comes: Investors across the world will scrutinize the meeting for any insight into future monetary policy.

While Powell’s speech will be a high point, other discussions that even remotely touch on interest rates can trigger significant market moves, especially with investors psyched up for another Fed cut in September. Any hints of a rate reduction will almost certainly boost crude and gold prices.

Even without adding to the 25-basis point cut ordained by the central bank in July, investors will be watching to see how the Fed responds to recession fears whipped up by the recent inversion of the U.S. Treasury yield curve.

On The Radar Too: ECB Minutes, German PMI/h3

Jackson Hole aside, there will be more central bank watching this week, with the European Central Bank reporting its July minutes on Thursday, a day after the Fed’s.

While the ECB left rates unchanged last month, it did adjust its forward guidance to indicate that rates could go lower. That essentially means the ground has been laid for a potential September cut. It also indicated that it could revive its quantitative easing program in coming months.

Ahead of the ECB minutes, investors will get an update on the health of the euro zone’s manufacturing and service sectors. PMI data from Germany will be closely watched after the euro area’s largest economy contracted in the second quarter, fueling fears over the prospect of a recession.

On the U.S. side, market attention will largely be on existing home sales and new home sales numbers, slated for Wednesday and Friday, respectively. At the moment, both are supported by firm consumer confidence, rising wages and falling mortgage rates.

Mixed Drivers For Oil/h3

Volatility has whipsawed crude markets for two straight weeks now, with traders unsure of direction.