Weekly Outlook: Fed, BOE, SNB And BOJ Decisions In Focus

 | Jun 13, 2022 04:10AM ET

We enter another busy week, with four major central banks deciding on monetary policy: The Fed, the BoE, the SNB, and the BoJ. The Fed and the BoE are widely anticipated to hike interest rates by 50 and 25bps, respectively, and therefore, all the attention is likely to fall on signals on how they plan to move forward.

On the other hand, we expect the SNB and the BoJ to remain on hold, but we cannot overlook the growing speculation that these Banks may soon need to change course.

h2 Monday /h2

A relatively light day in terms of economic releases and events. The only top-tier data releases are already out, and those are the final UK GDP for Q1, as well as the industrial production and trade balance for April.

h2 Tuesday/h2

We get the UK employment report for April, the German ZEW survey for June, the Eurozone industrial production for April, and the US PPIs for May. None of these releases are usually major market movers, and we doubt this could be the case this week, especially with four major central banks delivering their monetary policy decisions.

h2 Wednesday/h2

The spotlight will likely fall on the FOMC decision. The bank is widely anticipated to deliver another 50bps hike, with the CME FedWatch tool suggesting a 25.7% chance for a triple hike. Thus, with that in mind, we don’t believe that a 50bps liftoff will move the markets by itself. Yes, a 75bps increase could lift the dollar and push equities lower, but we doubt this will take flesh.

Therefore, we believe that all the market attention will fall on the accompanying statement, the economic projections – especially the new dot plot –, and the press conference by Fed Chair Jerome Powell.

Following the release of the minutes of the prior gathering, there had been some speculation that due to the latest economic slowdown in the US, the Fed may need to pause its tightening process after summer. However, several policymakers argued against such a strategy, with Friday’s accelerating inflation adding more credence to their view.

Given that the Fed has telegraphed a double hike now and another one in July, the focus will fall on what they signal from there onwards. In our view, they are unlikely to signal a pause after summer, but we also see them not keep signaling double hikes.

Due to the latest economic slowdown, they may avoid committing themselves to such bold actions from now. After all, there are a lot of data to be released and seen until September, signaling 25bps hikes towards the end of the year.