ECB to Hike, Powell Speaks, Oil Stable After Slump - What's Moving Markets

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By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- The European Central Bank may announce its biggest ever interest rate hike in an effort to prop up the ailing euro. Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell will speak at a Washington conference, while the U.S. will also release weekly jobless claims. Naspers prepares to unload a bunch of Tencent stock in the latest big cashing-out from Chinese equities, and oil prices stabilize after slumping to six-month lows on Wednesday, but face another test from U.S. inventories data. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Thursday, September 8.

1. Powell to speak as dollar pressures Asian currencies again

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will speak at 09:10 ET (13:10 GMT) at a conference organized by the Cato Institute. That’s against a backdrop of data suggesting that the economy is, after all, holding up better than it seemed earlier this summer - something that analysts fear will embolden it to keep raising interest rates aggressively.

Expectations for U.S. rates continue to propel the dollar higher, with the Korean won posting another multi-year low in overnight trading, while the yen found some support after more intense jawboning from the Japanese government.

One of the data series that has provided the strongest proof of the economy’s robustness is weekly jobless claims, which have trended gently lower over the last month. Data for last week are due at 08:30 ET and initial claims are expected to show a modest increase to 240,000 from 232,000.

2. ECB set for biggest ever rate hike

One currency that may have found at least a short-term bottom against the dollar is the euro. It rose 0.1% in morning trading in Europe to trade back above parity against the dollar, on expectations that the European Central Bank will announce its biggest ever interest rate hike at 08:15 ET.

Short-term interest rate futures suggest that the market is split between expecting a raise of 50 or 75 basis points, with the balance slightly in favor of 75. The amount of support the euro gets from the announcement may depend heavily on the skill with which President Christine Lagarde communicates the bank’s thinking at her press conference at 08:45 ET.

Also supporting the euro is a sense that the worst of the newsflow surrounding the energy crisis may be over: benchmark gas prices extended their big falls on Wednesday which followed the announcement of measures intended to depress peak power consumption and put effective price caps both on wholesale power prices and the price of Russian gas imports.

3. Stocks mark time ahead of central banks; Tencent in focus

U.S. stock markets are set to open flat after a solid bounce on Wednesday in response to the sharp fall in oil prices (see below) and growing confidence that the Fed can engineer a soft landing for the economy.