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Central Bank bonanza from Washington to Tokyo

The head quarter of the European Central Bank (ECB) is illuminated with a giant euro sign at the start of the 'Luminale, light and building' event in Frankfurt, Germany, today. – Reuters pic, March 13, 2016.The head quarter of the European Central Bank (ECB) is illuminated with a giant euro sign at the start of the 'Luminale, light and building' event in Frankfurt, Germany, today. – Reuters pic, March 13, 2016.Central banks take centre stage in the coming week as policymakers from Washington to London and Tokyo battle slowing global growth, heightened market volatility and deflationary pressures.

Coming after the European Central Bank's massive stimulus package, the US Federal Reserve must resolve conflicting economic drivers while the Bank of England will take a cautious line ahead of a defining vote on European Union membership.

A standout in an otherwise wobbly world economy, even the United States is facing growing headwinds, primarily from trade and weak emerging markets.

That is likely to stay the Fed's hand on Wednesday and push out its next hike, possibly to June, even as it maintains a tightening bias.

"Overall, the message from the Fed will likely be a pause to assess uncertainties and gather more evidence, but no shift in strategy, or medium term view: act soft, talk tough," BNP Paribas said in a note.

While the Fed has hinted at four 25-basis-point rate hikes this year, markets see just one increase in the second half, leaving an unusually big gap between market expectations and the central bank's guidance.

Fuelling the doves' case, the Cleveland Fed's Financial Stress Indicator briefly showed its highest warning level in recent weeks, pointing to significant risk.

Business surveys have also pointed to growing worries while exports are facing challenges from a strong dollar.

But unemployment continues to fall, housing activity is high, the labour market is tightening and household consumption is rising, all indicating that the real economy is performing broadly as the Fed has predicted.

Data also suggest that the labour supply will be below demand, suggesting increased competition for labour and higher wages, a strong argument to keep increasing rates, economists said.

"The difference between a hawkish Fed and a dovish Fed is the degree to which they open the door to a June, or much less likely, April hike," Citi economist Steven Englander said.

"They have no incentive to pre-announce a June hike," Englander said. "It makes more sense for them to begin warning the market a month or so before they intend to hike so that it is largely priced in before it occurs and has less chance of being derailed by events that they can't control."

From London to Tokyo

The Bank of England, announcing its decision on Thursday, a day after the new budget is delivered, is also sure to stay on hold, potentially sounding a dovish tone and acknowledging potential economic hurdles.

The meeting's minutes, published along with the decision, are likely to show a unanimous vote for flat rates for second month in a row after lone dissenter calling for a hike rejoined the fold last month.

Although some policymakers have flirted with the thought of stimulus, data on Wednesday is expected to show wage growth picking up speed after slowing in recent months, dampening any rate-cut talk.

"While the recent quite sharp fall in trade-weighted sterling and the large percentage rise in oil prices will push up on inflation, with growth slowing, wage growth weak, and uncertainty high, in large part due to the impending referendum on EU membership, the MPC will be in no mood to talk up the prospect of rate hikes," UniCredit said.

The Bank of Japan is also likely to stay on hold, still scrambling to soothe market jitters caused by January's surprise decision to adopt negative interest rates.

Markets are rife with speculation the BOJ will expand monetary stimulus in the coming months to reflate a stagnant economy after January's move failed to boost stock prices or arrest an unwelcome rise in the yen.

But many central bank policymakers are reluctant to ease again soon unless external shocks jolt global financial markets enough to derail Japan's fragile economic recovery, sources familiar with the bank's thinking told Reuters earlier.

Comments from BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda that it is time to scrutinise the effects of negative rates also point to a steady hand.

The Swiss National Bank is likewise expected to stay pat on Thursday while minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia are likely to acknowledge a surprising improvement in the outlook after recent GDP data beat expectations by a wide margin.

"Unless there is a serious deterioration in the local growth outlook generally, and particularly the labour market, and/or a meltdown in the global growth outlook, say a tanking in Chinese growth, then the RBA will be content to leave the cash rate at 2% over 2016," Commonwealth Bank said. – Reuters, March 13, 2016.

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