KEY POINTS
  • Markets will focus on trade and the economy in the week ahead, after Friday's steep selloff on escalating trade tensions and rising recession fears.
  • August has had more big swings than any month since December's selloff, and that volatility could continue as the month winds down.
  • Investors are watching any data that could point to whether the economy is feeling the impact of trade wars, and that includes Monday's durable goods, Tuesday's consumer confidence, and Friday's personal income and spending data.
Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange, August 13, 2019.

The final week of August — the bittersweet end of summer for many— could be highly volatile, as markets fret over the economy and the latest developments in trade wars.

President Donald Trump joins the G-7 leaders in France over the weekend, and markets will be watching to see if the meeting exposes new fault lines in the shaky relations among a once fairly congenial leadership group that fought the Great Recession together. Trump is expected to discuss the U.S. economy and highlight the U.S. pro-jobs, pro-growth agenda, under his leadership.