Economic Calendar - Top 5 Things to Watch This Week

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By Noreen Burke

Investing.com -- With stock markets now in the August doldrums investors this week will stay focused on the twin risks of heightened U.S.- China tensions and developments in Washington on the next round of coronavirus pandemic relief. Market participants will also be watching the dollar, which despite a rebound after Friday’s U.S. jobs report notched up its seventh straight weekly loss, the longest such streak in a decade. On the economic calendar, Thursday will bring the weekly jobless claims numbers, followed by retail sales figures for July on Friday. China is also to release a deluge of what will be closely watched economic data and earnings season will enter the final stretch. Here’s what you need to know to start your week.

Double trouble

After failing to reach a deal with the U.S. Congress for a fresh round of coronavirus pandemic relief, President Donald Trump on Saturday signed a series of executive orders aimed at bolstering the hard-hit economy.

However, details on how the measures could be funded remain unclear and Democrats have already warned that such executive orders are legally dubious and would likely be challenged in court.

Uncertainty over fresh stimulus measures coincides with a renewed deterioration in ties between Washington and Beijing. Last week Trump unveiled sweeping bans on Chinese tech firms TikTok and Tencent, escalating a high-stakes confrontation over the future of the global tech industry.

Uncertainty associated with the dual risks will likely continue to act as a dampener on market sentiment, analysts said.

Dollar weakness

The U.S. Dollar bounced on Friday after jobs numbers for July helped ease some investor worries on the U.S. labor market, but the currency logged a seventh straight week of declines.

While the U.S. economy added a slightly larger than forecast 1.76 million jobs last month it was still sharply lower than the record 4.8 million in June.

Sentiment has turned against the greenback due to a combination of rising U.S. coronavirus infections, a steady decline in Treasury yields, and a lack of consensus in Washington over additional stimulus.

Analysts say the dollar will continue to fall, particularly against the euro, the yen and Swiss franc, as expectations for a V-shaped recovery from the pandemic fades and investors take a more sanguine view of markets.

"I see further dollar weakness," said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney.

"Optimism for an economic recovery is not backed up by the data. Safe-havens are very high, but stocks are also high, which doesn't make sense. The party has to end at some point."