By Noreen Burke
Investing.com -- U.S. inflation figures and the start of corporate earnings season will be the main highlights of an otherwise quiet week on the economic calendar. Inflation data for December will help influence the size of the Federal Reserve’s next rate hike, while corporate earnings will give an important insight into the health of the economy amid concerns over a potential slowdown. U.K. GDP, Japanese inflation, and Eurozone data will also be in focus. Here’s what you need to know to start your week.
- U.S. CPI
The U.S. consumer price index for December is due out on Thursday with economists expecting core inflation to have increased 5.7% from a year earlier. Any sign that price pressures are continuing to ease could not only reinforce the view that the Fed is nearing the end of its most aggressive tightening cycle in decades but may also fuel speculation that rate cuts could come later this year.
U.S. data on Friday showed that December payrolls expanded more than expected even as wage increases slowed and services activity contracted, easing worries about the Fed’s monetary policy path.
Fed officials on Friday acknowledged cooling wage growth and other signs of a gradually slowing economy, with Atlanta President Raphael Bostic hinting at the chance of a quarter percentage point hike at the Fed’s next policy meeting on Jan. 31 – Feb. 1. It raised rates 50 basis points in December.
- Earnings season gets underway
Companies are due to start reporting fourth quarter earnings in the coming week with investors looking for signs of a potential economic slowdown filtering through to bottom lines.
On Friday alone, reports are due from banks Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC), Citigroup (NYSE:C), Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) and JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM), healthcare titan UnitedHealth Group (NYSE:UNH), asset manager BlackRock (NYSE:BLK) and Delta Air Lines (NYSE:DAL).
Consensus analyst estimates call for a 1.6% decline in S&P 500 Q4 earnings versus the year-ago period, according to Refinitiv IBES. Some reckon 2023 projections are still too rosy given recession risks.
Stocks may be more expensive than they appear if current earnings estimates do not fully account for any economic slowdown, while any downturn could further dampen what investors are willing to pay for equities.
- U.K. GDP
The U.K. is to release November GDP figures on Friday against a background of a historic cost-of-living squeeze amid double digit levels of inflation, transport and public sector strikes and a softening housing market as the country faces what is likely to be a lengthy recession.
Following nine consecutive rate rises by the Bank of England, and more to come, British mortgage approvals plumbed their lowest level in November since the pandemic-induced slump of June 2020, recent data showed.
As price pressures and higher borrowing costs bite, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has pledged to halve inflation, grow the economy, reduce public debt and cut health service waiting lists.
But analysts at Deutsche Bank see high inflation persisting this year, no rate cuts until 2024 and fiscal policies becoming more austere, while analysts at Barclays expect the UK economy to keep contracting until the end of the third quarter of 2023.
- Eurozone data
Germany is to publish an estimate of annual GDP growth on Friday which will show the impact of the energy crisis triggered by Russia’s war in Ukraine on the Eurozone’s largest economy.
The broader Eurozone is to publish data on industrial production and trade the same day. The high costs of energy imports have flipped the bloc’s trade balance from surplus to deficit, but the deficit reduced in October as gas prices eased and market watchers will be looking to see if this trend continued in November.
Industrial production is forecast to make a small rebound after a decline in October.
- Tokyo inflation
Market watchers will be keeping a close eye on Tokyo's inflation numbers on Tuesday, after last month's report first tipped the market to a potential Bank of Japan policy shift.
Tokyo CPI - which front-runs the national numbers, often by several weeks - surged to a four-decade high in November.
Less than a month later, the BOJ tweaked its bond-yield control that allows long-term interest rates to rise more, wrong-footing markets. The move was aimed at easing some of the costs of prolonged monetary stimulus.
The yen has strengthened to seven-month highs on rising expectations for a further hawkish shift, even as BOJ officials maintain the move was a one-off. The BOJ is due to hold its next policy meeting on Jan. 18.
--Reuters contributed to this report