Wall St seen steady ahead of inflation data, Fed later in week
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[December 12, 2022] By
Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Global stocks, oil and the dollar languished on
Monday as investors braced for the last round of transatlantic interest
rate hikes this year from a trio of central banks, hoping that a
hitherto hefty pace of increases in borrowing costs will finally show
signs of easing.
S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures recovered earlier losses to edge
higher, indicating a steady start on Wall Street and helping European
indices trim their modest losses.
Oil prices gave up early gains to deepen a multi-week decline, as a
weakening global economy offset tighter supplies from the closure of a
key pipeline supplying the United States, and Russian threats of a
production cut.
The dollar eased, its losses contained by data last week that showed
U.S. wholesale inflation rose more than expected last month, reinforcing
the view that the Federal Reserve may have to keep interest rates higher
for longer.
The U.S. consumer price index for November is due on Tuesday, when a
slowdown in core annual inflation is anticipated.
"A heavy event risk calendar this week stands to define the core themes
for 2023," ING bank said.
Market consensus was still "underappreciating" the risk of inflation
staying higher longer, and "dangerously second-guessing" the Fed in
terms of rate cuts in the second half of next year, ING said.
The MSCI all country stock index was down 0.2%, the benchmark having
lost about 18% so far this year, wiping out all gains chalked up in
2021.
In Europe, the STOXX index of 600 companies was down 0.6%.
Economists expect the Federal Reserve on Wednesday, and the European
Central Bank and Bank of England on Thursday to all raise rates by 50
basis points, still a slowing down from the 75 basis point hikes seen in
recent meetings.
Patrick Spencer, vice chair of equities at Baird investment bank, said
central banks will start taking a less aggressive stance this week,
though Tuesday's CPI data will be critical.
"It's the last important week of the year, after this week you've got no
real sort of catalysts. If the CPI is a muted number, we're off to the
races and we'll get our year-end rally," Spencer said.
But irrespective of the CPI, deflationary pressures are increasing, with
crude oil prices down for the year, and iron ore, lumber and house
prices also down, Spencer said.
"All this talk of recession, I think it is certainly in the price, it's
in the markets. The key about recession is generally employment, and I
think employment is going to be stronger than people give it credit,"
Spencer said.
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People pass by an electronic screen
showing Japan's Nikkei share price index inside a commercial
building in Tokyo, Japan September 22, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File
Photo
ASIAN SHARES FALL
In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
slid 1.2%, erasing almost all of the previous week's gains stemming
from optimism that China is finally opening up its economy with the
dismantling of its zero-COVID policy.
Japan's Nikkei eased 0.2%.
Chinese bluechips dropped 1.1%, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index
was down 2.2%, as investors' focus shifted away from crippling
COVID-19 curbs to the surge in infections that is now disrupting the
economy.
While the Fed is widely expected to raise rates by 50 basis points
on Wednesday at its last meeting of 2022, the focus will also be on
the central bank's updated economic projections and Fed Chair Jerome
Powell's press conference.
"We also want to understand if Jay Powell opens the door to a
slowdown to a 25bp hiking pace from February - again, while in line
with market pricing, this could be taken that we're closer to the
end of the hiking cycle and is a modest USD negative," said Chris
Weston, head of research at Pepperstone.
Kevin Cummins, chief U.S. economist at NatWest, said any surprise in
the November CPI report was unlikely to shift the Fed from a
50-basis-point rate hike, although it would play a bigger role in
the policy statement and the tone of Powell's press conference.
In currency markets, the dollar eased 0.295% to 104.74, although it
was not too far away from the five-month trough of 104.1 hit a week
ago.
Sterling gained 0.2% to $1.2295.
Treasury yields held largely steady on Monday. The yield on
benchmark 10-year Treasury notes eased to 3.5342%, from its U.S.
close of 3.5670%. The two-year yield touched 4.3273%, down slightly
from its U.S. close of 4.330%.
Brent crude futures were off 0.7% at $75.58 a barrel while U.S. West
Texas Intermediate crude was at $70.72 a barrel, off 0.4%.
Spot gold was 0.3% lower at $1,792 per ounce.
(Reporting by Huw Jones, Editing by Bradley Perrett, Sam Holmes,
David Evans and Susan Fenton)
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