Morning Bid: With US economy humming, a quarter point will do
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[August 16, 2024] A
look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan
The U.S. economy is doing just fine and markets now accept a
quarter-point rate cut from the Federal Reserve next month will be
enough to get the easing cycle going as disinflation resumes.
That was the basic conclusion from a torrent of macro economic updates
on Thursday that showed American shoppers in fine fettle, WalMart upping
forecasts and jobless claims ticking lower.
It's not all clear skies and sunshine - some weakness persists in
manufacturing and housing. But as inflation is returning to target, it
allows the Fed to start taking its foot off the brake in September and
underscore the decent expansion.
Despite the retail spending spree, the Atlanta Fed's 'GDPNow' real time
estimate cooled to 2.4% growth for the current quarter from 2.9%
previously. And U.S. and global economic surprise indexes remain in
negative territory overall.
Overall, the updates have been enough to bat away thoughts of recession
without removing Fed easing hopes.
The debate about whether the first cut will be a quarter or a half point
seems settled for now and futures price just 30 basis points of cuts for
next month - and just 61bps over the remainder of the year. There had
been more than 100bps of 2024 cuts assumed at the start of the week.
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The Fed's annual Jackson Hole symposium late next week now colors in the
central bank's thinking and earnings from AI-bellwether Nvidia on Aug 28
kick the tyres of the artificial intelligence theme.
Fed chair Jerome Powell speaks next Friday as Jackson Hole event gets
underway.
But it's clear already that most Fed officials are prepared for easing
to start next month, if only to prevent renewed disinflation lifting the
real inflation-adjusted policy rate even further from 17-year highs.
"It now appears the balance of risks on inflation and unemployment has
shifted ... the time may be nearing when an adjustment to moderately
restrictive policy may be appropriate," St. Louis Fed President Alberto
Musalem said on Thursday.
Srugging off its near heart attack early last week, Wall St seems to
like the current constellation.
After Thursday's roaring stock rally, S&P500 futures are higher again on
Friday and the index looks set to record its best week of the year with
gains of almost 4%.
And Treasuries were only mildly put off by the reset of Fed expectations
- with two-year yields returned back above 4% on Thursday and holding
there early today. The dollar index firmed up in tandem.
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The exterior of the Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve Board
Building is seen in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 14, 2022.
REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger/File Photo
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Perhaps reflecting more sustainable times ahead, the negative daily
correlation between stocks and bonds that's returned since Aug 1 has
been sustained just as the VIX volatility index returns just below
its historic median.
The overseas market mood was similarly ebullient, with Japan's
Nikkei surging again on Friday - gaining more than 3% to record a
spectacular weekly bounceback from Aug 5's yen-related turbulence
that now ranks as its best week in more than four years.
Thursday's second-quarter GDP beat from Japan has helped and the yen
easing back a bit.
Despite a more mixed economic picture in Europe - sapped in part by
China's ongoing economic stumble - European stocks also caught Wall
Street's slipstream on Friday to stay on track for their best week
in three months.
Chinese stocks were firmer too after Thursday's interview with
central bank governor Pan Gongsheng indicated the bank will will
stick to a supportive monetary policy.
Sterling was an outperformer on currency markets after data showed
British retail sales rebounded 0.5% in July, in line with
expectations.
Next up stateside on Friday is July's housing starts report, with
the corporate earnings diary thinning out.
In company news, Applied Materials forecast fourth-quarter revenue
slightly above estimates after the bell on Thursday, anticipating a
surge in AI-fueled demand for its chip-making equipment.
But shares of the Santa Clara, California-based company were down
2.8% in extended trading after having closed about 5% higher on
Thursday.
Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S. markets
later on Friday:
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* US July housing starts and permits, University of Michigan August
household survey
* Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee speaks
* US corporate earnings: Campbell Soup
(By Mike Dolan, editing by Philippa Fletcher; mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com)
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