BoE Braces for Nervous Stage Following Morning Bid and Fed Fireworks

BoE Braces for Nervous Stage Following Morning Bid and Fed Fireworks

A look at the day ahead in⁢ European and global‍ markets from Kevin BucklandIf ⁣the market vacillations that followed the Federal Reserve are anything to go by, European investors should ​buckle up ahead ‍of​ policy decisions from​ no less than four of the region’s biggest central banks today -‌ with the⁤ Bank of England providing the crescendo.Considering investors largely expected a hawkish pause⁤ from U.S. policymakers, the resulting surge ‌in Treasury yields⁢ and slide in stocks (.SPX) show that Chair‌ Jay Powell showed a little more talon than ⁣they were comfortable with.Reuters GraphicsU.S. yields‌ pushed even higher in the ⁢Asian time⁢ zone, while U.S. ‌stock futures pointed lower. Asian shares slumped⁢ region-wide (.MIAP00000PUS) – including a ⁣1% slide for Japan’s Nikkei⁢ – while‌ crude oil extended its retreat from a 10-month‍ peak.European ⁢equities⁢ (.STOXX) have scope to fall at the⁤ open, ⁢following their bounce in the previous session.⁢ How much a hawkish Fed can spoil ‌the good feeling ​from yesterday’s surprise fall⁤ in ⁣British inflation will​ ultimately come ⁣down to what the BoE makes⁣ of the conflicting forces at play, in a finely​ balanced⁣ call on whether to hike or skip.But the BoE is actually the​ last of the European central banks ⁣to set policy on Thursday, with the SNB and Riksbank kicking things off, followed shortly by Norges Bank.This⁣ week’s central⁢ bank bonanza doesn’t end in Europe either. The Bank of Japan’s policy decision ‍on Friday will be one of ⁢the most scrutinised in a string of closely watched recent meetings, after⁤ Governor Kazuo Ueda made ‌a⁤ startling hawkish shift⁢ in a Yomiuri newspaper interview this month, suggesting negative⁣ interest rates could be gone by‌ year-end.Japanese ⁤10-year yields spiked to‌ decade highs in today’s session.Japan’s currency,‍ though, is at the⁢ mercy of the dollar, sinking to the weakest since the⁤ start of November to 148.465 yen , increasing the risk of central bank intervention.Key developments that could influence markets on Thursday:-Swiss National Bank (0730 GMT)-Riksbank (0730 GMT)-Norges‍ Bank (0800 GMT)-Bank of England (1100 GMT)Editing by Jacqueline WongOur⁣ Standards: The Thomson ‍Reuters Trust Principles. Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new tab

Original from www.reuters.com rnrn

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