Take Five: World markets themes for the week ahead
A police officer keeps watch in front of the U.S. Federal Reserve building in Washington, DC, U.S. on October 12, 2016. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo · Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - Following are five big themes likely to dominate the thinking of investors and traders in the coming week and the Reuters stories related to them.

WHAT'S THE PRICE

1/The Federal Reserve has acknowledged U.S. inflation has perked up, adding to the conviction that interest rates will rise faster this year than previously anticipated. Price data due next week might cement investors' view.

While leaving the benchmark Fed funds rate unchanged at its last meeting, the central bank included somewhat more hawkish language in its statement, noting that "on a 12-month basis, both overall inflation and inflation for items other than food and energy have moved close to 2 percent".

Latest data showed the U.S. economy added 164,000 jobs, less than forecast, while wages barely rose. However, the Fed's preferred inflation measure, the so-called core PCE, rose 1.9 percent in the 12 months through March, the biggest increase since February 2017.

Producer price and consumer price indexes are due next Wednesday and Thursday, respectively, and investors fear that stock and bond markets won't get much reprieve from the rate-hike concerns of recent weeks.

The Fed is currently signalling two more rate rises this year, but the inflation figures, if strong enough, could just confirm expectations that it will squeeze in a third.

( Inflationary Pressures Brewing: https://reut.rs/2JSyaBh )

2/STERLING SELLING

The big central banking event of next week is the Bank of England's May 10 meeting, with market expectations now overwhelmingly in favour of interest rates being held at the current 0.5 percent rate.

Interest rate bets have swung around sharply from early-April when investors priced a 90 percent chance of the BoE raising rates by 25 basis points.

But a spate of weak economic data is almost certain to stay the BoE's hand. Banks have slashed rate rise forecasts, with some not expecting one at all in 2018. That has taken sterling more than six percent lower in two weeks, tipping it into the red for 2018.

Investors will monitor Governor Mark Carney's language for signals on what the appetite is for hikes further out in 2018.

More dovish remarks from the BoE could send sterling even lower.

(Sterling versus the U.S. dollar: https://reut.rs/2Icwsxb)

3/GRUESOME TWOSOME

Almost exactly five years after the taper-tantrum selloff in emerging markets, a resurgent dollar and rising global borrowing costs are smashing through Argentina and Turkey's currencies like a wrecking ball.

With the peso and the lira hitting record lows, Argentina has had to jack up interest rates to 40 percent in the third emergency hike in a week. Turkey too raised rates recently by 75 basis points after keeping it overly loose for years.