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Fed meeting, Retail sales: What to know in the week ahead

This week, a slew of economic data and the Federal Reserve’s final Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting of the year will take center stage.

Central bank officials are set to offer their assessment of how the economy has held up amid a resurgence in coronavirus cases, which has spurred a wave of renewed business restrictions across the country.

Heading into Tuesday and Wednesday’s FOMC meeting, officials struck a cautious tone. In their December Beige Book, or collection of anecdotes about economic activity released ahead of each Fed meeting, the central bank said that most Federal Reserve districts “characterized economic expansion as modest or moderate,” while four districts “described little or no growth, and five narratives noted that activity remained below pre-pandemic levels for at least some sectors.”

Many Fed officials over the past several months have also reiterated that their monetary policy efforts work most effectively in tandem with strong fiscal stimulus from congressional lawmakers, though those on Capitol Hill have remained at a months-long stalemate over the size and scope of another virus-relief bill.

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Given this, the Fed’s revised Summary of Economic Projections set for release this week will be of particular interest. In September, Fed officials upgraded their outlook for the U.S. economic recovery to see a 3.7% contraction in real gross domestic product (GDP) this year, or better than the 6.5% drop they anticipated in June. They also expected the labor market to end the year at a 7.6% rate at the time in September, while taking until 2023 to reach 4.0% to close in on pre-pandemic levels. The Federal Reserve also signaled in September that interest rates would likely remain at their current near-zero level until at least 2023.

“Though positive news on the vaccine front has likely brightened the medium-term outlook for the Fed, near-term uncertainty on the trajectory of the virus and the fiscal outlook should result in a still-cautious tone to the FOMC meeting statement and Chair [Jerome] Powell's presser,” Matthew Luzzetti, chief U.S. economist for Deutsche Bank, said in a note Thursday.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell holds a press conference following a two day Federal Open Market Committee policy meeting in Washington, U.S., January 30, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell holds a press conference following a two day Federal Open Market Committee policy meeting in Washington, U.S., January 30, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

And importantly, the Fed may use December’s monetary policy statement and press conference to discuss forward guidance around asset purchases, which have been a key tenet of its strategy to stimulate financial market activity during the coronavirus crisis.

For now, the Fed’s quantitative easing program has involved purchasing $80 billion worth of Treasuries each month, along with $40 billion in mortgage-backed securities. In the Fed’s latest November monetary policy statement, the central bank suggested this rate of purchasing would continue, saying it planned to “increase its holdings of Treasury securities and agency mortgage-backed securities at least at the current pace to sustain smooth market functioning.”

But in the Fed’s November meeting minutes, the central bank added that, “many participants judged that the Committee might want to enhance its guidance for asset purchases fairly soon,” and that “most participants favored moving to qualitative outcome-based guidance for asset purchases.” In other words, the Fed this week may offer more details about what specific economic conditions — whether around inflation, employment levels, or some combination of the two — would catalyze a change in their pace of asset purchases.

“Officials have hinted they could make the pace of purchases more conditional on economic conditions. They may also make the point that tapering of purchases must happen before they would even consider raising interest rates more forcefully,” James Knightley, ING chief international economist, said in a note Thursday. “This may, at the margin, help to press down borrowing costs.”

Retail sales

On Wednesday, the U.S. Commerce Department is set to release the November retail sales report, offering a look at how consumers have been spending during the key holiday shopping window.

Recent data on Black Friday and Cyber Monday spending shattered records, with a surge in online purchases buoying results. Yet economists still expect that retail sales on the whole turned negative in November for the first time since April.

Incidentally, some noted that stores may have shifted some holiday purchases from November to October by rolling out sales especially early this year.

“Online sales rose sharply in October, but some of the strength seemed to have been pulled forward from November, making a weaker reading more likely,” said Credit Suisse economist James Sweeney.

Consensus economists expect U.S. retail sales dipped 0.3% in November after rising by the same margin in October. That, in turn, had been the slowest pace of increase since April’s record decline, as consumption tapered off following an early surge after the initial lockdowns in spring were lifted.

One major drag on November’s retail sales will likely come from a drop in service-related spending, as renewed stay-in-place restrictions and colder weather pressured activity at places like restaurants and bars.

“High-frequency data on credit and debit card spending suggest continued recovery of spending on goods during the holiday period, albeit at a more modest pace relative to the summer,” Nomura economist Lewis Alexander said in a note Friday. “However, due to the impact of tighter pandemic restrictions on food services and a sharp decline in auto sales, we expect a 0.4% month-over-month decline in total retail sales in November.”

“Many local authorities reduced indoor dining capacity and hours at restaurants and bars as COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations rose sharply in November,” he added. “In some populous regions (e.g. areas in Illinois and California), indoor dining was halted completely. In addition, more cautious individual behavior amid negative news coverage may have weighed on receipts at restaurants.”

Economic Calendar

Monday: N/A

Tuesday: Empire State Manufacturing Index, December (6.9 expected, 6.3 in November); Import prices month-over-month, November (0.3% expected, -0.1% in October); Import prices year-over-year, November (-0.9% expected, -1.0% in October); Export prices month-over-month, November (0.2% expected, 0.2% in October); Export prices year-over-year, November (-1.6% in October); Industrial Production month-over-month, November (0.3% expected, 1.1% in October); Capacity utilization, November (73.0% expected, 72.8% in October); Net long-term TIC flows, October ($108.9 billion in September); Total net TIC flows, October (-$79.9 billion in September)

Wednesday: MBA Mortgage Applications, week ended Dec. 11 (-1.2% during prior week), Retail sales advance month-over-month, November (-0.3% expected, 0.3% in October); Retail sales excluding autos month-over-month, November (0.1% in November, 0.2% in October); Retail sales excluding autos and gas month-over-month, November (0.2% in November, 0.2% in October); Markit US manufacturing purchasing managers index, December preliminary (55.8 expected, 56.7 in November); Markit US services PMI, December preliminary (56.0 expected, 58.4 in November); Business inventories, October (0.6% expected, 0.7% in September); NAHB Housing Market Index, December (88 expected, 90 in November); FOMC Rate Decision

Thursday: Building permits, November (1.558 million expected, 1.544 million in October); Housing starts, November (1.533 million expected, 1.530 million in October); Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook index, December (20.0 expected, 26.3 in November); Initial jobless claims, week ended December 12 (823,000 expected, 853,000 during prior week); Continuing claims, week ended December 5 (5.7 million expected, 5.757 million during prior week); Kansas City Fed Manufacturing Activity Index, December (10 expected, 11 in November)

Friday: Current Account Balance, 3Q (-$187.4 billion expected, -$170.5 billion during 2Q)

Earnings Calendar

Monday: N/A

Tuesday: N/A

Wednesday: Lennar (LEN) before market open

Thursday: General Mills (GIS), Rite Aid (RAD) before market open; FedEx (FDX) after market close

Friday: Darden Restaurants (DRI) before market open; Nike (NKE) after market close

Emily McCormick is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter: @emily_mcck

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