Investors brace for more swings as U.S. inflation
specter rises
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[February 10, 2018]
By Chuck Mikolajczak
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The inflation bogeyman
has reared its ugly head and sent U.S. stock investors racing for the
hills in recent days.
Next week, coming off one of the most volatile stretches in years, two
important readings on U.S. inflation could help determine whether the
stock market begins to settle or if another bout of volatility is in
store.
If the January's U.S. consumer price index due next Wednesday from the
U.S. Labor Department, and the producer price index the next day, come
in higher than the market anticipates, brace for more selling and
gyrations for stocks.
U.S. consumer prices rose 2.1 percent year-on-year in December and is
forecast to stay around that pace this month.
"If we get a hot CPI print it will insert additional uncertainty, but if
we get a quiet, below-consensus print, you may see yields down and
equities rally," said Jason Ware, Chief Investment Officer & Chief
Economist at Albion Financial Group in Salt Lake City, Utah.
The equity market has become highly sensitive to inflation this month. A
selloff in U.S. stocks earlier this week was in large part sparked by
the Feb. 2 monthly U.S. employment report which showed the largest
year-on-year increase in average hourly earnings since June 2009.
Recent U.S. tax cuts that may spur economic growth, the prospect of more
government borrowing to fund a widening fiscal deficit, and rising
wages, have all pushed up benchmark U.S. Treasury yields to near four
year highs.
"This is how we started, go back to Friday and this is exactly where we
were," said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley FBR in New
York.
"The conversation about equity risk premium, interest rates and
inflation, we are coming full circle."
The jump in wage inflation pushed yields on the benchmark 10-year U.S.
Treasury note <US10YT=RR> closer to the 3.0 percent mark last seen four
years ago, denting the attractiveness of equities, and unnerving
investors fearful inflation will force the U.S. Federal Reserve to
raises short term interest rates at a faster pace than is currently
priced into the market.
The current earnings yield for the S&P 500 index companies stands at 5.4
percent, below the 6.4 percent average of the past 20 years. As bond
yields rise the spread between the two narrows, prompting asset
allocation changes between equities and fixed income.
Investor concerns over inflation was reflected in Lipper funds data on
Thursday, which showed U.S.-based inflation-protected bond funds
attracted $859 million over the weekly period, the largest inflows since
November 2016.
On Thursday, New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley said the
central bank's forecast of three rate hikes still seemed a "very
reasonable projection" but added there was a potential for more, should
the economy look stronger.
Traders are currently putting the chances of a 25 basis point hike by
the Fed at its March meeting at 84.5 percent, according to Thomson
Reuters data.
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Traders work near the end of the day on the floor of the New York
Stock Exchange in New York, U.S., February 8, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan
Mcdermid
Benchmark 10-year note yields <US10YT=RR> rose as high as 2.884 percent on
Thursday, just below Monday’s four-year high of 2.885 percent. The notes ended
down 6/32 in price to yield 2.853 percent.
While many analysts were predicting bond yields to rise this year as global
economies improve, the suddenness of the move was a large factor in the recent
stock market selloff.
The 10-day correlation between the S&P 500 index and yields on the 10-year note
stands at a negative 0.79.
Both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 index were on track on
Thursday for their biggest two-week percentage declines since August 2011.
"The pace really does matter," said Ron Temple, Head of US Equities and Co-Head
of Multi Asset Investing at Lazard Asset Management in New York.
"If we see 3.0 percent next week that is going to spook people more - the equity
market psyche is fragile at this point."
The fragile investor psyche is likely to lead to continued volatility coming off
a week that saw the Dow suffer its largest intraday index point decline in
history on Monday, nearly 1,600 points. The Dow currently has an average
intraday swing over the past 50 days of 265.76 points, the highest since March
2016.
While volatility has subsided a little from the heights touched earlier this
week, it is far from an all clear, Nigol Koulajian, chief executive of Quest
Partners, a New York-based systematic commodity trading advisor with $1.4
billion in assets under management, said.
Koulajian pointed to the fixed income market as the main catalyst right now for
near-term moves in the stock market.
"Investors need to keep a very, very close eye on fixed income," he said. "The
catalyst needn't be big. When the market is this levered, even tiny events can
trigger a big avalanche."
But analysts also caution yields are not at levels that should be alarming to
investors, and in fact are at levels that signal a healthier global economy, and
the performance of some stocks this week points to a belief the consumer is also
getting healthier.
The average yield on the 10-year Treasury note over the past 30 years is 4.834
percent, still well above current levels.
"Fundamentals are still positive, there is strong economic growth and strong
earnings growth - those will help stocks move higher over time," said Kate
Warne, investment strategist at Edward Jones in St. Louis.
"But it doesn't do much for predicting short-term moves."
(Additional reporting by Megan Davies, Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and April Joyner;
Editing by Alden Bentley and Clive McKeef)
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