Week Ahead: US employment and the RBA headline a full economic calendar

3 May 2021 By Lachlan Meakin

Share

Equity Markets

US Indices took a breather on Friday, easing off all-time highs that were hit during the week on strong tech earnings.

US earnings in the week ahead see a less cluttered calendar with only a handful of big names reporting on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

Source: Interactive Investor

The Australian market will see three of the big four banks reporting half-year results along with Macquarie Group Ltd this week.

Westpac (WBC) kicked off this morning reporting cash earnings rising to $3.5 billion an impressive improvement from $993 million in the same period a year earlier as we see a V-shaped recovery in the Australian economy.

Tuesday will see ANZ (ANZ), Thursday NAB (NAB) and Friday will see Macquarie Group reporting to round out a busy week for the banks. With the recovery in the nation’s economy allowing lenders to wind back bad-debt provisions faster than initially expected, analysts are predicting strong reported results for the financial sector.

Forex Markets – The week’s economic announcements

There is a busy week ahead in the economic calendar, with Central Banks in the US, Australia NZ and the UK all-seeing scheduled releases which should see some volatility in the FX markets as traders attempt to decipher any clues as to future interest rate movements.

Highlights of the week are:

Tuesday

RBA rate statement – After last week’s weak inflation figure the RBA is expected to maintain a cautious approach, maintaining its highly supportive policy settings despite surging growth and falling unemployment. The RBA has made it clear in previous meetings that its main challenge is lifting wages and inflation from record lows and will keep its current accommodative policies until those goals are met.

Thursday

Bank of England Monetary Policy Report

Despite the general consensus being that no major surprises will come from this announcement, The BoE is being tipped by some major lenders to announce they will begin the process of tightening UK monetary conditions at its May policy meeting. Economists at HSBC tell clients in a new research note that the Bank of England (BoE) will announce it is to start tapering its quantitative easing program.

“The May meeting could well be the time the MPC starts a gradual tapering of asset purchases,” says Elizabeth Martins, Senior Economist at HSBC.

Any tapering signal would come as a shock to the markets so the pound could jump higher on the news.

Friday

Friday will see one of the most important economic figures of the calendar month with the release of US Non-Farm Employment Change.

After the impressive +916k gain in March, the US economy is forecast to have added other 975k jobs in April with the unemployment rate falling to 5.8% from 6%.

Last week Fed chief Jerome Powell made it clear in the post-meeting press briefing he wants to see several months of strong data before opening a debate about a taper of asset purchases or rate increases. Any move in the US dollar on these figures could be muted by traders looking ahead to further guidance from the Fed.

 

Tuesday, 4 May 2021 
Indicative Index Dividends
Dividends are in Points
ASX200 WS30 US500 US2000 NDX100 CAC40 STOXX50
0 0 0 0.053 0 3.481 1.146
ESP35 ITA40 FTSE100 DAX30 HK50 JP225 INDIA50
0 0 0 0 2.851 0 0


Disclaimer: Articles are from Alphates analysts and contributors and are based on their independent analysis or personal experiences. Views, opinions or trading styles expressed are their own, and should not be taken as either representative of or shared by Alphates. Advice, if any, is of a ‘general’ nature and not based on your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Consider how appropriate the advice, if any, is to your objectives, financial situation and needs, before acting on the advice. If the advice relates to acquiring a particular financial product, you should obtain and consider the Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) and Financial Services Guide (FSG) for that product before making any decisions.