Latest News

Morning bid Europe-Firming Fed cuts bets buoy stock, undercut dollar

Kevin Buckland gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

The market is focused on the bets that the Federal Reserve will cut rates next week, and the murkiness in the economic data used by Fed officials to make policy decisions.

The Fed is focusing on the state of the labour markets, so the Fed will release the most important data - the monthly payroll figures - in mid-December instead of today.

This is the result of a record-breaking government shutdown. But at least the Fed will get key data pertaining to the other side of its employment-nurturing, inflation-taming mandate today with the delayed release of the PCE deflator, among the Fed's favoured price statistics, although the data is for September.

The CME Group's tool FedWatch shows that bets on the FOMC reducing rates by a quarter point on Wednesday are now at 87%. This has been a steady increase over the last week, after the ADP private jobs report revealed a surprising decline in payrolls.

The data showed that weekly unemployment claims had fallen to their lowest level in three years on Thursday. However, economists believe the figures were skewed due to the Thanksgiving holiday.

The dollar index has been lagging near its five-week low and the stock markets are gaining momentum.

The markets will focus on possible cuts next year in the press conference that follows Jerome Powell's meeting.

It's not the first indication of the outlook for longer-term interest rates. President Donald Trump presented White House economist Kevin Hassett earlier this week as a possible Fed chair when Powell's tenure ends in May.

A report by the FT said that bond investors had expressed concern to the Treasury about the possibility of Hassett becoming the head of the central banks, predicting he'd aggressively reduce rates to align himself with Trump's desire for much easier policy settings.

The Fed is in a period of blackout ahead of the meeting. But markets should be alert to any social media posts from Trump.

Today, ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane is in Europe to chair a session of a conference about fiscal policy.

The UK house prices for November are the most important data points in this region.

The following are key developments that may influence the markets on Friday.

Halifax Halifax house prices November

ECB's Lane chairs a session at the ECB-IMF Conference in Frankfurt

-U.S. PCE deflator for September

(source: Reuters)