1

WEEKLY ECONOMIC CALENDAR AHEAD

Here is what you need to know about the important news between December 20th 2021 and December 24th 2021, where we take a look at the economic data, market news and headlines likely to have the biggest impact on the market prices this week and beyond, as well as the US Dollar, and other key correlated assets.

The market was action-packed in the past week, dominated by major central bank announcements, some of that could spill into the coming week as investors continue to weigh the Federal Reserve’s plan to raise interest rates and the spread of the omicron Covid variant.

The USD weakened after the Federal Reserve projected three rate hikes next year.  The Fed announced on December 15th that it would speed up the end of its bond-buying. The central bank also provided a new interest rate forecast which showed members expect as many as three hikes next year, when previously they did not forecast any.

Sterling shot higher after the Bank of England surprised the market with its first-rate hike in three years. Britain became the first G7 economy to hike interest rates to 0.25% from 0.1% on Thursday, Dec 16. The BoE said inflation was set to hit 6% in April, three times the BoE’s target level.

EUR strengthened after the European Central Bank said a rate hike in 2022, ECB cuts stimulus but maintains support, the ECB, which has undershot its inflation target for most of the past decade, kept interest rates on hold and announced the end of its pandemic emergency asset-buying scheme next March.

The Bank of Japan kept monetary policy ultra-loose at its meeting on Friday, no change from the Bank of Japan policy meeting and only tinkering with QE programs leave USD/JPY back at the mercy of the US/Japan rate differential.

 

Central Bank

Now the Federal Reserve’s hawkish reset is complete, the Fed brought no major surprises. As expected, it announced it will wind down bond purchases at a faster rate, acknowledging the elevated consumer price pressures that have persisted through the back half of the year. The Fed is done with speaking appearances for the year, so thin trading conditions should settle in once we get past Thursday’s economic data.

There are some economic reports to watch, including consumer confidence on Wednesday that will show if the US consumer remains strong. Another round of housing data On Thursday should show existing home and new home sales remain hot. The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge will show pricing pressures continued to surge in November.

These final weeks of 2021 could be challenging for investors who were hoping for a quiet and positive end of the year. The calendar is looking a little thin, with policymakers now in holiday mode, and many in the markets likely also. The biggest risk to the short-term outlook remains COVID, and whether this Omicron wave leads to significant school closures and cancellation of holiday travel plans.

 

Other important economic data is as follows: (All times listed are GMT+0)

 

Monday, December 20, 2021

17:00 : US  – CB Leading indicators

 

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

02:30: AUS – Monetary Policy Meeting – RBA minutes of its December interest rate meeting

15:30:  CAD – Retail Sales

17:00:  EUR – Consumer Confidence

 

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

09:00 : UK – Final GDP

15:30 : US – Final GDP

17:00 : US – CB Consumer confidence

17:00 : US –  Existing home sales

17:30 : US –  Crude Oil Inventories

 

Thursday, December 23, 2021

15:30: CAD ­  –  GDP

15:30: US ­  –  Durable goods

17:30: US ­  –  New home sales

 

Friday, December 24,2021

US Markets closed for Christmas holiday

European markets close earlier

 

Thanks for reading! Have a great week!

 

Important Note: The information found on Ausprime platform is intended only to be informative, is not advice nor a recommendation, nor research, or a record of our trading prices, or an offer of, or solicitation for a transaction in any financial instrument and thus should not be treated as such. The information provided does not include any specific investment objectives, financial situation and needs of any specific person who may receive it. The past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance and/or results. Past Performance or Forward-looking scenarios are not a guarantee of future performance. Actual results may differ materially from those anticipated in forward-looking or past performance statement.