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Key Market Occasions for the Week of Could 4–8, 2026


US Nonfarm Payrolls, Banxico Rate Decision, Copom Minutes, ISM Services, RBA Hike, Mexico CPI, ADP, Michigan Sentiment, Brazil Industrial Production

Week Overview

Markets digest last week’s seven-central-bank super week while facing a fresh batch of labor market and rate decisions. US Nonfarm Payrolls (Friday 8:30 AM, cons. +73K, prior +178K) is the week’s global anchor — after March’s surprise recovery from the February −92K trough, April’s reading will determine whether the labor market is stabilizing or weakening again under the combined weight of the oil shock, tariff uncertainty, and consumer confidence collapse. Banxico decides Thursday at 3:00 PM (prior 6.75% after the surprise March cut) — with headline CPI at 4.59% in April and core stubbornly at 4.45%, the board faces the tension between an economy showing marked weakness and inflation still well above the 3% target. The Copom minutes (Tuesday 7:00 AM) will reveal the internal debate behind last week’s Selic decision — whether the committee accelerated to 50 bps or stayed at 25 bps, and what the inflation/growth tradeoff looked like in the room. ISM Services (Tuesday 10:00 AM, cons. 53.8 vs. 54.0) provides the US services-sector activity read, with JOLTS job openings (cons. 6.870M) arriving simultaneously. The RBA is expected to hike to 4.35% (Tuesday 12:30 AM), making Australia an outlier tightener alongside Colombia. Mexico delivers April CPI (Thursday, prior 0.86% MoM / 4.59% YoY) alongside the Banxico decision. ADP (Wednesday, cons. 90K) provides the pre-NFP private payroll read. Michigan sentiment prelim for May (Friday, cons. 49.3) tests whether the consumer confidence collapse is deepening. Final Manufacturing PMIs, EZ Services PMIs, trade data, and Brazil industrial production round out the slate. UK closed Monday (Early May Bank Holiday). Japan closed Monday–Wednesday (Golden Week). China closed Monday–Tuesday (Labor Day).

⚠ Holiday Watch — Golden Week + Early May

Japan closed Mon–Wed (Golden Week). China closed Mon–Tue (Labor Day). UK closed Monday (Early May Bank Holiday). South Korea closed Tuesday (Children’s Day). Normal LATAM trading all week.

Three Themes That Will Define the Week

1
NFP + ISM Services + ADP — the US labor market reality check: Friday’s April Nonfarm Payrolls (8:30 AM, cons. +73K, prior +178K) arrives after March’s reassuring recovery but with consensus pointing to a sharp deceleration. The decline from +178K to +73K would signal that the labor market is cooling but not collapsing — a “Goldilocks” outcome for the Fed’s hold stance. But the risk is asymmetric: a number below 50K would reignite recession fears and rate-cut repricing; above 120K would calm markets through summer. The unemployment rate (cons. 4.3%, unchanged) and average hourly earnings (cons. +0.3% MoM) complete the jobs picture. ISM Services (Tuesday 10:00 AM, cons. 53.8 vs. 54.0) tests whether the services sector — America’s economic backbone — is holding up after last week’s flash PMI showed Services barely above 50. The Prices Paid component (prior 70.7) signals services inflation pressure. JOLTS (cons. 6.870M) and ADP (Wednesday, cons. 90K vs. 62K) provide the leading reads. Michigan sentiment for May (Friday, cons. 49.3 vs. 49.8) tests whether consumer confidence remains mired near its crisis-era low — the 1-year inflation expectation (prior 4.7%) could push back above 5%, a threshold that would force the Fed to reconsider its patience.

2
Banxico + Mexico CPI — the easing-into-inflation dilemma: Banxico’s Thursday decision (3:00 PM, prior 6.75%) is the week’s LATAM centerpiece. The March 25 bps cut to 6.75% surprised markets — it came despite headline CPI rising to 4.63% in mid-March and core inflation stuck at 4.46%. The decision was 4-1, with Deputy Governor Heath dissenting in favor of a hold. April CPI (Thursday 8:00 AM, prior 0.86% MoM / 4.59% YoY) arrives the same morning as the decision — the committee will have seen this data before announcing. If headline has risen above 5.0% on energy pass-through, a hold or even a reversal becomes the base case; if it’s moderated toward 4.2%, another 25 bps cut to 6.50% is on the table. Core CPI (prior 4.45%) is the structural signal — the persistence of services inflation above 4% constrains the board even as economic activity contracts (GDP was −0.9% MoM in February). The PPI data (prior 1.70% MoM) arriving simultaneously shows the producer-level pipeline. Mexico’s monetary policy is now the most ambiguous in LATAM: cutting into elevated inflation while the economy weakens, with the peso providing the only anchor.

3
Copom minutes + EZ PMIs — decoding last week’s central bank decisions: Tuesday’s Copom minutes (7:00 AM) are the most anticipated in months. Last week’s Selic decision — whether it was 25 or 50 bps — sets the frame, but the minutes reveal the intellectual debate: How did the committee weigh the IPCA-15 data? What oil-price assumptions did they use? Was the vote unanimous or split? Did any members argue for a larger cut based on weak IBC-Br activity? The answers will shape expectations for the June meeting and the entire H2 easing path. Final EZ Services PMIs (Wednesday) will confirm whether the April flash readings — which showed EZ Services at 47.4, German Services at 46.9, and French Services at 46.5 — represent a genuine contraction. EZ PPI (Wednesday, cons. +3.3% MoM) shows the producer-level inflation surge hitting European industry. The post-ECB landscape is defined by whether Lagarde held at 2.15% or surprised with a hike — the minutes from last week’s decision will be parsed for hawkish signals. Brazil delivers industrial production (Thursday, prior +0.9% MoM), trade balance, and FX flows. Chile economic activity (Monday, prior −0.3% YoY) and CPI (Friday) add Andean data.

Key Market Events for the Week of May 4–8, 2026 Key Market Events for the Week of May 4–8, 2026

Week at a Glance — High-Impact Events Only

Day
Time
Region
Event
Cons.
Prior

Mon
9:00 AM
BRAZIL
S&P Global Manufacturing PMI (Apr)

49.0

Tue
12:30 AM
AUSTRALIA
RBA Interest Rate Decision
4.35%
4.10%

Tue
7:00 AM
BRAZIL
Copom Meeting Minutes

Tue
10:00 AM
US
ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI (Apr)
53.8
54.0

Tue
10:00 AM
US
JOLTS Job Openings (Mar)
6.870M
6.882M

Wed
8:15 AM
US
ADP Nonfarm Employment (Apr)
90K
62K

Wed
4:00 AM
EU
EZ Services PMI (Apr, final)
47.4
47.4

Thu
8:00 AM
MEXICO
CPI MoM / YoY (Apr)

0.86% / 4.59%

Thu
8:00 AM
BRAZIL
Industrial Production MoM (Mar)

0.9%

Thu
8:30 AM
US
Nonfarm Productivity QoQ (Q1)
1.0%
1.8%

Thu
3:00 PM
MEXICO
Banxico Interest Rate Decision

6.75%

Fri
8:30 AM
US
Nonfarm Payrolls (Apr)
73K
178K

Fri
8:30 AM
US
Unemployment Rate (Apr)
4.3%
4.3%

Fri
10:00 AM
US
Michigan Consumer Sentiment (May, prelim)
49.3
49.8

Week in Context

Last week was the most consequential of the half-year: seven central banks decided in 72 hours, Q1 GDP and Core PCE landed, EZ flash CPI jumped, and ISM Manufacturing closed the week on a US-only May Day session. The FOMC held at 3.50–3.75% as expected (99.7% Polymarket probability), and the statement and Powell’s press conference set the tone for Q2. The Copom delivered its Selic decision, the ECB either held or hiked, the BoE held, and BanRep closed the LATAM cycle. This week is about digestion and the next chapter: how does the labor market look after the central bank decisions? Banxico adds the LATAM exclamation point on Thursday — cutting to 6.75% in March was bold, and April CPI will determine whether the board regrets it or doubles down. The Copom minutes (Tuesday) provide the internal narrative behind what was likely the most debated Selic decision of the year. ISM Services and JOLTS (Tuesday) give the demand-side US picture that last week’s ISM Manufacturing framed from the supply side. ADP (Wednesday) and NFP (Friday) tell the jobs story. The RBA’s expected hike to 4.35% (Tuesday) makes Australia the latest tightener in a world where the divide between tighteners (RBA, BanRep) and holders (Fed, ECB, BoE, BoC) versus cutters (Copom, Banxico) grows more stark by the month. Michigan sentiment (Friday, cons. 49.3) could breach below 49 for the first time — a psychologically important threshold. Golden Week thins Asian liquidity Monday through Wednesday. The UK is closed Monday. Five days of data after five days of decisions. This is where positioning meets reality.

Monday — May 4

FINAL PMIs + UK/JAPAN CLOSED — Final Manufacturing PMIs worldwide. Chile economic activity. Brazil Manufacturing PMI + Focus. Factory orders. UK and Japan closed.

Time
Region
Event
Impact
Cons.
Prior

3:55 AM
EU
German Manufacturing PMI (Apr, final)
MED
51.2
51.2

4:00 AM
EU
EZ Manufacturing PMI (Apr, final)
MED
52.2
52.2

4:30 AM
EU
Sentix Investor Confidence (May)
MED
−20.9
−19.2

7:25 AM
BRAZIL
BCB Focus Market Readout
HIGH

8:30 AM
CHILE
Economic Activity YoY (Mar)
MED

−0.3%

9:00 AM
BRAZIL
S&P Global Manufacturing PMI (Apr)
MED

49.0

10:00 AM
US
Factory Orders MoM (Mar)
MED
0.5%
0.0%

11:00 AM
MEXICO
Manufacturing PMI (Apr)
MED

48.90

12:50 PM
US
FOMC Member Williams Speaks
MED

1:05 PM
EU
Buba President Nagel Speaks
MED

A holiday-thinned open. UK (Early May Bank Holiday), Japan (Greenery Day), and China (Labor Day) are all closed, stripping liquidity from European and Asian sessions. Final EZ Manufacturing PMI (cons. 52.2) confirms the flash. Sentix Investor Confidence (cons. −20.9 vs. −19.2) measures the post-ECB-decision shift in European investor mood. Brazil’s Focus survey is the first post-Copom reading — the market’s updated IPCA and Selic expectations will reveal whether last week’s decision was seen as hawkish or dovish. Brazil Manufacturing PMI (prior 49.0) tests whether the factory sector is recovering from contraction. Chile Economic Activity (prior −0.3% YoY) gauges whether the Andean economy is stabilizing after the Q3 2025 contraction. Mexico Manufacturing PMI (prior 48.90) shows if the factory floor is still contracting under 6.75% rates and tariff uncertainty. FOMC’s Williams and Buba’s Nagel speak — both processing last week’s decisions.

Tuesday — May 5

RBA HIKE + COPOM MINUTES + ISM SERVICES — RBA hike, Copom minutes, ISM Services, JOLTS, US trade balance, Lagarde speaks. Japan and China closed.

Time
Region
Event
Impact
Cons.
Prior

12:30 AM
AUSTRALIA
RBA Interest Rate Decision
HIGH
4.35%
4.10%

12:30 AM
AUSTRALIA
RBA Monetary Policy Statement
HIGH

5:00 AM
BRAZIL
IPC-Fipe Inflation MoM (Apr)
MED

0.59%

7:00 AM
BRAZIL
Copom Meeting Minutes
HIGH

8:30 AM
US
Trade Balance (Mar)
MED
−59.00B
−57.30B

8:30 AM
CANADA
Trade Balance (Mar)
MED
−2.10B
−5.74B

8:30 AM
EU
ECB President Lagarde Speaks
HIGH

9:45 AM
US
S&P Global Services PMI (Apr, final)
MED
51.3
51.3

10:00 AM
US
ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI (Apr)
HIGH
53.8
54.0

10:00 AM
US
ISM Non-Manufacturing Prices (Apr)
HIGH

70.7

10:00 AM
US
JOLTS Job Openings (Mar)
HIGH
6.870M
6.882M

10:00 AM
US
New Home Sales (Mar)
MED
1K
587K

10:10 AM
US
IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism (May)
MED
42.0
42.8

11:00 AM
COLOMBIA
Exports YoY (Mar)
MED

11.40%

12:30 PM
US
FOMC Member Bowman Speaks
MED

The week’s most analytically dense session. The RBA (12:30 AM, cons. hike to 4.35% from 4.10%) would make Australia one of the few economies still tightening — the RBA board faces the same inflation-versus-growth tension as every other central bank, but with Q1 CPI running above 3.5% and a tight labor market, the hawks have the upper hand. Copom minutes (7:00 AM) are critical: the market needs to know whether the vote was unanimous, how the committee assessed the oil shock’s persistence, and whether forward guidance was considered but rejected. ISM Services (10:00 AM, cons. 53.8 vs. 54.0) is the post-FOMC activity read — a significant decline below 53 would signal services-sector cooling, consistent with the consumer confidence collapse. Prices Paid (prior 70.7) measures services inflation pressure. JOLTS (cons. 6.870M) tests labor demand — any decline below 6.8M would suggest the labor market is loosening, supporting the Fed’s patience narrative. Lagarde speaks (8:30 AM) — her first post-ECB remarks will reveal whether the hold (or hike) was contentious. US Trade Balance (cons. −$59B) and Colombia exports round out the external data. Japan and China remain closed.

Wednesday — May 6

ADP + EZ SERVICES PMIs + EZ PPI — ADP pre-NFP read. Final Services PMIs (EZ in contraction?). EZ PPI surge. Brazil PMIs + FX flows. Goolsbee speaks.

Time
Region
Event
Impact
Cons.
Prior

3:50 AM
EU
French Services PMI (Apr, final)
MED
46.5
46.5

3:55 AM
EU
German Services PMI (Apr, final)
MED
46.9
46.9

4:00 AM
EU
EZ Services PMI (Apr, final)
HIGH
47.4
47.4

4:00 AM
EU
EZ Composite PMI (Apr, final)
MED
48.6
48.6

4:30 AM
UK
Services PMI (Apr, final)
MED
52.0
52.0

5:00 AM
EU
EZ PPI MoM (Mar)
HIGH
3.3%
−0.7%

5:00 AM
EU
EZ PPI YoY (Mar)
MED

−3.0%

8:00 AM
MEXICO
Gross Fixed Investments MoM / YoY (Feb)
MED

−1.10% / −3.30%

8:15 AM
US
ADP Nonfarm Employment (Apr)
HIGH
90K
62K

9:00 AM
BRAZIL
S&P Global Composite PMI (Apr)
MED

49.9

9:00 AM
BRAZIL
S&P Global Services PMI (Apr)
MED

50.1

1:00 PM
US
Fed Goolsbee Speaks
MED

1:30 PM
BRAZIL
Foreign Exchange Flows
MED

9.184B

The pre-NFP positioning day. ADP (8:15 AM, cons. 90K vs. 62K) provides the final private payroll signal before Friday — an acceleration from 62K would suggest NFP could beat the 73K consensus. Final EZ Services PMIs confirm the contraction signal: German Services at 46.9, French at 46.5, and EZ aggregate at 47.4 would represent the deepest services contraction since the 2023 energy crisis, validating the Ifo/ZEW confidence collapse. EZ PPI (cons. +3.3% MoM vs. −0.7%) captures the oil shock hitting European producers in full — the swing from deflation to sharp inflation is one of the most dramatic monthly reversals in the series’ history. Brazil’s Composite and Services PMIs (prior 49.9 / 50.1) show whether the post-Copom economy is stabilizing or softening further. Mexico Gross Fixed Investments (prior −3.30% YoY) continues the capex contraction story that underpins Banxico’s easing argument. Goolsbee speaks (1:00 PM) — the Chicago Fed president has been among the more dovish voices and his post-FOMC/pre-NFP commentary will signal the Committee’s labor market assessment. Japan reopens from Golden Week — the BoJ minutes from last week’s decision are released overnight.

Thursday — May 7

BANXICO + MEXICO CPI + BRAZIL IP — BANXICO DAY. Mexico CPI + Banxico decision. Brazil industrial production. US claims + productivity. Chile trade. Fed speakers.

Time
Region
Event
Impact
Cons.
Prior

2:00 AM
EU
German Factory Orders MoM (Mar)
MED
1.1%
0.9%

4:30 AM
UK
Construction PMI (Apr)
MED
46.0
45.6

5:00 AM
EU
EZ Retail Sales MoM (Mar)
MED
−0.3%
−0.2%

8:00 AM
MEXICO
CPI MoM (Apr)
HIGH

0.86%

8:00 AM
MEXICO
CPI YoY (Apr)
HIGH

4.59%

8:00 AM
MEXICO
Core CPI MoM (Apr)
HIGH

0.38%

8:00 AM
MEXICO
Core CPI YoY (Apr)
MED

4.45%

8:00 AM
MEXICO
PPI MoM / YoY (Apr)
MED

1.70% / 2.80%

8:00 AM
BRAZIL
Industrial Production MoM (Mar)
HIGH

0.9%

8:00 AM
BRAZIL
Industrial Production YoY (Mar)
MED

−0.7%

8:30 AM
US
Initial Jobless Claims
MED
203K
189K

8:30 AM
US
Nonfarm Productivity QoQ (Q1)
MED
1.0%
1.8%

8:30 AM
US
Unit Labor Costs QoQ (Q1)
MED
2.5%
4.4%

8:30 AM
CHILE
Trade Balance (Apr)
MED

3.06B

2:00 PM
BRAZIL
Trade Balance (Apr)
MED

6.41B

3:00 PM
MEXICO
Banxico Interest Rate Decision
HIGH

6.75%

3:00 PM
ARGENTINA
Industrial Production YoY (Mar)
MED

−8.7%

3:30 PM
US
FOMC Member Williams Speaks
MED

The LATAM session of the week. Mexico CPI (8:00 AM, prior 0.86% MoM / 4.59% YoY) and Banxico (3:00 PM, prior 6.75%) arrive on the same day — the committee will have the inflation data before announcing. The March cut to 6.75% was a 4-1 decision with Heath dissenting, and Banxico stated it would “evaluate the timing for additional adjustments.” If April headline CPI has risen above 5.0% on continued oil pass-through, a hold is the base case; if it’s moderated to 4.3–4.5%, another 25 bps to 6.50% is possible; if core has broken above 4.5%, the board may regret the March cut entirely. Brazil Industrial Production (8:00 AM, prior +0.9% MoM / −0.7% YoY) tests manufacturing under the Selic (14.75% or lower after last week’s Copom) — the year-on-year contraction has persisted for months and any deepening would strengthen the case for faster easing. US Nonfarm Productivity (cons. 1.0% vs. 1.8%) and Unit Labor Costs (cons. 2.5% vs. 4.4%) show whether the cost-per-unit-of-output is easing — a deceleration in ULC would be dovish for the Fed. Chile trade and Argentina industrial production add LATAM depth.

Friday — May 8

NONFARM PAYROLLS + MICHIGAN + CANADA JOBS — NFP DAY. April payrolls, unemployment, wages. Michigan sentiment. Canada jobs. Chile CPI. Colombia CPI overnight. German industrial production. Lagarde + Bailey + 4 Fed speakers.

Time
Region
Event
Impact
Cons.
Prior

2:00 AM
EU
German Industrial Production MoM (Mar)
MED
0.4%
−0.3%

2:00 AM
EU
German Trade Balance (Mar)
MED
18.1B
19.8B

3:00 AM
EU
ECB President Lagarde Speaks
MED

7:00 AM
BRAZIL
IGP-DI Inflation MoM (Apr)
MED

1.14%

8:00 AM
MEXICO
Consumer Confidence (Apr)
MED

44.1

8:00 AM
CHILE
CPI MoM (Apr)
MED

1.0%

8:20 AM
UK
BoE Governor Bailey Speaks
MED

8:30 AM
US
Nonfarm Payrolls (Apr)
HIGH
73K
178K

8:30 AM
US
Unemployment Rate (Apr)
HIGH
4.3%
4.3%

8:30 AM
US
Average Hourly Earnings MoM (Apr)
HIGH
0.3%
0.2%

8:30 AM
US
Private Nonfarm Payrolls (Apr)
MED
60K
186K

8:30 AM
CANADA
Employment Change (Apr)
MED
5.1K
14.1K

8:30 AM
CANADA
Unemployment Rate (Apr)
MED
6.7%
6.7%

10:00 AM
US
Michigan Consumer Sentiment (May, prelim)
HIGH
49.3
49.8

10:00 AM
US
Michigan 1-Year Inflation Expectations (May)
HIGH

4.7%

10:00 AM
US
Michigan 5-Year Inflation Expectations (May)
HIGH

3.5%

1:00 PM
US
Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count
MED

408

7:00 PM
COLOMBIA
CPI MoM / YoY (Apr)
MED
0.73% / 5.63%
0.78% / 5.56%

The week’s climax. April NFP (8:30 AM, cons. +73K, prior +178K) will determine whether the March recovery was a dead-cat bounce or the beginning of stabilization. A reading above 100K would settle recession fears through summer; 50–73K range is consistent with gradual cooling; below 50K reignites the February panic. The unemployment rate (cons. 4.3%, unchanged) is the headline that matters most for the Fed — any uptick to 4.4% or above would trigger Sahm Rule proximity concerns. Average hourly earnings (cons. +0.3% MoM vs. +0.2%) tests wage inflation — acceleration would complicate the Fed’s hold stance. Michigan sentiment for May (10:00 AM, cons. 49.3 vs. 49.8) would be the lowest since the 2022 depths if confirmed, with the 5-year inflation expectation (prior 3.5%) at the critical anchoring threshold. Canada Employment (cons. +5.1K vs. +14.1K) tests northern labor market resilience. Chile CPI (8:00 AM, prior +1.0% MoM) validates the BCCh’s hold at 4.50%. Colombia CPI overnight (cons. 5.63% YoY) continues tracking the BanRep tightening effectiveness. German Industrial Production (cons. +0.4% MoM) tests the European factory floor. Lagarde, Bailey, and four Fed speakers (Goolsbee, Waller, Bowman, Daly) provide the central bank commentary on the data. This is the week where the labor market tells us whether the oil-shock economy is bending or breaking.

The Bottom Line

From rate decisions to rate consequences. Last week seven central banks told us what they think; this week the data tells us what’s actually happening. Friday’s NFP is the verdict on the US labor market’s resilience — +73K consensus would represent meaningful cooling from March’s +178K without crossing into contraction territory, a reading that keeps the Fed comfortable with its hold. But the tails matter more than the center: below 50K reopens the recession debate, above 120K shelves it. Banxico on Thursday is the LATAM wildcard — cutting to 6.75% in March was bold, and April CPI will determine whether that boldness was prescient or premature. If headline inflation has pushed above 5.0%, the board is in an uncomfortable position: reverse course or maintain credibility by doubling down on the growth imperative. The Copom minutes (Tuesday) decode last week’s decision — vote split, oil-price assumptions, and forward guidance signals will shape the entire H2 rate path for Brazilian assets. ISM Services (Tuesday) and ADP (Wednesday) provide the pre-NFP pulse. The RBA’s expected hike to 4.35% adds another tightener to the global count, underscoring the divergence between economies where inflation is winning (Australia, Colombia) and those where growth concerns are forcing accommodation (Brazil, Mexico). Michigan at 49.3 would confirm the American consumer’s worst mood since 2022 — with inflation expectations at 4.7% and the Fed on hold, this is the tension that defines the cycle. Five days to resolve the post-super-week uncertainty. The labor market gets the last word.

All times Eastern (ET) · Previous LATAM Pulse · April 27–May 1 Calendar · Sources: Investing.com, TradingEconomics, Polymarket, CME FedWatch, central bank calendars · Published by The Rio Times



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