PROTECT YOURSELF with Orgo-Life® QUANTUM TECHNOLOGY
Orgo-Life the new way to the future Advertising by AdpathwayRio Times Markets · The Week Ahead
Week Overview
The week belongs to central banks. Six of them announce rate decisions across five days, and the entire calendar revolves around Wednesday afternoon. At 2:00 PM New York time, the Federal Reserve delivers its decision and the updated quarterly projections that show where each committee member sees interest rates by year-end. Three and a half hours later, Brazil’s Copom announces its own decision.
The Fed is widely expected to hold its policy rate at 3.75%, so the story sits inside the projections. Last week’s US inflation report at 4.2% was the hottest reading in nearly three years, and several committee members will likely shift their year-end forecasts higher. The Bank of Japan opens the week Monday evening (New York time) with its own decision; markets expect a quarter-point hike to 1.00%, the highest Japanese policy rate since 2008.
For Latin America, the Copom announcement is the most consequential rate call of the year. The Selic sits at 14.50%, and analysts are split: XP, Itaú and Goldman expect a quarter-point cut to 14.25%, while Santander calls for a pause. Inflation expectations in the central bank’s weekly Focus survey have climbed for ten consecutive weeks — the longest run of upward revisions since Brazil’s inflation-targeting era began.
Holiday Watch
Argentina and Colombia are closed Monday. South Africa is out Tuesday for Youth Day. Friday is the thinnest session of the week — the US is closed for Juneteenth, while China and Hong Kong observe the Dragon Boat Festival. Western European markets are open all week.
Three Themes That Will Define the Week
Theme One — The Fed and the Dot Plot
The Fed is expected to hold at 3.75% on Wednesday. The story lives in the updated quarterly projections, in particular the chart known as the dot plot — where each committee member marks a single point showing the policy rate they expect by year-end. The March projection still showed two cuts by December; the June version is almost certainly going to show fewer. A median that still leaves room for one cut keeps the dollar in check; a flat line through all of 2026 sends it higher and pressures every emerging-market currency, including the real.
Theme Two — Copom: Cut or Pause
Brazil’s Copom decision Wednesday evening is the year’s most consequential rate call for Brazilian markets. Three of the four major analyst houses expect another quarter-point cut to 14.25%. Santander is the lone voice calling for a pause. The committee meets with inflation expectations that have drifted away from the official target for ten consecutive weeks — and whatever happens to the rate itself, the post-decision communiqué will set the cycle’s direction for the rest of the year.
Theme Three — The Wider Central-Bank Cluster
Beyond the Fed and the Copom, four other central banks decide. The Bank of Japan opens Monday night with an expected hike to 1.00%. The Reserve Bank of Australia holds Tuesday morning at 4.35%, and Chile’s central bank also holds Tuesday evening at 4.50%. Thursday brings the busiest block: the Swiss National Bank, the Norges Bank and the Bank of England, all expected to hold. The BoE vote split is what to watch — last meeting saw eight members vote for a hold, one for a hike, and none for a cut.
The Week at a Glance
The week’s market-moving releases at a glance. Impact is colour-coded throughout this guide: red marks the high-impact, market-moving releases; amber marks the secondary data.
Mon
7:25 AM · Brazil · BCB Focus Market Readout
High
Mon
9:15 AM · US · Industrial Production (May)
High
Mon
11:00 PM · Japan · BoJ Interest Rate Decision
High
Tue
12:30 AM · Australia · RBA Interest Rate Decision
High
Tue
6:00 PM · Chile · BCCh Interest Rate Decision
High
Wed
2:00 AM · UK · CPI YoY (May)
High
Wed
5:00 AM · EU · Final CPI YoY (May)
High
Wed
8:30 AM · US · Retail Sales (May)
High
Wed
2:00 PM · US · Fed Interest Rate Decision
High
Wed
2:00 PM · US · FOMC Projections (Dot Plot)
High
Wed
2:30 PM · US · Powell Press Conference
High
Wed
5:30 PM · Brazil · Copom Interest Rate Decision
High
Thu
2:00 AM · UK · Average Earnings (Apr)
High
Thu
3:30 AM · Switzerland · SNB Interest Rate Decision
High
Thu
4:00 AM · Norway · Norges Bank Rate Decision
High
Thu
7:00 AM · UK · BoE Interest Rate Decision
High
Thu
8:30 AM · US · Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing (Jun)
High
Fri
2:00 AM · UK · Retail Sales (May)
High
01 Monday — June 15
BCB Focus, US factory data and the Bank of Japan’s late-night hike. A quiet opening day in the West that ends with the week’s first major central-bank decision after the New York close.
2:00 AM
EU · German Wholesale Prices MoM (May) — cons. 0.8%, prior 2.0%
Med
2:30 AM
Switzerland · PPI MoM (May) — cons. 0.4%, prior 0.8%
Med
2:30 AM
India · WPI Inflation YoY (May) — cons. 9.10%, prior 8.30%
Med
3:15 AM
EU · ECB President Lagarde Speaks
High
5:00 AM
EU · Industrial Production MoM (Apr) — cons. 0.2%, prior 0.2%
Med
5:00 AM
EU · Trade Balance (Apr) — cons. 7.8B, prior 7.8B
Med
7:25 AM
Brazil · BCB Focus Market Readout
High
8:30 AM
US · NY Empire State Manufacturing (Jun) — cons. 13.20, prior 19.60
Med
9:15 AM
US · Industrial Production MoM (May) — cons. 0.3%, prior 0.7%
High
9:15 AM
US · Capacity Utilization (May) — cons. 76.2%, prior 76.1%
Med
10:00 AM
US · NAHB Housing Market Index (Jun) — cons. 36, prior 37
Med
11:00 AM
Peru · GDP YoY (Apr) — prior 3.21%
Med
10:00 PM
China · Industrial Production YoY (May) — cons. 4.3%, prior 4.1%
Med
10:00 PM
China · Retail Sales YoY (May) — cons. −0.2%, prior 0.2%
Med
10:30 PM
Japan · BoJ Monetary Policy Statement
High
11:00 PM
Japan · BoJ Interest Rate Decision — cons. 1.00%, prior 0.75%
High
The Bank of Japan’s decision late Monday night in New York — Tuesday lunchtime in Tokyo — is the week’s first major central-bank move. A quarter-point hike to 1.00% would mark the highest Japanese policy rate in eighteen years and confirm that Tokyo’s careful exit from negative interest rates has reached cruising altitude. The yen has weakened toward 158 against the dollar in recent sessions, and a hike here helps reverse that drift.
In the US, the New York Fed manufacturing survey and the national industrial production figure are both expected to slow — the survey from 19.6 to 13.2, factory output from 0.7% growth to 0.3%. Both are still positive, but the deceleration tells the story of American factories now feeling the squeeze from higher oil costs. Brazil’s BCB Focus survey is the final read on inflation expectations before Wednesday’s Copom — another increase would harden the case for a pause.
02 Tuesday — June 16
RBA holds, German confidence and Chile’s evening decision. Two more rate decisions bookend the day around the BoJ press conference and a strong expected rebound in German investor sentiment.
12:30 AM
Australia · RBA Interest Rate Decision — cons. 4.35%, prior 4.35%
High
12:30 AM
Australia · RBA Rate Statement
Med
2:30 AM
Japan · BoJ Press Conference (Ueda)
High
4:00 AM
EU · Italian CPI YoY (May) — cons. 3.2%, prior 3.2%
Med
5:00 AM
EU · German ZEW Economic Sentiment (Jun) — cons. −5.5, prior −10.2
High
5:00 AM
EU · Eurozone Wages YoY (Q1) — prior 3.00%
High
5:00 AM
EU · Labor Cost Index YoY (Q1) — cons. 3.30%, prior 3.30%
Med
7:00 AM
Brazil · IGP-10 Inflation Index MoM (Jun) — prior 0.9%
Med
8:00 AM
Brazil · Retail Sales YoY (Apr) — prior 4.0%
High
8:30 AM
US · Building Permits (May) — cons. 1.420M, prior 1.423M
Med
8:30 AM
US · Housing Starts (May) — cons. 1.420M, prior 1.465M
Med
8:30 AM
US · Import Price Index MoM (May) — cons. 0.9%, prior 1.9%
Med
9:10 AM
EU · ECB’s Lane Speaks
High
11:00 AM
Colombia · Industrial Production YoY (Apr) — prior 3.9%
Med
11:00 AM
Colombia · Retail Sales YoY (Apr) — prior 13.4%
Med
1:00 PM
US · 20-Year Bond Auction — prior 5.122%
Med
6:00 PM
Chile · BCCh Interest Rate Decision (Jun) — cons. 4.50%, prior 4.50%
High
The Bank of Japan press conference at 2:30 AM ET — Tuesday afternoon in Tokyo — is where Governor Ueda explains the hike. His tone on whether more increases will follow this year will move the yen and the global bond market more than the decision itself.
In Europe, the German ZEW investor sentiment survey is expected to improve sharply — from −10.2 to −5.5 — suggesting that Frankfurt’s hike last Thursday is being read as the last for now rather than the first of many. The eurozone Q1 wages reading is the cleanest measure of how labour costs are evolving across the bloc, and it lands at the same time. Brazilian retail sales for April are the activity counterpart to last week’s IPCA — strong consumer demand makes a Copom cut harder to defend.
Chile’s central bank holds at 4.50% in the evening. With oil still near $100 and Chilean inflation now running above target, the steady stance is becoming harder to sustain, but Santiago has signalled patience for the moment.
03 Wednesday — June 17
The week’s defining session. UK CPI opens the day, US retail sales follow midmorning, and the Fed and Copom decide one after the other through the New York afternoon — the most consequential evening for Brazilian rates in twelve months.
2:00 AM
UK · CPI YoY (May) — cons. 3.0%, prior 2.8%
High
2:00 AM
UK · Core CPI YoY (May) — cons. 2.7%, prior 2.5%
High
2:00 AM
UK · RPI YoY (May) — cons. 3.3%, prior 3.0%
Med
4:00 AM
South Africa · CPI YoY (May) — prior 4.0%
Med
5:00 AM
EU · Final CPI YoY (May) — cons. 3.2%, prior 3.2%
High
5:00 AM
EU · Final Core CPI YoY (May) — cons. 2.5%, prior 2.5%
Med
6:50 AM
EU · ECB President Lagarde Speaks
High
8:00 AM
Brazil · IBC-Br Economic Activity (Apr) — prior −0.70%
Med
8:30 AM
US · Retail Sales MoM (May) — cons. 0.5%, prior 0.5%
High
8:30 AM
US · Core Retail Sales MoM (May) — cons. 0.5%, prior 0.7%
High
10:00 AM
US · Pending Home Sales MoM (May) — cons. 1.3%, prior 1.4%
Med
10:30 AM
US · Crude Oil Inventories — prior −7.227M
Med
2:00 PM
US · Fed Interest Rate Decision — cons. 3.75%, prior 3.75%
High
2:00 PM
US · FOMC Economic Projections (Dot Plot)
High
2:00 PM
US · FOMC Statement
High
2:30 PM
US · FOMC Press Conference (Powell)
High
5:30 PM
Brazil · Copom Interest Rate Decision — prior 14.50%
High
6:45 PM
New Zealand · GDP QoQ (Q1) — prior 0.2%
Med
UK inflation opens the day. The headline rate is expected to jump from 2.8% to 3.0%, with core inflation accelerating to 2.7% — Britain’s last data point before the Bank of England decides Thursday morning. A reading above consensus strengthens the hand of the one BoE committee member who has been voting for a hike at every recent meeting.
The Fed announcement at 2:00 PM ET arrives in three pieces at once: the rate decision, the policy statement, and the updated projections including the dot plot. The March projection still showed two cuts by year-end; the June version is unlikely to keep that. Chair Powell takes questions thirty minutes later — and three and a half hours after Powell finishes, Brazil’s Copom announces its own decision.
The combination is what makes the day historic. A hawkish Fed paired with a Brazilian cut weakens the real and undermines the cycle’s logic. A dovish Fed paired with a Copom cut is the cleanest possible outcome for Latin American assets. A Copom pause would mark the end of the easing cycle that began in April, regardless of what the Fed says first.
04 Thursday — June 18
SNB, Norges Bank and Bank of England — three holds in three hours. The morning is dense with European rate decisions, and the BoE vote split is the read.
2:00 AM
UK · Average Earnings ex Bonus (Apr) — cons. 3.3%, prior 3.4%
High
2:00 AM
UK · Claimant Count Change (May) — cons. 25.8K, prior 26.5K
Med
2:00 AM
UK · Unemployment Rate (Apr) — cons. 5.0%, prior 5.0%
Med
3:30 AM
Switzerland · SNB Interest Rate Decision (Q2) — cons. 0.00%, prior 0.00%
High
3:30 AM
Switzerland · SNB Monetary Policy Assessment
High
4:00 AM
Norway · Norges Bank Rate Decision — cons. 4.25%, prior 4.25%
High
4:00 AM
EU · Current Account (Apr) — cons. 18.5B, prior 14.9B
Med
4:30 AM
Switzerland · SNB Press Conference
High
7:00 AM
UK · BoE Interest Rate Decision (Jun) — cons. 3.75%, prior 3.75%
High
7:00 AM
UK · BoE MPC Vote Split — cons. 8 hold / 1 hike / 0 cut
High
7:00 AM
UK · BoE MPC Meeting Minutes
High
8:15 AM
EU · ECB’s Lane Speaks
High
8:30 AM
US · Initial Jobless Claims — cons. 225K, prior 229K
High
8:30 AM
US · Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing (Jun) — cons. 11.4, prior −0.4
High
8:30 AM
US · Continuing Jobless Claims — prior 1,795K
Med
10:00 AM
US · Leading Index MoM (May) — cons. 0.1%, prior 0.1%
Med
7:30 PM
Japan · National Core CPI YoY (May) — cons. 1.4%, prior 1.4%
High
The Bank of England decision at 7:00 AM ET is Thursday’s main event. A hold at 3.75% is broadly expected, but the committee vote is where the real story sits. Last meeting saw eight members vote for a hold, one for a hike, and zero for a cut. If a second member joins the hike camp — particularly after Wednesday’s higher CPI — the September meeting becomes a live possibility for further tightening.
The Swiss National Bank and the Norges Bank both hold earlier in the morning. The SNB sitting at zero remains the only major central bank where deflation is still a bigger concern than inflation. Norway’s hold at 4.25% reflects an oil producer’s ability to ride out the energy shock rather than fear it — the krone has been one of the strongest currencies of the year.
In the US, the Philadelphia Fed manufacturing survey is expected to swing from −0.4 in May to +11.4 in June. A reading anywhere near consensus would be the strongest signal yet that American factories are recovering from the spring slowdown that worried the FOMC at its May meeting.
05 Friday — June 19
A thin holiday session with UK retail sales the only major release. Wall Street, China and Hong Kong are all closed — Friday is headline-driven and lightly traded.
2:00 AM
UK · Retail Sales MoM (May) — cons. 0.5%, prior −1.3%
High
2:00 AM
UK · Retail Sales YoY (May) — prior 0.0%
Med
2:00 AM
UK · Public Sector Net Borrowing (May) — cons. 18.90B, prior 24.30B
Med
2:00 AM
EU · German PPI MoM (May) — cons. 0.8%, prior 1.2%
Med
3:10 AM
EU · ECB’s Lane Speaks
Med
6:30 AM
EU · ECB’s Elderson Speaks
Med
7:30 AM
India · RBI MPC Meeting Minutes
High
8:30 AM
Canada · Retail Sales MoM (Apr) — cons. 0.6%, prior 0.9%
Med
10:30 AM
EU · ECB’s Lane Speaks
Med
With Wall Street closed for Juneteenth and Chinese and Hong Kong markets out for the Dragon Boat Festival, Friday is the thinnest trading session of the week. UK retail sales offer the only major data point — a sharp rebound of 0.5% is expected after April’s 1.3% drop. The BoE meeting minutes from Thursday will shape how investors read it.
The Reserve Bank of India publishes the minutes of its most recent meeting, giving the first detailed look at how Delhi is processing the energy shock’s impact on Indian inflation. With the rupee under pressure and oil prices stubbornly high, the minutes will be more closely read than usual.
The Week in Context
Last week confirmed how broad the inflation problem has become. US CPI climbed to 4.2% over the past year — the hottest reading since 2023. The European Central Bank hiked for the first time this cycle. The Bank of Canada held, but Macklem flagged that a hike may be needed if the oil shock proves persistent. Brazil’s May IPCA confirmed that the post-Hormuz gasoline shock is now reaching the broader consumer basket.
This week is the rate-decision week the entire year has been building toward. Eight central banks meet across five days — the Fed, the Copom, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, the Swiss National Bank, the Norges Bank, the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Chilean central bank. Most will hold; the Bank of Japan and possibly the Copom will move.
For Latin America, this is the moment when the cycle either holds together or breaks apart. The Copom decision Wednesday evening defines the second half of the year for Brazilian assets. A confident cut keeps the easing path alive. A pause signals the committee believes inflation has gotten ahead of it. Read alongside the Fed’s updated projections at 2:00 PM, this is the most consequential evening for Brazilian rates in twelve months.
The Bottom Line
Wednesday is the year’s most important session for global rates. The Fed at 2:00 PM, the updated projections in the same envelope, Powell’s press conference at 2:30, and the Copom decision at 5:30 — all in one afternoon. The base case is a Fed hold with at least one cut still showing in the projections and a quarter-point Copom cut to 14.25%, which keeps the disinflation story alive. Anything else marks a regime shift.
For Brazil, this is the moment of truth. The Selic at 14.50% remains the highest real-yield benchmark in the major emerging market complex, but inflation expectations have moved away from the target for ten consecutive weeks. Either the Copom cuts and the central bank convinces markets the path is intact, or it pauses and concedes the cycle has stalled.
Bias: a week that ends one cycle and begins another. Six central banks decide rates, two of them within hours of each other on Wednesday afternoon, and Brazil’s Copom call defines the rest of 2026.
Reported for The Rio Times — Markets. Filed June 14, 2026. Sources: Trading Economics, Investing.com, IBGE, FXStreet, central-bank calendars.
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →


4 hours ago
2





















English (US) ·
French (CA) ·
French (FR) ·