Sunday Aug 2 2020 05:21
6 min
Earnings season is winding down, but the Q3 report from Walt Disney will be closely watched this week. On an economic front, the RBA and BoE both hold monetary policy meetings, and Friday’s US nonfarm payrolls report threatens to keep markets volatile right up until the weekend.
A slew of PMIs this week will provide more information on the state of the global economy. Finalised manufacturing and services PMIs are due for the Eurozone, UK, and US. The closely-watched China Caixin manufacturing PMI arrives first on Monday, with the services PMI following during Wednesday’s Asian session.
Also in the docket this week are the US ISM manufacturing and nonmanufacturing indices. The nonmanufacturing index is expected to pull back slightly after leaping nearly 12 points in the June reading, while still remaining firmly in growth territory.
The Reserve Bank of Australia meets against a backdrop of surging coronavirus cases both globally and domestically.
Fresh lockdowns threaten the economic reopening and recent CPI data revealed that prices fell on an annual basis for the first time since 1997 in Q2, with the quarter also posting its biggest drop in the consumer price index on record.
Markets are likely looking for policymakers to do more to stimulate inflation. With interest rates already effectively zero, and no appetite to go lower, the focus will be on whether the RBA considers other forms of stimulus necessary now or in the near-term.
Investors will be watching three key factors in Disney’s upcoming Q3 earnings report, which is due after the close on August 4th. The biggest portion of the company’s revenue comes from its theme parks – some of these have reopened, but others have remained closed even past their original reopen dates thanks to surging case numbers.
Delays not only to the release, but also the production, of blockbuster movies will impact both the bottom line and guidance.
Disney+ might prove a silver lining – lockdown has seen a surge in subscriber numbers for rival Netflix, and investors will be watching the see if Disney has enjoyed a similar boom.
The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee will announce its latest monetary policy decision on Thursday.
Chief economist Andy Haldane recently told the Treasury Select Committee that he believes the UK economy has recovered “roughly half” of the huge slump seen in March and April, but warned that unemployment could hit highs not seen since the mid-80s.
Haldane listed several policies the Bank of England could employ if policymakers deem it necessary – any talk of negative interest rates would be the most headline-grabbing, but the MPC could also consider additional QE, credit easing, or forward guidance.
No changes to interest rates or QE is currently expected. The BoE will also publish the latest Inflation Report on Thursday.
July’s US nonfarm payrolls report is due for release on Friday. The past two readings have shown a huge rebound after the -20 million collapse seen in April, with 2.7 million jobs added in May and 4.8 million in June. Economists expect to see another 2.2 million jobs were created in July.
There is still a long way to go until the US is back to pre-Covid levels of employment, and surging case numbers and fresh restrictions on businesses in many states could weigh on future jobs gains.
Read the full schedule of financial market analysis and training.
07.15 UTC | Daily | European Morning Call |
12.00 UTC | 03-Aug | Master the Markets with Andrew Barnett |
From 15.30 UTC | 04-Aug | Weekly Gold, Silver, and Oil Forecasts |
17.00 UTC | 06-Aug | Election2020 Weekly |
12.00 UTC | 07-Aug | Marketsx Platform Walkthrough |
Here are some of the biggest earnings reports scheduled for this week:
05.30 UTC | 04-Aug | Bayer – Q2 |
04-Aug | Sony – Q1 | |
Pre-Market (UK) | 04-Aug | BP – Q2 |
After-Market | 04-Aug | Walt Disney – Q3 |
05.00 UTC | 05-Aug | Allianz – Q2 |
Pre-Market | 05-Aug | Regeneron |
06.00 UTC | 06-Aug | Glencore – Q2 |
06-Aug | Adidas – Q2 | |
Pre-Market | 06-Aug | Siemens – Q3 |
06-Aug | Uber – Q2 |
Watch out for the biggest events on the economic calendar this week:
01.45 UTC | 03-Aug | China Caixin Manufacturing PMI |
07.15 UTC – 08.00 UTC | 03-Aug | Finalised Eurozone Manufacturing PMIs |
08.30 UTC | 03-Aug | Finalised UK Manufacturing PMI |
14.00 UTC | 03-Aug | US ISM Manufacturing PMI |
04.30 UTC | 04-Aug | RBA Interest Rate Decision |
22.45 UTC | 04-Aug | New Zealand Quarterly Employment Change / Jobless Rate |
01.45 UTC | 05-Aug | China Caixin Services PMI |
07.15 UTC – 08.00 UTC | 05-Aug | Finalised Eurozone Services PMIs |
08.30 UTC | 05-Aug | Finalised UK Services PMI |
14.00 UTC | 05-Aug | US ISM Nonmanufacturing PMI |
14.30 UTC | 05-Aug | US EIA Crude Oil Inventories |
11.00 UTC | 06-Aug | Bank of England Rate Decision, Monetary Policy Report |
12.30 UTC | 06-Aug | US Weekly Jobless Claims |
14.30 UTC | 06-Aug | US Natural Gas Storage |
01.30 UTC | 07-Aug | RBA Monetary Policy Statement |
06.00 UTC | 07-Aug | Germany Industrial Production / Trade Balance |
12.30 UTC | 07-Aug | US Nonfarm Payrolls, Average Earnings, Jobless Rate |