Volatile Trading Week Ahead as U.S. Elections Are Due

Financial markets prepare for a volatile trading week ahead. The U.S. elections are due on November 3rd, and the complex process of electing the new President and the Congress’ composition may delay the outcome for days or even weeks.

The U.S. dollar, as well as the U.S. stock market, are main volatility drivers in financial markets. For the past several months, neither the USD nor the stock market did nothing – they both awaited the U.S. elections outcome.

Anything is possible this week. We could easily know the name of the United States’ President for the next four years right on Wednesday morning. But we could also have to wait for votes to be counted to find out the real winner. In both cases, the market’s volatility will go through the roof.

In the meantime, the US GDP showed an impressive recovery from the coronavirus pandemic. Last week saw a record rebound as the U.S. economy grew 33.1% on an annualized rate in the third quarter of the year.

Considering that many European economies just entered their second lockdown and that Asian economies managed to control the pandemic, the economic growth differential may be the one to drive the price action for the months remained until the end of the trading year.

Three Central Banks Plus the NFP

The U.S. elections will likely steal the thunder from this trading week, but some other important economic events are worth monitoring. Three central banks announce their policy decisions this week – the Reserve Bank of Australia tomorrow, the Federal Reserve on Wednesday, and the Bank of England on Friday.

While the market does not expect something new from the RBA, the Fed and the BOE may bring some surprises. That is especially the case of the Bank of England as the market priced in an increase in the quantitative easing program. Coupled with the new lockdown to start the same day in the United Kingdom, the combination of the two may weigh on the GBP.

The trading week ends with the Non-Farm Payrolls and the unemployment rate on Friday. However, no economic event this week will outpace in importance the U.S. elections. Therefore, the sooner the market knows the elections’ outcome, the better for financial market participants.