Hopes for 'soft landing' at stake as investors await US inflation data
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[May 15, 2024] By
Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors’ newfound optimism on the U.S. economy
faces an important test on Wednesday, with consumer price data set to
show whether the soft landing hopes that have fueled recent gains in
equities are justified.
Investors’ resurgent appetite for equities has driven the S&P 500 back
near record highs. Meanwhile, eye-popping rallies in shares of GameStop
and other so-called meme stocks suggests that risk-takers are riding
high in more speculative corners of the market.
In options markets, the Cboe Volatility Index, known as Wall Street’s
"fear gauge" because it shows demand for protection against stock
swings, stood near its lowest level in about two months on Tuesday.
Many of those moves have been driven by rekindled hopes that the Federal
Reserve can pull off an economic soft landing, where it is able to cool
inflation without badly hurting growth and eventually transition to
cutting interest rates.
Still, while Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has downplayed the potential for
rate hikes this year and recent data showed cooling in the labor market,
the soft landing scenario is by no means a foregone conclusion.
Another stronger-than-expected inflation reading on Wednesday could
spark more worries that a too-hot economy will force the Fed to raise
rates again, throwing cold water on investors’ recent optimism and
undercutting the case for more gains in stocks and bonds.
"It's a pretty critical short-term report," said Keith Lerner, co-chief
investment officer at Truist Advisory Services. "If you look at a lot of
the markets right now, they're at potential inflection points."
Markets tend to be more volatile on days of CPI releases. The S&P 500
has moved by 0.7% on CPI days over the past year, on a median basis,
versus 0.5% on all other days, according to an analysis by Goldman Sachs
strategists. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield moved by 11 basis points on
days of CPI releases, compared with a typical move of 4 basis points on
all other days, the analysis showed.
S&P options currently show traders pricing in a move of 0.9%,
derivatives strategists at Barclays said in a note on Tuesday.
"While there is potential for significant volatility in either a CPI
beat or a miss, equity volatility is priced for a more benign outcome,"
the Barclays strategists wrote.
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People walk around the Financial District near the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., December 29, 2023.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo
The CPI index for April is expected to have climbed 3.4% on an
annual basis, according to a Reuters poll of economists. On Tuesday,
Powell reiterated that he believed that the Fed’s next move is
unlikely to be a rate increase. He also said he still expects
inflation to cool throughout 2024, though his confidence in that has
fallen after prices rose faster than projected through the first
quarter.
Fed futures show the market expects about 40 basis points of
monetary policy easing this year, according to LSEG data. That
compares to more than 150 basis points that had been priced in
January.
"The market overall is really pricing in rate cuts," said Jack Ablin,
chief investment officer at Cresset Capital. "In order to fulfill
these expectations, we're going to need data like CPI to cooperate."
Despite the recent gains in stocks, market indicators generally do
not suggest too much speculative excess or over-exuberance.
The forward price-to-earnings ratio for the S&P 500 has risen to
20.5 times, well above its historic average of 15.7, according to
LSEG Datastream. Still, that's below the 21.2 level the index
reached in March.
Investor sentiment is at its most bullish level in a month,
according to the widely used survey from American Association of
Individual Investors, which could raise the bar for positive
surprises to help stocks. But the portion of investors reporting
bullish sentiment, 40.8%, is below where it stood earlier in the
year.
Some market watchers do see worrying signs. Matt Maley, chief market
strategist at Miller Tabak, said that the market’s rebound after
falling from its March record high leaves it vulnerable to a chart
pattern known as a double top.
That’s "one of the most bearish signals we see in technical
analysis," Maley said in a note on Monday. "If this week’s inflation
data creates a substantial reversal, it’s going to be a very
negative development," Maley said.
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; additional reporting by Saqib Iqbal
Ahmed and Terence Gabriel; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Michael
Erman)
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