S&P
Credit Suisse
CitigroupGoldman Sachs
Fed
Moody's Analytics
Refinitiv."I
The Federal Reserve
Stanford University
the European Central Bank
Bannockburn Global Forex
ECB
a.m. Boston Fed
ADP
New York Fed
Cleveland Fed
Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research Economic Summit
CNBC
CNBC LLC
All Rights Reserved
Division
NBCUniversalData
Global Business and Financial News
Market Data and Analysis
Patrick Palfrey
Citigroup
Mark Zandi
Jerome Powell
Marc Chandler
Eric Rosengren9:45
Tom BarkinWednesday8:15
John Williams
Loretta Mester2 p.m.
Mario Draghi
claims8:30
Chinese
European
Markit
No matching tags
Brexit
U.S.
Richmond
No matching tags
The economy is widely expected to bounce back in the second quarter to a pace well above 2 percent, after the temporary headwinds from the government shutdown and polar vortex abate.The jobs data tops the list of important economic news in the week ahead, particularly after a string of disappointing reports showing that both consumers and businesses have pulled back.The stock market will pass a major milestone on Wednesday—the tenth anniversary of the day the market bottomed in 2009, when the S&P 500 hit 666. But the Fed could move forward on rates again, if inflation begins to pick up, and for that reason the wage data in the jobs report would also be key were it to show new wage pressures.There are a few speeches by Fed officials, including Fed Chairman Jerome Powell who speaks at Stanford University Friday night at an economic conference.Market focus will also be on the European Central Bank which meets Thursday."I think people are expecting some detail about a long-term loan operation," said Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex.
As said here by Patti Domm