Weekly Market Outlook | 10 – 14 Nov
The week of November 10–14 arrives in the shadow of the longest-running U.S. government shutdown, creating data visibility issues that keep markets on edge. With major U.S. inflation and employment data likely delayed or cancelled, investors will instead lean heavily on central-bank commentary, business sentiment surveys, and corporate earnings to gauge policy direction. Globally, key releases in the UK, eurozone and China will test the durability of the growth recovery, while trade and commodity dynamics remain ever-present.
Key Points to Watch
- Major U.S. inflation data (CPI, PPI) and employment metrics may be delayed due to the shutdown, increasing reliance on Fed speak.
- Business outlook and sentiment surveys will fill the void left by missing official data, offering clues to growth and pricing pressure.
- In the UK and eurozone, labour-market updates, GDP prints and sentiment indices will shine a light on growth risks and central-bank flexibility.
- China’s October activity and inflation data, along with global trade flows, will shape emerging-market and commodity-linked asset outlooks.
- With official U.S. data scarce, central-bank speeches (especially the Federal Reserve) and geopolitical/commodity dynamics may drive market moves.
United States: Data Gap & Fed Focus
In the U.S., the ongoing government shutdown means that key inflation (CPI, PPI) and employment figures expected this week may be delayed or omitted entirely, leaving markets reliant on commentary from the Fed and private-sector indicators. With the data void, the Fed’s tone becomes even more important: any hint that data-dependence has shifted or that cuts may be delayed could shift expectations toward a more cautious path. Sustained inflationary signals or stronger-than-expected private surveys may therefore sharpen the dollar and weigh on risk assets.
Europe & UK: Growth Under the Microscope
In Europe and the UK, growth remains fragile, and this week’s releases, including UK labour-market updates and eurozone GDP revisions, will test whether domestic demand is picking up or flagging. The Bank of England (BoE) is likely to remain on hold, but weak data could increase speculation of cuts later in the year. Investors will monitor whether the UK economy shows signs of stabilisation or further deceleration, and how that impacts sterling and UK assets.
Asia & Global Themes: China, Trade & Commodities
China’s October inflation, investment and industrial-production data will be key gauges of whether the world’s second-largest economy is stabilising or decelerating further. Global trade flows, commodity trends and the implications of a stronger or weaker dollar will remain cross-cutting themes. The commodity-linked currencies and emerging-market assets may face pronounced moves depending on China’s data outcome and the trade environment.
Conclusion
This week may not deliver marquee breakthroughs, but it could reshape how markets interpret the missing U.S. data and central-bank messaging. With official figures disrupted, surprises in private indicators or sharp commentary could trigger outsized moves. Investors should remain alert to the risk of market swings from sentiment shifts, data gaps, and policy ambiguity, especially in currency, bond and commodity markets.


