Data from both sides of the Atlantic will give clues in the coming week on just how bad the eurozone economy is and just how sustainable is its U.S. counterpart.
Europe offers a rate meeting from the European Central Bank and a new slate of economic forecasts; the United States will release its influential monthly jobs data.
Purchasing manager indexes for the past month will also show how businesses see things shaping up in the United States and Europe. One for China's has already come in lower than expected.
For many, the ECB meeting on Thursday will be the main money event — despite the fact that it is not likely to be one of action or suspense.
As usual, the attention will be on ECB President Mario Draghi's nuances at the news conference that follows the likely non-move on rates. When it comes to the ECB, the news is often all about the journey rather than the destination.
This week's inflation data let the ECB off the hook on taking any immediate additional action to combat the threat of deflation.
At 0.4 percent in October, inflation is worryingly slight, but it is higher than it was a month earlier.
ECB policymakers are also in no rush to move on to something new when they have not yet seen how their targeted loans and purchases of asset-backed securities are doing.
Many in financial markets would like to see the ECB move to a full quantitative easing (QE) asset-buying programme like the one the U.S. Federal Reserve has just closed. But as these words from ECB Governing Council member Ewald Nowotny suggest, it is not likely.
"I don't think we should be pushed by the markets to produce a new programme at every meeting we have."
The bank will also be looking at the U.S. Federal Reserve's ending of QE and relatively hawkish tone for some spillover succor. The euro is down more than 1.5 percent against the dollar since the Fed meeting on Wednesday, and down more than 10 percent since May.
A weaker euro not only boosts eurozone exports, it imports inflation, both of which the ECB wants to see.
The nuance being sought on Thursday, however, will be whether there is any momentum towards full QE and how German opposition could be overcome.
The ECB has been throwing money in various ways at the eurozone economy for a long time but dynamic growth has proved as elusive as quicksilver.
This is expected to be underlined by the purchasing manager indexes. The eurozone's manufacturing is sitting just a tad above stagnation. Data has been very lackluster.
"October's ... business and consumer survey suggests that the euro-zone economy got off to a weak start in Q4, after broadly stagnating in Q3," Capital Economics said in a note.
Mid-week, the European Commission will give its latest economic forecasts and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development will issue its on the G-20 economies ahead of a meeting of the group.
GETTING BETTER?
Outside the eurozone, the Bank of England also looks to keep interest rates on hold at record low levels on Thursday. Three of its most senior officials have expressed staunch opposition to hiking rates over the last two weeks.
Until a few weeks ago, a small but significant minority of economists expected the BoE would raise interest rates from 0.5 percent in November. Now they are unanimous in expecting no change this month, according to a Reuters poll.
This is partly because the British recovery, while strong compared with elsewhere, is still tentative and is unlikely to be sustainable if Britain's main trading partners decline.
The United States is one of those partners, but it seems to be relatively robust.
U.S. employers are expected to have expanded their payrolls by a healthy 233,000 in October, according to a Reuters poll.
That figure, if confirmed on Friday, would validate the Federal Reserve's conclusion that the job market continues to make strides toward full health.
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