Summary Key Macro Events
π¬π§/πΊπΈ trade talks (3)
π΅π± election ruling (3)
πΊπΈ ISM Manufacturing for July (3)
πΊπΈ New Vehicle Sales for July (3)
π¦πΊ RBA Meeting (4)
πΊπΈ ISM Services for July (5)
π¬π§ BOE Meeting (6)
πΊπΈ Employment Report for July (7)
π Monetary Nerves Fray on Four Continents: Economy Week Ahead – Bloomberg
*Link: https://t.co/if8B15tZRc pic.twitter.com/Cr0eLzKQbG— Christophe Barraudπ’ (@C_Barraud) August 2, 2020
US stimulus debate, Bank of England meets, jobs figures https://t.co/meGfH6lOkU
— FT Economics (@fteconomics) August 2, 2020
The jobs report and congressional politics may matter more for markets than earnings in the week ahead https://t.co/0yYB0jQPK8 pic.twitter.com/A853afX1jG
— Patti Domm (@pattidomm) July 31, 2020
U.K. International Trade Secretary Liz Truss will meet with her U.S. counterpart Robert Lighthizer in Washington on Monday as part of the third round of talks to reach a trade deal between the two countries https://t.co/yOv4CCsb5f
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) August 3, 2020
Focus on πΊπΈ Economic Calendar
Schedule for Week of August 2, 2020 https://t.co/IrVKnixUe3 pic.twitter.com/gkRto57Mvc
— Bill McBride (@calculatedrisk) August 1, 2020
The U.S. jobs report for July will cap a full week of data that should shed light on the global pace of recovery from the recession triggered by Covid-19 https://t.co/Xf4QtelfZp
— Real Time Economics (@WSJecon) August 2, 2020
#Autos | πΊπΈ U.S. New Vehicle Sales Are Expected to Keep Rebounding In July Despite Virus Resurgence
β‘ https://t.co/XTCImUCHYE β pic.twitter.com/W0wh49glCz— Christophe Barraudπ’ (@C_Barraud) August 1, 2020
πΊπΈ U.S. Employment Report Preview for July: Several Indicators Suggest Labour Market Deteriorated
β‘ https://t.co/F2aIXfFtGa β pic.twitter.com/nwNtFy7DwV— Christophe Barraudπ’ (@C_Barraud) July 28, 2020
State and Local Government Education Employment will Increase Sharply in July, Seasonally Adjusted https://t.co/xNPZHEQXfO pic.twitter.com/c6PkdWTwR8
— Bill McBride (@calculatedrisk) August 2, 2020
Merrill: "The July jobs report is likely to reveal a pullback in the pace of hiring to +1.0mn … There is a large error band around this forecast with even a risk of a negative print. We look for the unemployment rate to head lower to 10.7%."
— Bill McBride (@calculatedrisk) July 31, 2020