Bear market rally or bull? Fed, data may hold clue
Bear market rally or bull? Fed, data may hold clue · CNBC

Stocks celebrated the bull market's seventh birthday with their first four-week win streak since November. But markets still anxiously await U.S. data, a Fed meeting and clarity on China .

The "debate we're going to have: Is this a bull market or is it just a rally in a bear market?" said John Canally, investment strategist and economist at LPL Financial. "Next week is going to go a long way to determining it."

Investors will be parsing the Federal Reserve 's statement and Fed Chair Janet Yellen 's press conference scheduled for Wednesday for indications on the Fed's view of economic growth and the pace of tightening.

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Retail sales and inflation data due ahead of the Fed meeting could support the improving economic picture while increasing expectations of a rate hike sooner rather than later.

"Next week is all about the Fed, and there may be some nervousness around that that it might be a bit more hawkish," said Lee Ferridge, head of macro strategy, North America, at State Street Global Markets.

While markets are only pricing in one more hike this year, "the risk is the Fed is slightly more hawkish than that one hike (and) only take one out" from their December projection for four hikes, he said.

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After the European Central Bank's stimulus announcements in the past week, the Bank of Japan is set to meet Monday and Tuesday. However, no major decisions are expected since the Japanese central bank surprised markets with a move to negative rates just over a month ago.

"There really hasn't been enough time to see the full impact of it," said Sharon Stark, fixed-income strategist at D.A. Davidson.

The Bank of England is also scheduled to release its monetary policy announcement and minutes on Thursday.

Currency reaction will be key to watch, after the euro and yen both unexpectedly rallied against the U.S. dollar following the ECB's and BOJ's latest stimulative measures.

The resulting downward pressure on the U.S. dollar index gives the Fed more room to raise rates.

"The Fed has become much more comfortable with this idea that the U.S. dollar is not a one-way train higher," said Gene Tannuzzo, senior portfolio manager of Columbia Threadneedle's Strategic Income Fund.

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The U.S. dollar index rallied more than 20 percent in 12 months as expectations of a rate hike rose following Janet Yellen's assumption of the Fed chair in early 2014. Since a peak last March, the dollar has held in a range, and currently trades about 4 percent below that high.