United States stock markets see gains driven by favourable Federal Reserve inflation data and Oracle's earnings, while geopolitical concerns in the Middle East and China tariffs present challenges.
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Market Analyst
United States (US) stock markets edged higher as Federal Reserve (Fed)-friendly inflation data and strong earnings from Oracle were balanced by a spike in Middle Eastern geopolitical tensions and tariff concerns.
Locally, the Australia 200 (ASX 200) is on track for its eighth week of gains in the past nine. The index was supported by a strong rally in energy stocks, while the rally in the big banks faded towards the end of the week.
Date: Tuesday, 17 June
The Bank of Japan (BoJ) left its key policy rate unchanged at 0.50% in May for the second consecutive meeting after raising rates by 25 basis points (bp) in January. The decision was widely expected amid the growing threat from US tariffs to Japan’s export-reliant economy.
The BoJ reaffirmed its commitment to tighten policy if growth and inflation remain consistent with its 2% target, which headline inflation has exceeded for 36 months.
Since May, core inflation has risen to 3.5% YoY - the highest in two years - driven by elevated food costs and wage growth. Analysts expect a further rise to 3.6% YoY in the May inflation report due Friday.
Despite rising inflation, softening consumption and output suggest the BoJ will likely hold rates steady at 0.50%. Focus will be on the BoJ’s updated forecasts and forward guidance during the press conference.
Markets are pricing in a 55% chance of a 25 bp hike by year-end.
Date: Thursday 19 June, 4.00am (AEST)
At its last meeting, the Fed held the Federal Funds rate at 4.25% – 4.50%, citing rising risks of higher unemployment and persistent inflation. Fed Chair Jerome Powell noted the economy remains solid, and that the Fed will monitor the impact of President Trump’s tariff policy before making any moves.
While survey data has softened, hard data (including the recent non-farm payrolls) remains robust. The Fed’s preferred inflation measure, the core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, stands at 2.5%, showing no tariff-related inflation surge.
As such, the Fed is expected to maintain current rates while reiterating its data-dependent stance. Powell is expected to emphasise a cautious approach and resist political pressure to cut.
Markets are pricing in no change next week, with an 80% chance of a 25 bp cut in September and 50 bp of cumulative easing priced by year-end.
Date: Thursday 19 June, 11.30am (AEST)
In April, Australia added 89,000 jobs - well above the 25,000 forecast - while the unemployment rate held at 4.1%. The participation rate also rose to 67.1% from 66.8%, marking the 17th straight month unemployment has stayed within a 3.9% - 4.1% band.
The data confirmed labour market resilience but did not prevent the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) from delivering a 25 bp rate cut the following week. However, it likely deterred a larger 50 bp move.
Consensus expects 20,000 new jobs in May, with the jobless rate steady at 4.1%. Unless results exceed expectations, the RBA is expected to deliver another 25 bp cut on 8 July, lowering the Cash rate to 3.60%.
Date: Thursday 19 June, 9.00pm (AEST)
At its May meeting, the BoE's monetary policy committee voted 5:4 to reduce the Bank rate to 4.25%. Two members preferred a larger 50 bp cut; two others wanted no change. The tone reflected ongoing uncertainty surrounding US tariffs.
Since then, UK inflation has reaccelerated to 3.5%, largely driven by surging utility prices. Payroll employment fell by 109,000 - the largest drop since May 2020. GDP also contracted by 0.3% MoM in April, its sharpest fall since October 2023.
Markets assign a 90% probability to the BoE holding rates steady next week, with two rate cuts priced in for August and December, bringing the Official Bank rate down to 3.75%.
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