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Investing.com -- Central banks around the world make different responses to the Federal Reserve's rate cut, U.S. stocks are set for a lower opening, and some fresh saber-rattling pushes oil prices back up. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Thursday, 19th September.
1. Manic monetary Thursday
The global monetary policy easing cycle continued overnight as Indonesia and Hong Kong both cut official interest rates, although the more important Bank of Japan left its key rate unchanged and hinted it may ease at its next meeting in October.
In Europe, the Swiss franc strengthened against both the dollar and the euro after the Swiss National Bank left its key rate unchanged but tweaked the way it will calculate the penalty rate on excess bank reserves going forward, a measure it said would reduce the side-effects of negative interest rates on banks. The Norwegian central bank pulled off what it said it is likely to be its last interest rate hike for the foreseeable future.
The Bank of England and South African Reserve Bank are still to announce their monetary policy decisions.
The decisions came as the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development cut its forecast for global growth this year to 2.9%, the lowest in a decade.
2. Stocks set to open lower
U.S. stock markets are set to open lower, reversing a late rally at the end of Wednesday’s trading that left markets little changed on the day after the Federal Reserve’s policy decisions and press conference.
By 6 AM ET, Dow Futures were down 51 points or 0.2%, while the S&P 500 Futures contract was also down 0.2% and the Nasdaq 100 Futures contract was down 0.3%.
Chairman Jerome Powell indicated at his press conference that the Fed didn’t expect any significant weakening in the U.S. economy in the near term. That thesis will be tested at 8:30 AM ET, when the Philadelphia Fed releases its regular business survey. There will also be the weekly initial jobless claims at the same time.
3. Fed to soothe money market again
The Federal Reserve is set to hold an overnight repo to ease conditions in the U.S. money market for a third day running.
As it did on Wednesday, the Fed will offer a maximum of $75 billion to banks in overnight funds. Banks had asked for $80 billion at Wednesday’s auction, meaning that there was another scramble at the margin for overnight funds on the open market, which drove the Fed funds rate up to over 2.30%, above the Fed’s old target range of 2%-2.25%.
There’s still no consensus as to the long-term significance of this liquidity squeeze. If, as many argue, the causes are largely technical and short-term, overnight rates should logically return to their targeted level within days. If they don’t, then the Fed may come under pressure to start buying assets again.