Fed reaction to data barrage is focus for
stocks
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[May 28, 2016]
By Rodrigo Campos
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Data on inflation and
employment, two of the economic indicators most important to a
"data-dependent" U.S. Federal Reserve are expected next week.
While Fed policymakers will be looking at those numbers as they
decide whether to raise key interest rates as soon as June, traders
will read through them to try and get ahead of the Fed decision.
For most of the current bull market, stocks have sold off on
expectations of tighter monetary policy. But they rose sharply over
the past week as Fed-speak turned more hawkish.
The Fed has remained constant in using economic data to decide
whether to raise the Fed funds rate. On Friday, Fed Chair Janet
Yellen said that if current economic conditions hold, a rate hike
over the next few months would be "appropriate."
However, stocks have not yet priced in a rate hike in June or even
July, according to analysts at Bank of America/Merrill Lynch.
"The vast majority of 'hawkish' industries (which have outperformed
when rate hikes have been pulled forward by the market) are still
cheap, while most 'dovish' industries (which have outperformed when
rate hikes have been pushed out) are still expensive," the bank's
analysts said in a Friday note.
They list consumer finance, banks and insurance among industries
that appear cheap while beverages, real estate investment trusts and
electric utilities still rank as expensive even though they benefit
from policy the Fed seems to be walking away from.
Financials led the way on the S&P 500 on Friday. If next week's data
continues to point to a hike from the Fed, banks will likely
continue to outperform, as higher interest rates mean increased
returns for lending, the core of their business.
Shares in the utilities sector <.SPLRCU> were the laggard of the
week and could continue to be if investors see a hawkish slant at
the Fed. With a dividend yield of 3.5 percent, the sector is mostly
favored when rates are expected to remain lower for longer.
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A street sign is seen in front of the New York Stock Exchange on
Wall Street in New York, February 10, 2009. REUTERS/Eric Thayer
The Fed's favorite inflation gauge, personal consumption
expenditures, is due on Tuesday and is expected to show a 0.2
percent monthly increase for April. Non-farm payrolls data due on
Friday is expected to show the U.S. economy created 164,000 jobs in
May.
Besides the big inflation and jobs data, the Fed will get its own
numbers out, with the Beige Book of anecdotal information of current
economic conditions out Wednesday.
Though the probability of all data pointing in the same direction is
small, a chance of an increase in the manufacturing work-week
numbers in the payrolls report, a broad build-up of wage pressure in
the Beige Book and a strong reading in the new orders component of
the private-sector ISM manufacturing data out Wednesday are key to
determining the Fed's next move, according to Brian Jacobsen, chief
portfolio strategist at Wells Fargo Asset Management in Menomonee
Falls, Wisconsin.
"Those three things could line up to make (a rate hike in)June a
real possibility," he said.
(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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