Week Ahead: Central Bank Meetings and Possible Peace
Markets move back to slightly more unexciting central bank meetings and data after last week’s excitement around the SpaceX IPO. It seems like the biggest stock offering in history swept the world like a tidal wave. Elon Musk became a trillionaire as his rocket propelled stock raised $65 billion and jumping over 30% at one point on the day, before settling down. Some equity analysts say fair value for the company is less than half the IPO price, while the lockup calendar puts a date on the bear case. In the meantime over the next two weeks, the stock should receive a tailwind as passive index-tracking funds linked to Nasdaq, FTSE and MSCI indices start to buy shares after it was fast tracked into the benchmarks.
Investors will be waiting for concrete news around a Middle East peace deal as the US is still claiming talks are underway. The G7 will meet this upcoming week in Switzerland, and President Trump has said his representative JD Vance and Steve Witkoff may be ready to sign a ‘memorandum of understanding’ as the Iranian foreign minister put it on Sunday. Oil took a hit last week, but global energy prices will likely remain elevated until at least early 2027. European and Asian inventory rebuilding will keep a strong bid in markets through the second half of the year. At the same time, uncertainty over the scale of damage to infrastructure in the region and the willingness of shipping companies to put their vessels back potentially into harm’s way, should the deal subsequently fail, limits supply.
There’s a plethora of central bank meeting with rate announcements to follow. The spotlight will be on an unchanged FOMC, as the Fed will see Kevin Warsh host his first press conference as chairman. He has expressed scepticism of guidance tools such as the so-called dot plot of member rate expectations, which are due to be updated at this meeting. Expectations of an autumn rate hike are increasing in money markets, which goes against his dovish tendencies. Is it too early to expect him to push back against the markets? He could reiterate his view that, in time, tech investment will boost US productivity, meaning faster growth without generating inflation. That would imply a lower neutral interest rate that justifies lower policy rates over the medium to longer term.
In Brief: Major Data Releases of the Week
Tuesday, 16 June 2026
China Activity Data: May retail sales are expected at 0.0% from 3.2%, industrial production at 4.2% from 4.1%, and fixed asset investment at -2.0% from -1.6%. This data should highlight further confirmation of a second-quarter slowdown with retail sales and fixed asset investment likely to deteriorate further, while industrial production should fare better, buoyed by external demand.
Bank of Japan Meeting: The bank is widely expected to hike the policy rate 25bps to 1%. Sustained domestic inflation with services inflation above 1%, plus recent hawkish commentary mean focus will be on any guidance around more policy tightening.
RBA Meeting: Consensus predicts the RBA to leave rates unchanged at 4.35% after three straight rate hikes. Recent data has been softer than expected, with Q1 GDP weaker and job market figures deteriorating, while inflation matched forecasts. This gives time for rate setters to pause.
Wednesday, 17 June 2026
UK CPI: Headline CPI is forecast to rise two-tenths to 3.0%, core to 2.7%, while services tick up to 3.7% from 3.2%. The BoE watches the latter as a gauge of longer-term inflation pressures. The bounce back is due to Easter dampening April’s data.
FOMC Meeting: No changes are expected at Fed Chair Warsh’s first FOMC. But a removal of the easing bias and a hawkish shift in language is likely. A 25bps rate hike is priced in for 2026, and around a 50% chance of a second one next year. Updated forecasts should point to healthy growth and elevated inflation, with more officials signalling higher rates by year-end.
Thursday, 18 June 2026
Bank of England Meeting: The MPC will leave rates unchanged at 3.75%, with a widely watched vote split of 8-1. Rates are currently seen as somewhat restrictive so that gives the bank space to assess how conditions develop. Forward guidance will be key, with Governor Bailey describing the prior meeting decision as an ‘active hold’.
Friday, 19 June 2026
UK Retail Sales: Improved weather is expected to see sales activity rebound after April figures were hit by a drop in fuel volumes. The latter will be gauged as a metric of energy inflation and its impact on consumer activity and the broader economy.