What it means for European equities is unclear though, considering too that U.S. stock futures are pointing slightly lower after the S&P 500 already slipped on Friday to snap a five-day streak of setting fresh all-time closing highs.
Caution is certainly warranted in a week brimming with big risk events. In the U.S. alone, the Federal Reserve decides policy on Wednesday, the influential monthly jobs report is due Friday, and the week is littered with mega-cap earnings from the likes of Alphabet, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon and Meta Platforms, which between them account for nearly 25% of the S&P 500.
Monday’s events are by comparison rather muted. Sweden releases preliminary GDP figures, and earnings are due from Ryanair and Koninklijke Philips.
ECB deputy head Luis de Guindos is on the speaking circuit, days after investors exited the central bank’s last meeting by cementing bets for a rate cut as soon as June.
The Bank of England takes its turn this week, announcing policy a day after the Fed.