All eyes are set for the latest round of US corporate earnings after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke finally managed to reassure investors that the central bank's stimulus effort is not going to evaporate any time soon.
Markets had been pricing in a tapering of the Fed's US$85 billion a month bond-buying program since late May after Bernanke said as much. But with Bernanke tweaking his message last week, the bulls returned in droves, pushing the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index to record highs on Friday.
This week, Bernanke is scheduled to deliver his semi-annual monetary policy report to Congress, testifying before the House Financial Services Committee in Washington on Wednesday and the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday.
"Given that Bernanke's comments rattled the market a couple times now in a short period of time, I think many traders are going to be loath to take significant positions ahead of that," Marc Chandler, chief currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co in New York, told Bloomberg News.
Last week, the Dow gained 2.2 per cent, the S&P 500 climbed 3 per cent, while the Nasdaq Composite Index rallied 3.5 per cent. US Treasuries also benefitted from Bernanke's restatement. Yields on the 30-year government bond dropped 9 basis points, while those on 10-year notes declined 16 basis points for the week. The US dollar, however, weakened 1.8 per cent against the euro.