Earnings season will ramp up in the following week, with the banking sector receiving special attention. A few different factors should experience fluctuations.
During the week, Goldman Sachs Charles Schwab and BNY Mellon will report fourth-quarter results on Tuesday, followed by Morgan Stanley and Bank of America on Wednesday. Procter & Gamble and Netflix, the first of the heavily watched “FAANG” businesses to report, are among the big non-financial corporations to do so on Wednesday and Thursday, respectively. Investors will be watching the streaming giant’s plans for new content as well as its subscriber projection.
The stakes for this earnings season have been raised as investors look for reasons to remain steadfast ahead of expected Fed rate hikes. U.S. tech and growth stocks have had a rough start in 2022. It raised the stakes for this earnings season. Hence, investors look for reasons to remain steadfast ahead of expected Fed rate hikes.
At the end of its two-day monetary policy meeting on Tuesday, the Bank of Japan should maintain a policy on hold and raise its inflation outlook. Inflation is still significantly below the Bank of England’s objective of 2%. However, a recent jump in global commodity prices has encouraged more businesses to raise prices.
On Thursday, the ECB will release the minutes of its December meeting. It extended stimulus measures amid a continuing dispute over how to effectively combat increasing price pressures in the EU.
The U.S. economic calendar should be light in a holiday-shortened week. There should be updates on the housing sector and regional manufacturing surveys.
The Empire State Manufacturing Index will be released on Tuesday. Moreover, construction permit and housing start data should come on Wednesday. The Philadelphia Fed manufacturing index will become public on Thursday, including initial jobless claims and existing home sales data.
According to data released, China’s economy should grow by an annualized 3.6 % in the fourth quarter. This was the weakest growth since the second quarter of 2020, due to a slump in the housing industry, debt limits, and tough COVID-19 measures on Monday.
In 2022, the world’s second-largest economy will face many challenges, including further property market downturn and new limitations on migration due to the Omicron variant’s recent local spread.
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