Weekly Outlook: Flash PMIs, RBNZ Decision, Fed Chief Nomination Under The Radar

 | Nov 22, 2021 03:51AM ET

According to the White House, this will be the week we will get to know who the next Fed Chief will be, with US President Biden weighing whether to keep Jerome Powell or pass the torch to Fed Governor Lael Brainard.

The preliminary PMIs will also be closely watched, especially in the Eurozone, as new lockdown measures have increased concerns over the bloc's economic performance. In New Zealand, the RBNZ is widely expected to hike interest rates again, but the question is by how much.

Monday appears to be a relatively light day in terms of economic data and releases, but that doesn't mean that investors will not lock gaze on their monitors for any potential market-moving headlines.

Besides news that covid infections in Europe have soared recently, prompting fresh lockdowns, something that raises concerns over the future performance of an already fragile economy, there were also headlines last week that, in the US, President Joe Biden may choose the next Federal Reserve Chair before Thanksgiving, which is on Thursday.

Biden has weighed whether to keep Powell, whose term ends in February, or pass the torch to Fed Governor Lael Brainard. Brainard is the candidate of choice for progressive Democrats, while Powell has the backing of moderate Democrats and Republicans.

In any case, Brainard is considered to be more dovish than Powell on monetary policy. Thus, if she is appointed, market participants may push back their rate hike expectations and thereby sell some US dollar.

At their latest meeting, Fed officials began tapering their QE purchases. Although Chair Powell said that they would stay "patient" on interest rates, he did not close the door to the likelihood of a rate hike just after the tapering is over.

Since that meeting, data showed that the labor market continued to improve, and consumer prices kept accelerating in October, while last week, retail sales for the month rose well more than anticipated.

On top of that, last week, Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida said that increasing the tapering pace might be worth discussing at the upcoming gathering, while Chicago Fed President Charles Evans, who is known as a policy dove, said that he is now "more open-minded" to supporting hiking rates next year.

Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic has also signaled his support for a rate hike during the summer months of next year. According to the Fed funds futures, market participants anticipate a 25 bps hike to be delivered in July, while they are fully pricing in another quarter-point increase by the end of the year.

Thus, there is room for slowing down that expectations path if Brainard is chosen as the next Fed Chief. Now, if Powell stays in charge, nothing will change in interest-rate expectations, and thus, we don't expect a significant dollar rally at the time of a potential announcement.

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The currency may slowly continue drifting north, conditional upon more data and headlines supporting the case for a rate hike around the middle of next year.