Central Banks Overview: Investors Are Poised For An Eventful Week Ahead

In This Article:

Key Takeaways

  • The Bank of Japan (BOJ), the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), the Federal Reserve (Fed), the Swiss National Bank (SNB), and the Bank of England (BOE) will announce their policy rate decisions and issue their latest monetary statements on 19 – 21 March.

  • Investors and traders will get some fresh clues on the future path of interest rates in five major economies—Japan, Australia, the U.S., Switzerland, and the U.K.

  • All five central banks are expected to keep the rates steady but will likely announce important changes in their monetary policy statements.

  • BOJ may finally announce an end to its ultra-loose monetary policy, although the chances are 50/50.

  • AUD traders should watch if the RBA softens its tone and discounts the possibility of a rate hike.

  • The key event is the Fed’s decision, which comes with the latest FOMC projections and the ‘dot plot’.

  • The Fed’s decision will likely overshadow other central banks’ decisions and potentially trigger a sell-off in gold and euro.

  • CHF will take a hit if SNB announces a rate cut.

  • BOE’s rate vote might shift in a dovish direction, hurting the British pound.

Relative monetary policy drives currencies’ exchange rates. Therefore, whenever a central bank holds its regular meeting and changes its monetary policy, the market pays close attention. This week, five central banks—the Bank of Japan (BOJ), the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed), the Swiss National Bank (SNB), and the Bank of England (BOE) will declare their verdict on interest rates in the space of less than 72 hours.

Their decisions, announcements, and subsequent press conferences will be closely watched by traders and investors alike. Overall, the market assumes that the global central banks (besides BOJ) will embark on an easing campaign this year. However, the key question is timing: when exactly will the regulators make their first move and which central bank will be the first to lower its base rate? Octa offers a brief overview of what to expect.

Bank of Japan

BOJ’s decision will hit the wires in the early hours of the Asian trading session on 19 March. The market generally expects the central bank to leave its ultra-loose monetary policy unchanged, with the short-term rate target remaining at −0.1% and the 10-year Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yield target staying at around 0%. However, it is a close call. Investors have recently started to price in a higher chance that the BOJ will finally make a policy shift and phase out its decade-long stimulus program. Indeed, there are reasons to expect the Japanese central bank to end negative rates.