Election Day Tuesday: Who Controls Senate May Not be Determined Nov. 8

WASDE report Wed. | CPI report Thurs. | U.S./Taiwan trade talks | COP27

 


Week Ahead Headers 110622


 

Washington Focus


 

Tuesday is Election Day. Remember, if you do not vote, you cannot complain about the results. All 435 House seats are up for grabs; about one-third or 34 Senate seats. The party in power in Washington typically loses ground in midterm elections, and this year the Democrats control the House, Senate and presidency. Here is a link to a Pro Farmer special report on the midterms and their long-term implications.  

 

           - “If #VA02 Luria (D) holds on, better night for Dems than expected

           - “If #IN01 Mrvan (D) or #VA07 Spanberger (D) lose, Rs likely winning 20+ seats… A word of caution, though: at least in VA, the very first results reported are likely to favor Rs. Extra caution is warranted in #VA07, where Prince William Co.'s mail ballots are critical to Rep. Abigail Spanberger's (D) path to victory and could be the last to be counted.

           - “If #NH02 Kuster (D) or #VA10 Wexton (D) lose, Rs likely winning 30+ seats”

The U.S. and Taiwan will begin in-person trade talks in New York under a new joint initiative announced in June — one which China strongly opposes. The “conceptual discussions” on the U.S./Taiwan Initiative on 21st Century Trade — a plan first announced in June — will take place on Nov. 8 and 9 and will involve representatives from the National Economic Council, Commerce and Treasury departments, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, which will lead the delegation, said in a statement on its website Thursday. The talks will take place under the auspices of the American Institute in Taiwan — the de facto U.S. embassy — and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the U.S.  

     The trade initiative aims to reach agreements in areas including trade facilitation, good regulatory practices, strong anti-corruption standards, and addressing distortive practices of state-owned enterprises.

COP27 began Sunday in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, and will run until Nov. 16. COP27 is centered on the themes of decarbonization, the energy transition, innovative solutions, pro-climate finance, nature and biodiversity, and more. Link to the schedule.

     U.N. climate talks began with a deal to discuss how rich countries can help pay for the damages caused by global warming elsewhere. The breakthrough, reported in advance by Bloomberg, will allow diplomats to officially debate so-called “loss and damage” for the first time during the two-week conference in Egypt’s Sharm el-Sheikh resort. Developing countries have been demanding a discussion on climate reparations since Conference of Parties, or COP, meetings started in the early 1990s.

The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and Kansas City will host their seventh joint energy conference, "Energy and the Economy: The New Energy Landscape," in Houston and virtually on Thursday. The all-day conference features Gretchen Watkins from Shell PLC, Toby Rice from shale gas producer EQT Corp., and Sandhya Ganapathy from EDP Renewables on a panel to discuss the changing U.S. energy landscape. The conference follows Biden's recent attacks on the oil and gas industry for "war profiteering" and his call on Congress to impose a windfall tax on the industry's record profits.

Global conference. Emily Blanchard, chief economist at the Department of State; Richard Cantor, vice chairman of Moody's Investors Service; and World Bank Group Chief Economist Indermit Gill are among the speakers at the Peterson Institute for International Economics' "Next STEP Global Conference," taking place Wednesday through Friday.

American Express CEO Stephen Squeri will speak at a noon webinar hosted by The Economic Club of New York on Thursday.

Other key events include:

Monday, Nov. 7

Tuesday, Nov. 8

 

Wednesday, Nov. 9

 

Thursday, Nov. 10

 

Friday, Nov. 11

 


Economic Reports and Events for the Week


The economics calendar will be dominated by the October Consumer Price Index report on Thursday. The Labor Department’s October report on consumer prices will show whether underlying price pressures persisted or eased. Bank of America noted that transportation services prices and new auto prices, food/beverage prices and apparel prices are still elevated, but medical care services prices, used car prices, food/beverage prices and apparel prices are forecast to have moved lower. Earnings will also continue this week, with Disney, Rivian Automotive, Rolox and Nio some of the notable reports.

Monday, Nov. 7

Tuesday, Nov. 8

Wednesday, Nov. 9

Thursday, Nov. 10

Friday, Nov. 11


Key USDA & international Ag & Energy Reports and Events 


USDA on Wednesday releases its supply/demand updates via the WASDE report. Not much change is expected, but the focus will be on world supply and demand numbers.

     On the international front, China’s first batch of October trade data will be published Monday, while France’s agricultural ministry will update its 2022 crop production estimates during the week.

Monday, Nov. 7

     Ag reports and events:

Energy reports and events:

Tuesday, Nov. 8

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:

Wednesday, Nov. 9

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:

Thursday, Nov. 10

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:

Friday, Nov. 11

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:


 

 

KEY LINKS


WASDE | Crop Production | USDA weekly reports | Crop Progress | Food prices | Farm income | Export Sales weekly | ERP dashboard | California phase-out of gas-powered vehicles | RFS | IRA: Biofuels | IRA: Ag | Student loan forgiveness | Russia/Ukraine war, lessons learned | Election predictions: Split-ticket | Congress to-do list | SCOTUS on WOTUS  | SCOTUS on Prop 12 | New farm bill primer | China outlook | 2022 Midterm elections |