Looking For Action? Week Ahead Brings Heavy Load With Earnings, Data, Fed Meeting

Anyone who likes a lot of action can start right here. This coming week promises a smorgasbord, testing the market’s mettle with indices at or near record highs.

There’s a Fed meeting, a truckload of key earnings reports — including Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) and Facebook Inc (NASDAQ: FB) — and monthly jobs data. The U.S. government has to decide by the end of the week whether to stay open. And to top everything off, French voters go back to the polls this coming weekend to choose a president. In other words, there’s something for everyone, which means that volatility, which began to climb a little Friday from recent lows, could show more life.

The Nasdaq surged late last week on positive earnings results from Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) and Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN), and earnings in general have been mostly strong. That allowed the markets to plow ahead to the best weekly showing of the year for some indices as investors focused mainly on Q1 corporate results. Earnings are probably going to be the key driver again this coming week, and the real fun starts Tuesday morning with Archer Daniels Midland Company (NYSE: ADM), Merck & Co., Inc. (NYSE: MRK), Pfizer Inc. (NYSE: PFE), and ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP). Next comes Apple (AAPL) after Tuesday’s close. Facebook (FB) is Wednesday afternoon. Keep an eye on AAPL and FB to see if they can emulate some of the other recent strong tech company earnings.

The markets received a boost last week from French election results, which delivered as many investors had hoped with a centrist candidate getting the most votes in the first round. But that was just the first round, and attention turns back to the French as the May 7 election approaches. Polls late last week showed centrist Emmanuel Macron leading right-wing rival Marine Le Pen. But memories of last year’s surprising Brexit and U.S. election votes could mean caution in the markets, as traders may want to avoid taking major positions ahead of the vote.

Before that, the Fed meets Tuesday and Wednesday, and futures prices show virtually no chance of a rate hike. By June, however, the futures market projects a close to 70% chance of an increase in rates. While this week’s Fed meeting doesn’t appear likely to result in any fireworks, investors would be wise to not get complacent, because all Fed meetings are “live,” and the Fed’s statement Wednesday afternoon could be worth a close watch for anyone trying to read the tea leaves.

Ahead of the mid-June meeting, the Fed gets a look at two monthly jobs reports, with the April data due this Friday and the May report right before the June gathering. The March report delivered disappointing jobs growth of less than 100,000 positions, but the thought now is that might have been weather-related. A warm January and February might have triggered some construction industry job growth a little ahead of schedule, while a cold March might have hurt other industries. Perhaps the April report could iron things out a little, and check closely for any possible revisions to the March number.