Image Source: PixabayJames Smith reckons American football offers the perfect analogy for central banks. Only problem? He hasn’t the foggiest idea how the sport works. Take a time out, grab yourself a corndog, and read on as he and the rest of the team look ahead to another important week for financial markets.
THINK Ahead: The fifth quarter
As an Englishman, I confess I’ve always been baffled by American football. Why does the game have so many stoppages? And why isn’t the ball round? I just can’t get my head around the rules, though I accept that’s a bit rich coming from the nation that gave the world cricket and rugby…Even I must concede, however, that the game offers us an excellent analogy for central banks this year: a game of four quarters. Hang on, isn’t that baseball?Anyway, check out the chart below. 2024 can be divided into four distinct periods of varying levels of concern about inflation and the jobs market. Remember when markets were briefly pricing an emergency Fed rate cut at the start of August? Just like the rate hike cycle that came before, it’s a reminder that these rate-cutting processes rarely follow the nice straight lines us economists like to draw into the future. I could just as easily draw a chart like this for the European Central Bank.
Chart of the week: How Fed expectations have developed this year
Source: MacrobondIt begs the question, what does the proverbial ‘fifth quarter’ look like? I say proverbial like I have any idea whether it’s a thing or not…In the Fed’s case, most roads lead back to Trump. His strident tariff threats against Mexico and Canada this week are a reminder to central bankers in Washington: you can’t blissfully ignore his policy agenda for much longer. Incidentally, Chris talks about the effect of it all on FX markets here. A slower pace of cuts looks likely, and as James K explains below, next week’s jobs numbers will tell us whether or not the first pause comes in December or January.Life’s rarely that simple, though, and remember the jobs data isn’t exactly giving us a clean read of the situation. I can sympathise; here in the UK, our dubious jobs figures might not get fixed until 2027, according to a recent Bloomberg story.The recent US hurricanes don’t help, though recent state-level data showed that the weather can’t explain all of October’s weakness. Remember too that the American data is systematically overstating job creation on account of some questionable assumptions about the number of smaller companies being created or destroyed. Downward revisions are surely coming.A blitz of unwelcome surprises on the US jobs market, regardless of Trump’s policy agenda, is perhaps the most obvious downside risk for early 2025.The same is true of Europe, though the mere fact that the ECB is toying with a 50 basis-point cut in December tells us that weaker growth is already firmly on the radar. Whether the ECB actually follows through with that bigger cut is less clear.On the face of it, the European jobs market looks decent. Monday’s figures are expected to show the unemployment rate close to its all-time low. The ECB’s wage figures, though volatile, are above 5%.It’s therefore unsurprising that the hawks are mounting what we NFL aficionados would call a ‘two-minute drill’: a fast-paced strategy at the end of the half. Halves? This is all getting terribly confusing…Anyway, as Carsten Brzeski writes, this week’s modest rise in German inflation and more resilient confidence data will bolster the hawk’s ‘dee-fense’, as the Americans would say, of a 25bp cut in December.But the true fight, as hawkish-quarterback Isabel Schnabel’s interview this week demonstrated, is really about how low the ECB takes rates next year. Schnabel spoke of the inflationary risks from Trump’s economic policies. Carsten is less convinced and points to the German jobs market, which is looking weaker and hints that lower wage growth is coming. That means the doves are likely to be in the ascendency next year, and that’s why he thinks the ECB will take rates below 2%.We’ll have more to say about 2025 and plenty more besides in our global economic outlook, hitting your screens next week. We’re doing a webinar, too, on 9 December.Until then, you’ll be pleased to hear it’s ‘end of regulation’ for this week. That means game over, apparently. I need a huggle.
THINK Ahead in developed markets
United States (James Knightley)
THINK Ahead for Central and Eastern Europe
Poland (Adam Antoniak)
Hungary (Peter Virovacz)
Czech Republic (David Havrlant)
Turkey (Muhammet Mercan)
Key events in developed markets next week
Source: Refinitiv, ING
Key events in EMEA next week
Source: Refinitiv, INGMore By This Author:Turkish GDP Growth Sees Further Deceleration In Third Quarter Poland’s Inflation Rate Drops Temporarily In November FX Daily: Limited Activity Amid Diverging Signals