Week Ahead: Jitters Continue Into Busy Week

Published 06/28/2020, 04:17 AM

United States

The Fed releases the Minutes to their last policy decision and may start to show some signs they are worried about inflation. Policymakers will likely reiterate they are flying blind given the uncertainty about the course of COVID-19 and will likely keep all options on the table for further easing. Negative rates are probably not on their radar unless we see the prospects of longer and deeper recession grow.

A lot of attention will fall on Texas and the halting of their reopening of its economy. Texas was one of their first states to reopen and if they end up having to return to stricter restrictions, Wall Street could anticipate a much deeper recession as the V-shaped recovery could become a W-shaped one. Coronavirus cases are growing by at least 5% in 31 states and this could see lost reopening momentum mean many-out-of-work Americans will struggle to find employment.

Brexit Progress

There have been some signs this week that compromise is possible on some of the more contentious areas of the trade deal but an agreement is still some way off. Thankfully an intense summer of negotiations is planned. Michel Barnier warned that “the real moment of truth” will come in October, which throws the summer deadline out of the window. But let’s face it, that was never going to happen.

Sweden: Riksbank Meets

The Riksbank meets next week but no change is expected, with interest rates currently sitting at 0%. There may be some movement in the next quarter but a lot can change in that time, in the current environment.

China Embroiled In Geopolitical Conflict

China is embroiled in multiple diplomatic conflicts at the moment, from US-China trade, Hong kong’s security law to the standoff with India in the Himalayas. Any of these could quickly escalate and have negative repercussions across markets around the world.

Sunday, China releases Industrial Profits YTD for May. Expected-22.0%, a slight improvement. Worse than expected could see Asia markets sharply lower on Monday morning. Official and unofficial Manufacturing and Non-Manf PMI’s released throughout the week. Potential for short-term volatility.

Hong Kong: Security Law In Focus

Hong Kong security law outline poorly received. 28th June meeting in Beijing to decide exact wording. That has the potential to cause market volatility next week when released. Increased protests and depending on the wording, negative impact on the stock market.

COVID Cases Rise In India As Economy Reopens

The economy continues reopening but COVID-19 cases continue spiking, markets negative. Standoff with China continues in the Himalayas, the situation is tense and could escalate rapidly. There is no significant data.

Australia Dollar Under Pressure

Australian dollar remains under pressure as bull-market correction continues. High potential for more downside. Australia stocks and currency could have a significant vulnerability to sudden downside shifts in sentiment as a proxy for global risk as momentum in global recovery trade appears to be ebbing.

Community infections are increasing again in Victoria, Supermarkets limiting supplies. Markets are negative.

Japan Data To Dominate Week Ahead

North Korean tensions have faded and markets appear positive. COVID-19 risks in Tokyo and Osaka remain. The week ahead will be heavy with data, which is expected to show that Japan’s recovery is very slow. Local markets are negative.

Market

Oil Demand Recovery Receives A Blow

The oil demand recovery story was dealt a blow this week after the US registered the biggest-ever jump in coronavirus cases, suggesting many states may have to visit regional lockdowns soon. States will do their best to avoid a complete reversal with reopening phases, so the economic recovery should not complete stall out.

WTI crude has not been able to do much after capturing the $40 level and seems destined to continue to consolidate between the $35 and $42 level over the next couple weeks. The rapid demand rebound is not happening, but stimulus efforts, pauses in reopening of businesses, improved treatments for the virus are limiting the downward pressure on crude prices.

Oil prices are slightly higher in early trade mirroring the broader fluctuations with US equities.

Gold Heading To Record High Territory?

After nearly testing the $1800 an ounce level earlier in the week, gold prices are consolidating as the US dollar firms up. Gold will continue to see strong support as the coronavirus situation deteriorates globally and as central banks and governments will continue to pump in more stimulus to avoid strains to the financial system and to salvage as many jobs as possible.

Gold prices (in dollar-terms) seem destined for record-high territory as the latest spike in COVID-19 cases will see a much slower economic recovery that will keep the stimulus trade going strong. The global recession might be deeper than expected, but a scramble for cash (extreme risk aversion forces investors to sell their gold positions for cash) will not likely take place for gold given the optimism with eventual rebound and breakthroughs on the treatment and vaccine front.

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