Global central bankers enter a new week under fresh pressure to outline the next steps in their battle to address the impact of the coronavirus outbreak.
Policymakers got a wake-up call last week as the Federal Reserve’s emergency interest rate cut did little restore confidence, leaving officials hunting for innovative ways to add stimulus that can have a more targeted effect on the disruption caused by the virus.
The first institution to have grapple with that conundrum this week is the European Central Bank, which meets on Thursday. While Christine Lagarde has less room to act than the Fed, investors nonetheless see a good chance of a rate cut, while economists are eyeing up ways the institution could adopt to funnel money into the economy.
“The Fed’s attempt at calming markets didn’t have the desired effect, meaning central banks need to weigh their limited options carefully,” according to Bloomberg Economics’ Jamie Rush. “The ECB’s problem is that inaction would tighten financial conditions,” said Rush, who predicts policymakers in Frankfurt will reduce the deposit rate by 10 basis point and launch a new targeted refinancing operation.
Elsewhere, investors will be on the lookout for clues for how global central banks and governments will fine-tune their actions. The U.K. government will unveil its response at Wednesday’s budget, with a package of fiscal measures that could be supplemented by Bank of England support.
Here’s what happened last week and below is our weekly wrap of what else is going on in the world economy this week.
China’s economic data this week will provide a glimpse of how badly the virus has hurt the real economy. Chinese numbers published Saturday showed exports fell more than expected in the first two months of this year and inflation data due Tuesday will offer more insight on supply disruptions, while Taiwan’s trade figures on Monday will show the impact on supply chains.
Japan releases revised estimates for GDP on Monday and central bank officials in Australia and New Zealand will give speeches outlining what the virus outbreak means for monetary policy. India publishes inflation data later in the week, which will guide calls for a possible interest rate cut in coming months.
The U.K. is set to deliver its first response to the economic threat posed by the outbreak on Wednesday when Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak outlines the budget. Investors expect the Bank of England to follow with an interest-rate cut later this month.
Ukraine’s central bank is set to cut interest rates, while Serbia is likely to pause for a fourth meeting. Mauritius’s central bank also holds its monetary policy committee meeting, its first after its top management was changed and a governor was appointed.
On the data front, euro-area industrial production numbers will show the state of play in January just before China became engulfed by the virus outbreak that has since spread across the globe. Israel expects to confirm the economy ended last year on an upswing when it releases GDP data for the fourth quarter. And in South Africa, a quarterly business confidence index will probably show sentiment in the economy has deteriorated even further in the first three months of the year.
The Federal Reserve is in blackout next week with no scheduled speeches just as investor fears over spreading coronavirus intensify bets that the central bank will cut rates again at its meeting March 17-18. Traders will also be watching for next week’s economic data including job claims, trade and consumer sentiment data to gauge the impact of the health crisis on the economy.
On Monday, data in Mexico will likely show inflation last month accelerated further above target, raising the odds that policymakers will keep their key rate unchanged at their March 26 meeting.
In Brazil, Wednesday’s consumer price report should show inflation in February slowed below the year-end target of 4%. The report takes on added significance after policymakers last week said the coronavirus outbreak poses a bigger risk of stalling the economy than reigniting inflation, suggesting they won’t end Brazil’s record easing cycle when they meet next week. Peru’s central bank will probably cut rates when it meets on Thursday.
(By David Goodman, with assistance from Alaa Shahine, Margaret Collins, Nasreen Seria, Rene Vollgraaff and Robert Jameson)
Comments
Bruce J BarronBru0 and
The central bank’s are in on this regardless of this. The stock trading should have stopped 5 days ago. The Fed in the US, a private corrupt organization which has plenty of money in stock have the cash on hand or probably print it at the first sign of recovery. 100,000 cases of coronovirus among seven billion people is a joke. And they make no atempt in the news to tell us what kind of patients were already compromised. I had wonderful stocks and had to sell to meet margin requirements. I have no cash on hand to buy when recovery occures. Trillions have been lost due to this stock market’s irresposibility.