Economic Calendar - Top 5 Things to Watch This Week

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Investing.com - This week investors will be watching to see how the Federal Reserve may respond to recession fears whipped up by the inversion of the Treasury yield curve.

The Fed will hold its annual gathering in Jackson Hole towards the end of the week, with Chairman Jerome Powell to address the forum on Friday. The Fed will publish the minutes of its July meeting, when it cut interest rates for the first time since the financial crisis, on Wednesday.

That, along with European Central Bank minutes, economic data and earnings will offer investors plenty to mull over. Here’s what you need to know to start your week.

Jackson Hole

On Thursday, Fed officials will be gathering in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, for an annual summit that will be scrutinized by investors for any indications on the future path of monetary policy. The highlight of the forum will be a speech by Fed Chair Jerome Powell on Friday.

Markets have already priced in a quarter-point interest rate cut in September, now that the long-awaited inversion of the two-year/10-year Treasury yield curve has actually happened. However it’s not clear whether the Fed could still be tempted to move more aggressively to ward off a potential economic downturn against the backdrop of escalating trade tensions between the U.S. and China.

Fed meeting minutes

The U.S. central bank is to publish the minutes of its July meeting on Wednesday, which will reveal the strength of support for its first rate cut in more than a decade. Powell described it as a “mid-cycle adjustment,” rather than the start of a major easing cycle.

The decision was not unanimous, with two FOMC members voting against a rate cut citing signs of strength in the economy, but given what has transpired in bond and stock markets since that meeting policymakers may now be considering whether ‘insurance’ rate cuts could become a full easing cycle.

ECB meeting minutes

The ECB will release the minutes of its July meeting on Thursday. That meeting saw policy remain unchanged, but the ECB did adjust its forward guidance to indicate that rates could go lower, laying the groundwork for a September cut. The ECB also indicated that it could revive its quantitative easing program the coming months.

Ahead of the minutes, investors will get an update on the health of the euro zone’s manufacturing and service sectors. PMI data from Germany will be closely watched after the euro area’s largest economy contracted in the second quarter, fueling fears over the prospect of a recession.

Economic data

The U.S. economic data calendar is light this week with reports on existing home sales and new home sales (both supported by firm consumer confidence, rising wages and falling mortgage rates) the main releases to watch.