By Kim Khan
Investing.com - Wall Street gave a thumbs down to the economic response to the effects of Covid-19 today, with stocks sinking again and bonds rallying sharply, pushing the 10-year yield below the 1% milestone.
There were hopes for global coordinated rate cuts, but the G7 statement only promised appropriate action.
Still, more easing could come from other central banks.
Then bond market will also have some economic data to react to, rather than just virus headlines, and oil traders get the latest U.S. inventory numbers.
Here are three things that could move markets tomorrow.
1 Bank of Canada Rate Cut Expected
The Bank of Canada will have its interest-rate meeting tomorrow, with expectations of it following the Federal Reserve growing.
The central bank’s decision will come at 10:00 AM ET (15:00 GMT).
TD Securities said it expects a cut of 25 basis points tomorrow to 1.5% from 1.75%.
“We don't expect to see much in the way of forward guidance given the volatile backdrop,” it said.
“Data dependence will remain the bank's lodestar going forward, as they will tie the March rate cut to expected reductions in global growth,” it added. “We also expect they will cut by 25 bps in April, but the Bank won't want to signal anything until they have a better sense of COVID-19's growth implications and potential fiscal measures.”
2. ADP) Jobs, ISM Services on Tap
The bond market is jittery to say the least, although yields did end of lows today.
On the economic calendar for traders is the February private-sector jobs report from ADP (NASDAQ:ADP), which arrives at 8:15 AM ET (13:15 GMT).
Economists expect that ADP’s nonfarm employment measure showed a gain of 170,000 jobs last month, according to forecasts compiled by Investing.com.
In all the excitement this week, investors would be forgiven for forgetting that the government’s jobs report arrives on Friday.
At 10:00 AM ET, the Institute of Supply Management will issues its measure of services activity.
The ISM non-manufacturing PMI is expected to have ticked down to 54.9 from 55.5.
And at 2:00 PM ET, the Fed will release its Beige Book report on regional economic conditions. Although given today’s intermeeting rate cut, its impact will be muted.
3. Oil Inventories Seen Rising
Oil prices jumped after the rate cut today, but ended mixed as the decline in equities accelerated and concerns about what OPEC might or might not do at its meeting this week persisted.
OPEC’s Vienna meeting starts on Thursday, with traders hoping Saudi Arabia and Russia (part of OPEC+) can agree on more production cuts.
Tomorrow the Energy Information Administration will issues its weekly report on oil inventories.
Analysts are predicting a rise of about 2.64 million barrels in oil inventories for the week ended Feb. 28.
After the bell today the American Petroleum institute said its measure of crude stockpiles rose by 1.69 million barrels for last week.