Image Source: PixabayEnough of what us lot think. We asked actual real people – the audience of our live event earlier this week – what they thought on everything from the Fed to the US dollar. Are they thinking what we’re thinking? Read on as we dive into next week’s hectic financial and economic world.The latest US jobs numbers are hot of the press as I write this, and if you were hoping for clarity on how large the Fed’s September rate cut is likely to be, well, think again.The unemployment rate might have dipped back by a tenth of a percentage point, and payrolls’ growth wasn’t as bad as it could have been. But do we really trust the numbers? The last two months were revised down and we already know that further – potentially substantial – revisions are on their way.James Knightley has all the gory details here, but the upshot is he thinks it’s all to play for on whether or not we get a bumper fifty basis-point rate cut in two weeks. Keep an eye on next week’s inflation figures, though James isn’t expecting any nasty surprises. And he told our Economics Live session earlier this week that even if the Fed doesn’t cut rates by 50bp this month, it may well have to do so before the year is out. Recession isn’t inevitable, but the momentum is certainly fading. Our audience seemed to agree. Though by no means scientific…our poll question revealed that more than half thought the Fed Funds Rate would end up below 3.5%.That’s maybe not surprising, given financial markets have rates priced in a year’s time down close to 3%.It’s also undoubtedly contingent on what happens in November’s Presidential vote (watch our snazzy video). And next week’s head-to-head debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump could be pivotal, even if US voters have traditionally made up their minds by this point in the race. James reckons the result could have very different implications for the Fed, though he questions whether it will change much over the next 6-10 months or so.Across the Atlantic, the European Central Bank is facing up to its own set of uncertainties. Wage growth is still showing some underlying strength, even if headline numbers are stabilising. The major question for next week’s meeting, according to Carsten, is whether the ECB ends up increasing its inflation forecast above 2% at the end of 2025.If it does, then that would undoubtedly embolden the ECB hawks and presumably rule out a follow-up cut at October’s meeting.58% of our webinar audience saw just one rate cut beyond September and before year-end.That’s our view too, although the ECB’s other challenge is that growth isn’t looking too rosy either. Carsten’s point is that where the ECB may have been ahead of the curve when it cut rates in June, its renewed caution could quickly see it fall behind. We reckon rate cuts will speed up through the winter.I think it’s going to be a similar story here in the UK, though our audience wasn’t wholly convinced.41% thought the Bank of England would end up cutting rates less aggressively than the Fed, compared to 17% who thought they’d go harder.Markets are leaning that way, too. Services inflation is, after all, still stuck above the US and eurozone. But let’s not get carried away. Just as the Bank mirrored the Fed as rates rose, I suspect the same will largely be true on the way down.So where does that all leave markets? Opinion, at least judging by our poll results, has subtly shifted over the summer.25% of respondents felt EUR/USD would end the year over 1.13, while 46% felt it would remain roughly stable in a 1.10-1.13 range.Back in June, there was more of a bias in the direction of a move towards 1.07 or below among our audience.That’s maybe not surprising, given the move in the dollar this summer. But it’s the way we’re leaning too. We’ve got a slight downside dollar bias ahead of the US elections – keep an eye out for some FX scenarios early next weekBeyond the election, well just like that September Fed meeting, for the US dollar, it’s still all to play for.
Chart of the week: How our views compare to yours
Sample sizes of roughly 150 people, so results are not intended to be scientific or representative. Results taken during polls in our Economics Live webinar earlier this weekSource: ING
THINK Ahead in developed markets
United States (James Knightley)
Eurozone (Carsten BrzeskI)
United Kingdom (James Smith)
THINK Ahead for Central and Eastern Europe
Poland (Adam Antoniak)
Hungary (Peter Virovacz)
Czech Republic (David Havrlant)
Key events in developed markets next week
Source: Refinitiv, ING
Key events in EMEA next week
Source: Refinitiv, INGMore By This Author:US Payrolls Fails To Resolve The 25 Or 50bp Rate Cut Call FX Daily: Three Scenarios For Payrolls And The Dollar Today Rates Spark: If Payrolls Come In Line With Consensus, Then Forget The 50bp Cut Narrative
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