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Tag: S&P 500 Index

  • U.S. stocks post 3-session climb as bond yields, oil retreat

    U.S. stocks post 3-session climb as bond yields, oil retreat

    U.S. stocks booked a 3-session win streak Tuesday as oil prices and bond yields retreated. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.40%

    climbed about 134 points, or 0.4%, ending near 33,739, according to preliminary FactSet data. That was the longest streak of straight wins for the blue-chip index in a month, and the best three days of gains since late August, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    +0.52%

    advanced 0.5% and the Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    +0.58%

    gained 0.6%. It was the third session in a row of gains for all three indexes. The brighter backdrop for stock market came as oil prices
    CL00,
    -0.69%

    and bond yields
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    4.663%

    retreated and after Raphael Bostic, head of the Atlanta Fed, said he didn’t think additional rate hikes were needed to bring inflation down to the central bank’s 2% annual target, but also that he still sees rates staying high for a “long time.”

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  • Emerging-market stocks look poised for a comeback after a difficult decade. Here’s what U.S. investors need to know.

    Emerging-market stocks look poised for a comeback after a difficult decade. Here’s what U.S. investors need to know.

    Emerging-market stocks are coming off a tough quarter after facing down a triple threat of rising Treasury yields, a stronger U.S. dollar, and a lackluster recovery in China’s economy and markets.

    But amid the pain, some see opportunity for a lasting rebound.

    The iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF
    EEM,
    which tracks the widely followed MSCI Emerging Markets Index, fell 4.1% during the quarter ended in September, outpacing a 3.7% decline for the S&P 500
    SPX,
    the deeply liquid U.S. benchmark. Both benchmarks endured their worst performance in a year.

    It is just the latest chapter in what has been a decade of persistent underperformance during both good times and bad. The EM ETF fell 22.4% amid the global equity-market rout in 2022, compared with a 19.4% drop for the S&P 500, FactSet data show.

    But while the selloff in Chinese stocks has dominated headlines this year, some corners of the emerging markets universe have held up surprisingly well. Greek and Mexican stocks have even outperformed U.S. stocks in dollar terms, while other major markets like Brazil and India are trailing by only a modest margin.

    This hasn’t gone unnoticed by Wall Street, where some are advising clients to consider expanding their exposure to markets once deemed too risky for many U.S. investors saving for retirement.

    In a research note shared with MarketWatch, a team of equity strategists at Goldman Sachs Group
    GS,
    +0.69%

    pointed out that emerging-market stocks excluding China had outperformed developed-market stocks excluding the U.S. so far this year.

    Meanwhile, dissatisfaction with lofty valuations in the U.S., well as the prospect of another recession potentially looming around the corner have helped to embolden portfolio managers to seek out better returns elsewhere.

    Country ETF

    Ticker

    Performance YTD (USD)

    Brazil

    EWZ +9.2%

    India

    INDA +7%

    South Korea

    EWY +4%

    Colombia

    GXG +2.5%

    Chile

    ECH -7.6%

    Mexico

    EWW +13%

    China

    MCHI -7.6%

    Indonesia

    EIDO -2%

    Saudi Arabia

    KSA +0.3%

    Greece

    GREK +22%

    MSCI Emerging Markets

    EEM +0.8%

    U.S. (S&P 500 index)

    SPX +13%

    Times are changing

    Over the past 10 years, rock-bottom interest rates helped U.S. stocks best practically all comers. During the 10 years through Monday’s close, the S&P 500 has risen 161.8% excluding dividends, while the MSCI ACWI Index
    ACWI,
    a broad index of developed- and emerging-market stocks, gained nearly 74%, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Emerging markets performed pretty poorly by comparison, with the MSCI EM Index down 9.6%.

    But just because EM stocks have lagged their developed-world peers for a decade doesn’t mean they are doomed to repeat this dismal performance forever. Some pointed to the torrid gains for Japanese stocks in 2023 as an example of how a market that trailed the U.S. for decades can see its prospects suddenly brighten.

    Japan’s Nikkei 225
    NIY00,
    +0.47%

    has risen more than 21% since the start of the year in U.S. dollar terms, according to FactSet.

    To that end, a chorus of investment bank equity strategists along with big-name investors like GMO’s Jeremy Grantham have said a similar dynamic could play out in emerging markets.

    Equity strategists like Bank of America’s Michael Hartnett and Barclays Emmanuel Cau have urged clients to look beyond the U.S. for returns. According to a research report from Cau and his team, emerging markets offer “better tactical risk-reward.” Hartnett told clients that U.S. stocks appear extremely overvalued compared with the rest of the world, and that it is time to diversify away from the U.S.

    “From the perspective of relative performance, the U.S. market has been really strong the past 10 years. It wasn’t like that the prior 20 years, and at some point, a reversion will happen,” said Dina Ting, head of global index portfolio management at Franklin Templeton, during an interview with MarketWatch.

    “That is helping to make the case for international markets.”

    The bull case for emerging markets

    With the possible exception of India, emerging-market stocks generally enjoy much lower valuations compared with their counterparts in the U.S.

    That is according to a table of valuations and projected returns shared by analysts at Goldman. Many local equity markets enjoy forward price-to-earnings ratios below 10. By comparison, the S&P 500, considered the U.S. benchmark, presently enjoys a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 18.11, according to FactSet.

    Country

    NTM P/E

    12-month return forecast (USD)

    Brazil

    7.5

    +35%

    Mainland China

    9.4

    +23%

    Mexico

    10.7

    +27%

    India

    20

    +8%

    Colombia

    4.6

    +55%

    Egypt

    6.7

    0%

    South Korea

    11.1

    36%

    Indonesia

    13.8

    +20%

    Chile

    8

    +37%

    Saudi Arabia

    14.9

    +13%

    Total EM

    11.3

    +27%

    Developing economies have more rosy growth prospects, according to the International Monetary Fund, which released its latest batch of projections on Tuesday.

    As a group, the IMF expects developing economies to grow by 4% in 2024, compared with 1.4% for a group of advanced economies that includes the U.S.

    As Ting and other portfolio managers have pointed out, financials, producers of consumer goods and other industries are accounting for a growing share of emerging-market equity benchmarks. After so many years of being so heavily weighted toward China, and the commodity space, more diversity is seen as a welcome development.

    Although few, if any, emerging-market economies enjoy the trifecta of rule of law, deeply liquid capital markets, and institutional independence that investors take for granted in the U.S., progress has been made. Ting cited India as a great example of a country that’s recently made major strides toward becoming more friendly toward international investors.

    At the same time, paralysis in the U.S. Congress has raised concerns about potential political instability diminishing the attractiveness of the U.S. As House speakers are deposed and budget battles rage, some on Wall Street expect Moody’s Investors Service could join Fitch Ratings and S&P Global Ratings in stripping the U.S. of its AAA credit rating, as the agency has threatened to do.

    Central banks in Mexico, Brazil and India have also had far less trouble tamping down inflation compared with the Federal Reserve, which also bodes well for future equity returns.

    “In India and other emerging markets, certainly Brazil and others, their central banks have been much further ahead than the U.S. in fighting inflation,” said Ashish Chugh, a portfolio manager of long-only and long-short global emerging market equity strategies at Loomis, Sayles & Co.

    “The U.S. government handed out free money during COVID-19, but these emerging-market countries didn’t do that. They gave out food and other stuff, but they didn’t send checks in the mail. Because of that, you didn’t have as big of an inflation problem.”

    A word of caution

    While emerging markets have matured in many ways, the sheer number of disparate economies and governments can make risk management difficult. The emerging-market space as defined by MSCI consists of two dozen countries.

    Chinese stocks are still the most heavily represented in popular EM equity indexes like the MSCI Emerging Markets index, which is roughly 30% weighted toward the world’s second-largest economy.

    Many investors in the West are already familiar with the risks of investing in China, including those emanating from China’s authoritarian system to the fallout from burgeoning geopolitical tensions with the U.S. But the potential pitfalls of investing in India or Brazil may not be quite as well understood.

    That is why Zak Smerczak, an analyst and portfolio manager specializing in global equities at Comgest, would advise newcomers interested in the sector to start by investing in only the most established companies, even if their valuations don’t look quite as attractive.

    “Being selective is the key,” he said during an interview with MarketWatch. “Making a broad investment in emerging markets right now seems risky to us, but there are pockets of opportunities and in specific companies.”

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  • Stock market likely to see 12% retreat ahead of recession, says trader who called ’87 crash

    Stock market likely to see 12% retreat ahead of recession, says trader who called ’87 crash

    ‘The stock market, typically, right before recession declines about 12%.That’s probably going to happen at some point from some level.’


    — Paul Tudor Jones, founder and CIO, Tudor Investment Corp.

    That’s famed hedge-fund manager Paul Tudor Jones in an interview with CNBC Tuesday morning, explaining why he’s not enthusiastic about U.S. stocks and other risky assets as he awaits a recession induced by the Federal Reserve’s aggressive monetary tightening.

    Jones said it’s difficult to be positive on equities amid what he described as “the most threatening and challenging geopolitical environment that I’ve ever seen,” which is occurring “at the same time the United States is at its weakest fiscal position since World War II. It’s a really difficult time.”

    A 2023 rally in U.S. stocks has stalled, with the S&P 500 index
    SPX
    pulling back 5.5% from a 2023 high set on July 31, leaving the large-cap benchmark up 12.9% for the year to date through Monday’s close. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    is up just 1.4% so far this year.

    Jones is widely credited with predicting, and profiting, from the stock-market crash on Oct. 19, 1987, which saw the Dow lose nearly 23% of its value, marking the largest one-day percentage decline for the blue-chip benchmark in its history.

    So what does Jones like?

    “I would love gold and bitcoin, together,” he said.

    “I think [bitcoin and gold] probably take on a larger percentage of your portfolio than historically they would because we’re going to go through a challenging political time here in the United States and…we’ve obviously got a geopolitical situation” in Israel and Ukraine, Jones said.

    Bitcoin
    BTCUSD,
    -0.72%

    was off 0.8% near $27,380 Tuesday morning and has rallied around 65% so far in 2023. Gold
    GC00,
    +0.59%

    has retreated from a high above $2,000 an ounce earlier this year, slumping below $1,850 last week as Treasury yields marched higher and the dollar strengthened.

    A pullback in U.S. bond yields has seen gold bounce 1.4% this week, trading recently near $1,871 an ounce.

    Large, speculative short positions in gold will provide fuel for a rally as a recession takes hold, the investor said.

    “In a recession, the market is typically really long assets like bitcoin and gold,” he said. “So there’s probably $40 billion worth of buying that has to come into gold at some point between now and if that recession actually occurs.

    “So yeah, I like bitcoin and I like gold right here,” Jones said.

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  • 1970s-style stagflation may be at risk of repeating itself, Deutsche Bank warns

    1970s-style stagflation may be at risk of repeating itself, Deutsche Bank warns

    A major Wall Street bank is warning about the risk that inflation expectations could become unanchored in a fashion similar to the 1970s stagflation era.

    Weekend attacks on Israel by Hamas illustrate how geopolitical risks can suddenly return — adding to the surprise shocks of the current decade, such as the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, said macro strategist Henry Allen and research analyst Cassidy Ainsworth-Grace of Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank
    DB,
    -1.40%
    .

    Read: Questions emerge over how Israeli intelligence missed Hamas attack

    Oil prices settled more than 4% higher on Monday as traders weighed the impact of the war in the Middle East on crude supplies. The spike in energy prices is adding to the growing list of similarities to the 1970s era — which also includes consistently above-target inflation across major economies and repeated optimism about how quickly it would fall; strikes by workers; and even increasing chances that this winter will be dominated by the El Niño weather pattern, similar to what took place in 1971 and which is historically tied to higher commodity prices, according to Deutsche Bank.

    Inflation remains above central banks’ targets in every G-7 country — the U.S., Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United Kingdom. How long it will remain high is one of the most important questions facing financial markets, and a destabilization of expectations would make it even harder for policy makers to restore price stability.

    “So given inflation is still above its pre-pandemic levels, it is important not to get complacent about its path,” Allen and Ainsworth-Grace wrote in a note released on Monday. “After all, if there is another shock and inflation remains above target into a third or even a fourth year, it is increasingly difficult to imagine that long-term expectations will repeatedly stay lower than actual inflation.”

    History indicates that the last mile of inflation is often the hardest. One of the key lessons of the 1970s was that inflation failed to return to previous levels after the first oil shock of 1973 and U.S. recession of 1973-1975, and went even higher following a second oil shock in 1979. Now that inflation has been above target for the last two years, “a fresh inflationary spike could well lead expectations to become unanchored,” according to the Deutsche Bank note.


    Source: Bloomberg, Deutsche Bank

    For now, the public’s inflation expectations, as measured by a New York Fed survey of consumers in August, remain largely stable, though still above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

    The current period differs from the 1970s era in a number of ways, the Deutsche Bank team also points out. Long-term inflation expectations remain “impressively” well-anchored, commodity prices have fallen substantially from their peaks over the past 12 to 18 months, and supply-chain disruptions that emerged during the pandemic have “broadly healed.” In addition, the U.S. is less energy intensive than in the past and less susceptible to damage from a 1970s-style energy shock.

    Even so, “it is vitally important to avoid complacency,” Allen and Ainsworth-Grace wrote. “Indeed, with the benefit of hindsight, one of the mistakes of the 1970s was that policy was eased up too early, which contributed to a resurgence in inflation.”

    Risk-off sentiment prevailed in financial markets during the early part of Monday, before stocks turned higher during the New York afternoon. All three major U.S. stock indexes
    DJIA

    SPX

    COMP
    finished higher in a volatile session. Trading in U.S. government-debt futures reflected greater demand and gold rallied as a flight to safety took hold. The cash market for Treasurys was closed for Columbus Day and Indigenous Peoples Day.

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  • Will Israel-Gaza war sink stocks and shake the global economy? Watch oil prices.

    Will Israel-Gaza war sink stocks and shake the global economy? Watch oil prices.

    Wall Street on Monday shook off a bout of selling sparked by the Israel-Gaza war.

    That’s in keeping with the historical tendency of investors to look past geopolitical conflict and human tragedy, but it isn’t necessarily the last word. That last word will likely belong to oil traders.

    “Oil rallied today yet remains below the near-term peak from last month. If oil prices rise higher for longer, the global economy could feel a resurgence of inflation during a period when investors are hoping inflation is clearly decelerating,” said Jeffrey Roach, chief economist for LPL Financial, in emailed comments.

    Roach also noted that, in general, markets tend to have difficulty pricing the difference between a temporary shock and a permanent shock.

    For now, however, the jump in oil prices isn’t signaling a permanent shock. Sure, Brent crude
    BRN00,
    +0.11%
    ,
    the global benchmark, jumped 4.2% on Monday to end at $88.15 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate crude
    CL.1,
    +0.07%

    CL00,
    +0.07%

    surged $3.59, or 4.3% to $86.38 a barrel — the biggest one-day jump for both grades since April 3.

    See: Here’s what Israel-Gaza war means for oil prices as fighting continues

    The jump was impressive, but it comes after a big pullback last week that saw both WTI and Brent retreat from 2023 highs near $100 a barrel.

    So if crude can manage to close above those highs — $93.68 a barrel for WTI — investors across other markets will likely take notice.

    What would it take to drive crude back toward the highs? The focus is on Iran.

    The Wall Street Journal on Sunday reported that Iranian security officials helped plan the attack by Hamas. The Israeli military has said there is no concrete evidence of Iranian involvement, according to news reports.

    A direct role by Iran, a longtime ally of Hamas, would raise the threat of a broader conflict.

    Some analysts have put Iranian crude production at more than 3 million barrels a day and exports above 2 million barrels a day — the highest levels since the Trump administration pulled the U.S. out of the Iranian nuclear accord in 2018, according to the Wall Street Journal. Sales fell to around 400,000 barrels a day in 2020 as the U.S. reimposed sanctions.

    “If Israel discovers that Iran played a role in Hamas’ attack, it could retaliate militarily. At the very least, any warming of relations between Iran and the West is now on hold and this will limit incremental oil supply,” said Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research, in a Monday note.

    It’s a reminder that “while neither Israel nor Gaza are major oil producers, everything that happens geopolitically in the Middle East invariably ends up affecting oil prices,” he said.

    The potential for a broader conflict could lead to a “sharp market correction,” argued Olivier d’Assier, head of applied research, APAC, at Axioma.

    The scale of the conflict, the largest since the Yom Kippur War 50 years ago, renders comparisons with how markets have shaken off past geopolitical incidents, but they may be irrelevant in terms of stress testing, he argued.

    “The closest historical scenarios we could use would be 9/11 and the start of the Ukraine war. But because both took place on Western soil, they might not be adequate,” d’Assier said.

    On Monday, however, remarks by Federal Reserve officials ultimately trumped the rise in crude prices and jitters over the Middle East. Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan and Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson both noted the rise in long-term Treasury yields and their role in tightening financial conditions, which investors took as a signal the Fed may not be as likely to further raise interest rates.

    See: An Israel-Hamas war could change what the Fed does about interest rates

    Stocks turned north after a morning dip, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    rising nearly 200 points, or 0.6%, while the S&P 500
    SPX
    also advanced 0.6% and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP
    gained 0.4%.

    For now, market participants appear set to look ahead to economic data later this week, including September consumer-price index and producer-price index readings.

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  • U.S. stocks end higher despite climbing oil prices, Israel-Gaza war

    U.S. stocks end higher despite climbing oil prices, Israel-Gaza war

    U.S. stocks booked back-to-back gains on Monday, despite rising oil prices and a deadly weekend assault on Israeli by Hamas that left hundreds dead. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.59%

    rose about 197 points, or 0.6%, ending near 33,604, shaking off earlier weakness, while the S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    +0.63%

    advanced 0.6% and the Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    +0.39%

    gained 0.4%, according to preliminary FactSet data. U.S. benchmark oil prices
    CL00,
    +4.34%

    rose 4.3% to $86.38 a barrel as traders gauged potential implications of the Israel-Gaza war on crude supplies from the Middle East. Investors also flocked to haven assets, including gold
    GC00,
    +1.62%

    and the U.S. dollar
    DXY,
    +0.03%
    ,
    while cash trading in the $25 trillion Treasury market was closed for the Columbus Day and Indigenous Peoples Day holiday. Israel on Monday seal off the Gaza Strip from food, fuel and other supplies as the conflict between Israel and Hamas intensified, according to the Associated Press.

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  • 1970’s-style stagflation may be at risk of repeating itself, bank warns

    1970’s-style stagflation may be at risk of repeating itself, bank warns

    A major Wall Street bank is warning about the risk that inflation expectations could become unanchored in a fashion similar to the 1970s stagflation era.

    Weekend attacks on Israel by Hamas illustrate how geopolitical risks can suddenly return — adding to the surprise shocks of the current decade, such as the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, said macro strategist Henry Allen and research analyst Cassidy Ainsworth-Grace of Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank
    DB,
    -1.45%
    .

    Read: Questions emerge over how Israeli intelligence missed Hamas attack

    Oil prices jumped by more than 4% on Monday as traders weighed the impact of the war in the Middle East on crude supplies. The spike in energy is adding to the growing list of similarities to the 1970s era — which also includes consistently above-target inflation across major economies and repeated optimism about how quickly it would fall; strikes by workers; and even increasing chances that this winter will be dominated by the El Niño weather pattern, similar to what took place in 1971 and which is historically tied to higher commodity prices, according to Deutsche Bank.

    Inflation remains above central banks’ targets in every Group-of-7 country — the U.S., Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United Kingdom. How long it will remain high is one of the most important questions facing financial markets, and a destabilization of expectations would make it even harder for policy makers to restore price stability.

    “So given inflation is still above its pre-pandemic levels, it is important not to get complacent about its path,” Allen and Ainsworth-Grace wrote in a note released on Monday. “After all, if there is another shock and inflation remains above target into a third or even a fourth year, it is increasingly difficult to imagine that long-term expectations will repeatedly stay lower than actual inflation.”

    History indicates that the last mile of inflation is often the hardest. One of the key lessons of the 1970s was that inflation failed to return to previous levels after the first oil shock of 1973 and U.S. recession of 1973-1975, and went even higher following a second oil shock in 1979. Now that inflation has been above target for the last two years, “a fresh inflationary spike could well lead expectations to become unanchored,” according to the Deutsche Bank note.


    Source: Bloomberg, Deutsche Bank

    For now, the public’s inflation expectations, as measured by a New York Fed survey of consumers in August, remain largely stable, though still above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

    The current period differs from the 1970s era in a number of ways, the Deutsche Bank team also points out. Long-term inflation expectations remain “impressively” well-anchored, commodity prices have fallen substantially from their peaks over the past 12 to 18 months, and supply-chain disruptions that emerged during the pandemic have “broadly healed.” In addition, the U.S. is less energy intensive than in the past and less susceptible to damage from a 1970s-style energy shock.

    Even so, “it is vitally important to avoid complacency,” Allen and Ainsworth-Grace wrote. “Indeed, with the benefit of hindsight, one of the mistakes of the 1970s was that policy was eased up too early, which contributed to a resurgence in inflation.”

    Risk-off sentiment prevailed in financial markets on Monday, with all three major U.S. stock indexes
    DJIA

    SPX

    COMP
    down in New York afternoon trading. Trading in U.S. government-debt futures reflected greater demand and gold rallied as a flight to safety took hold. The cash market for Treasurys was closed for Columbus Day and Indigenous Peoples Day.

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  • U.S. stocks lose ground after Hamas attacks Israel

    U.S. stocks lose ground after Hamas attacks Israel

    U.S. stocks were slightly lower Monday as investors edged away from equities and other assets perceived as risky in favor of traditional havens after a surprise attack by Hamas on Israel over the weekend raised geopolitical alarms.

    What’s happening

    • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
      DJIA
      was down 26 points, or 0.1%, at 33,382.

    • The S&P 500
      SPX
      fell 11 points, or 0.3%, to 4,295.

    • The Nasdaq Composite
      COMP
      was down 102 points, or 0.8%, at 13,329.

    Stocks bounced Friday after a stronger-than-expected September jobs report, allowing the S&P 500 to rise 0.5% for the week and break a streak of four straight weekly declines. The Dow saw a 0.3% weekly decline, while the Nasdaq Composite rose 1.6%.

    What’s driving markets

    The attack by Hamas on Israel raised fears of a broader conflict.

    “Such geopolitical tension is traditionally and unsurprisingly negative on sentiment, with investors likely to be unsettled by the prospect of further uncertainty,” said Richard Hunter, head of markets at Interactive Investor.

    The price of Brent crude
    BRN00,
    +3.80%
    ,
    the global energy benchmark, jumped nearly 4% amid concerns oil supplies from the region may be compromised.

    Need to Know: From $150 oil to no impact at all: What the surprise attack on Israel means to markets

    “The shocking attacks in Israel have sent the price of oil soaring, as investors assess the potential for the conflict to disrupt supply in the Middle East, if other countries are drawn in,” said Susannah Streeter, analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

    U.S. stock futures dived as bourses in much of Europe and Asia sold off, while traders moved into the perceived havens of gold
    GC00,
    +1.17%
    ,
    the U.S. dollar
    DXY
    and government bonds, such as the German bund
    BX:TMBMKDE-10Y.

    See: Gold, U.S. dollar rally as investors flock to havens as Israel-Hamas war escalates

    The U.S. Treasury market is closed on Monday for Columbus Day and Indigenous Peoples’ Day, but futures
    TY00,
    +0.80%

    are trading and these indicate falling benchmark yields.

    “Geopolitical risk doesn’t tend to linger long in markets but there are many second order impacts that could come through in the weeks, months and years ahead from this weekends’ developments,” said Jim Reid, strategist at Deutsche Bank.

    Indeed, traders may find their focus soon switches this week back to monetary and corporate issues. Markets ultimately reacted positively to what on the surface was a strong nonfarm payrolls report published Friday, as traders believed it was not so hot it would move the needle on Fed policy.

    With that in mind, the U.S. producer and consumer prices data for September will be published on Wednesday and Thursday, respectively, with further evidence of easing price pressure required to cement no more rate increases by the Federal Reserve this year.

    Then Friday sees the start proper of the third-quarter company-earnings season, when big banks such as JPMorgan Chase
    JPM,
    -0.69%
    ,
    Citigroup
    C,
    -0.97%
    ,
    and Wells Fargo
    WFC,
    -0.93%

    present their results.

    Earnings Watch: Q3 earnings are here: S&P 500 heads toward year of profit declines as JPMorgan, and Delta report this week

    Forecasts suggest analysts have become less confident about corporate profitability in recent weeks. Aggregate S&P 500 earnings are expected to decline by 0.3% for the year to Q3 2023, which would mark the fourth consecutive quarter of falling earnings, according to John Butters, senior earnings analyst at FactSet.


    Source: FactSet

    Read: Good for stocks? Why Tom Lee says the attack on Israel could help equities.

    Companies in focus

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  • ‘Fear trade’: What Israel-Hamas war means for oil prices and financial markets

    ‘Fear trade’: What Israel-Hamas war means for oil prices and financial markets

    Oil traders on Sunday said crude prices were likely to remain supported in the near term, as investors assessed the fallout from the surprise attack by Hamas on Israel and focused on the role played by Iran and the potential impact on that country’s petroleum exports.

    The conflict may also hold market-moving consequences for talks aimed at normalizing relations between Saudi Arabia and Israel.

    “While in the short term there is no impact directly on supply, it’s obvious how things play out over the next 24 to 48 hours could change that,” Phil Flynn, an analyst at Price Futures Group in Chicago, told MarketWatch.

    Brent crude futures
    BRN00,
    +4.17%
    ,
    the global benchmark, and West Texas Intermediate oil futures
    CL00,
    +4.35%

    CL.1,
    +4.35%

    jumped more than 3% when the market opened Sunday night. U.S. stock-index futures
    ES00,
    -0.66%

    traded lower, while traditional havens, including gold
    GC00,
    +0.98%

    and the U.S. dollar
    DXY
    rose.

    Movements in oil prices, meanwhile, will also serve as a gauge for broader market worries around the conflict, analysts said.

    See: Israeli stocks slump in first day of trade since Gaza attack

    Hamas, the Iran-backed, Palestinian militant group that controls the Gaza Strip, staged a sweeping attack on southern Israel early Saturday. News reports put Israeli deaths at more than 700. The Gaza Health Ministry said 413 people, including 78 children and 41 women, were killed in the territory as Israel retaliated, according to the Associated Press. Injuries in Israel and Gaza were both said to be around 2,000.

    Israeli troops on Sunday were engaged in fierce fighting in an effort to retake territory in southern Israel as Hamas launched further barrages of missiles. Israeli citizens and soldiers were captured and are being held hostage in Gaza, according to the Israeli military.

    Read: Israel declares war, approves ‘significant’ steps to retaliate after surprise attack by Hamas

    The Wall Street Journal reported that Iranian security officials helped Hamas plan the attack. U.S. officials said they haven’t seen evidence of Iran’s involvement, the report said.

    “Iran remains a very big wild card and we will be watching how strongly [Israeli] Prime Minister Netanyahu blames Tehran for facilitating these attacks by providing Hamas with weapons and logistical support,” said Helima Croft, head of global commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, in a Sunday morning note.

    Iranian crude exports have risen in recent years, indicating the Biden administration has adopted a soft approach to sanctions enforcement, Croft said. Some analysts have put Iranian crude production at more than 3 million barrels a day and exports above 2 million barrels a day — the highest levels since the Trump administration pulled the U.S. out of the Iranian nuclear accord in 2018, according to the Wall Street Journal. Sales fell to around 400,000 barrels a day in 2020 as the U.S. reimposed sanctions.


    RBC Capital Markets

    Hedge-fund manager Pierre Andurand, one of the world’s best energy traders, said in a social-media post that a large price spike for oil isn’t likely in coming days, but emphasized the market focus on Iran.

    “Now, over the last six months we have seen a very large increase in Iranian supply due to weak enforcement of sanctions. As Iran is also behind Hamas’ attacks on Israel, there is a good probability that the U.S. administration will start enforcing those sanctions on Iranian oil exports more tightly,” he wrote. “That would further tighten the oil market. Also the probability that this will lead to direct conflict with Iran is not zero.”

    Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal late Friday reported that Saudi Arabia had told the White House it would be willing to boost oil production next year if crude prices remained high, as part of an effort aimed at winning goodwill in Congress for a deal that would see the kingdom recognize Israel and in return get a defense agreement with the U.S.

    A Saudi production cut of 1 million barrels a day that was implemented in July and recently extended through the end of the year has been given much of the credit for a rally that took global benchmark Brent crude within a few dollars of the $100-a-barrel threshold before retreating this past week. The U.S. benchmark last week briefly topped $95 a barrel for the first time in 13 months.

    In a statement, Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry called on both sides to halt the escalation and exercise restraint, but also recalled its “repeated warnings of the dangers of the explosion of the situation as a result of the continued occupation, the deprivation of the Palestinian people of their legitimate rights, and the repetition of systematic provocations against its sanctities.”

    With the Israeli government vowing an unprecedented response, “it is hard to envision how Saudi normalization talks can run on a parallel track to a ferocious military counteroffensive,” said RBC’s Croft.

    Beyond oil, much will depend on the potential for the conflict to widen.

    Stocks have stumbled, retreating from 2023 highs set in late July, as yields on U.S. Treasurys have jumped. The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond
    BX:TMUBMUSD30Y
    rose 23.2 basis points last week to end Friday at 4.941%, its highest since Sept. 20, 2007. The 10-year Treasury note yield
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    topped 4.80% on Oct. 3, its highest since Aug. 8, 2007, and ended the week at 4.783%. Yields and debt prices move opposite each other.

    The U.S. bond market will be closed Monday for the Columbus Day and Indigenous People’s Day holiday, while U.S. stock markets will be open.

    The S&P 500 index
    SPX
    rose 0.5% last week, breaking a streak of four straight weekly declines, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average 
    DJIA
    fell 0.3% and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP
    gained 1.6%.

    “I think there will be a negative reaction. However, I don’t see a meltdown,” Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities, told MarketWatch.

    Traditional haven plays, including gold, the dollar and U.S. Treasurys may see a strong move upward, with price gains for Treasurys pulling yields down.

    “Geopolitical crises in the Middle East have usually caused oil prices to rise and stock prices to fall,” said economist Ed Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research Inc., in a note. “More often than not, they’ve also tended to be buying opportunities in the stock market.”

    The broader market reaction will depend on whether the crisis turns out to be a short-term flare-up or “something much bigger, like a war between Israel and Iran,” he said. The latter is unlikely, but tensions between the two are likely to escalate.

    “The price of oil may be a good way to assess the likelihood of a broader conflict,” he said.

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  • U.S. stocks staged a surprising rally on Friday. But can the party last?

    U.S. stocks staged a surprising rally on Friday. But can the party last?

    U.S. stocks saw a surprising bounce on Friday, culminating in the S&P 500 index’s biggest intraday comeback since the March banking crisis, even though a monthly jobs report for September came in much higher than expected.

    So, are investors no longer worried about the Federal Reserve’s inflation fight or higher interest rates wrecking the U.S. economy?

    “Stocks initially sold off on the blockbuster jobs report which indicates the Fed may not be done,” said Gina Bolvin, president of Bolvin Wealth Management Group. “However, after digesting the strong labor market is still strong, stocks rallied. And why shouldn’t they? Will good news- finally – be good news?”

    Bolvin said part of the rally could be seasonal, with September typically being a rough months for stocks. There also has been increased optimism that the earnings recession for American corporations may be over, she said.

    Analysts are predicting corporate earnings growth rates of 5.9% for the fourth quarter for S&P500 companies, according to John Butters, senior earnings analyst at FactSet. Estimates are for the third-quarter of 2023 after the stock index’s fourth straight quarterly earnings decline on a year-over-year basis.

    At Friday’s session lows, the S&P 500 index
    SPX
    was down 0.9%, but it ended up posting a 1.2% advance, its largest intraday comeback since March 24, 2023, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    booked a 0.9% gain and the Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP
    rose 1.6% higher.

    “The movement in stocks today is certainly encouraging given yields are up as well,” said Chris Fasciano, portfolio manager, Commonwealth Financial Network. “But we will need to see follow through next week.”

    The yield on 10-year Treasury
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    note rose for five straight weeks in a row to 4.783% on Friday, while the 30-year yield
    BX:TMUBMUSD30Y
    rose to 4.941%, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Read: Why 5% bond yields could wreak havoc on the market

    While the U.S. stock-market will be open for business on Monday, the bond market will be closed for Columbus Day and Indigenous Peoples Day holiday, giving investors somewhat of a pause before a big week of economic data that could shape the Fed’s next decision on interest rates.

    “Ultimately, stocks and bonds will take their cues next week from the economic releases,” Fasciano told MarketWatch.

    Key items on the calendar for the week will be September inflation reports, with the producer-price index on Wednesday and the consumer-price index due Thursday. In between, Fed minutes of its policy meeting in September also are due to be released Wednesday.

    “That makes next week an important week for the future direction of both the bond and equity markets as the Fed will certainly be focused on those reports prior to their next meeting on Oct. 31-Nov. 1,” Fasciano said.

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  • U.S. stocks stage a surprising rally on Friday. But can the party last?

    U.S. stocks stage a surprising rally on Friday. But can the party last?

    U.S. stocks saw a surprising bounce on Friday, culminating in the S&P 500 index’s biggest intraday comeback since the March banking crisis, even though a monthly jobs report for September came in much higher than expected.

    So, are investors no longer worried about the Federal Reserve’s inflation fight or higher interest rates wrecking the U.S. economy?

    “Stocks initially sold off on the blockbuster jobs report which indicates the Fed may not be done,” said Gina Bolvin, president of Bolvin Wealth Management Group. “However, after digesting the strong labor market is still strong, stocks rallied. And why shouldn’t they? Will good news- finally – be good news?”

    Bolvin said part of the rally could be seasonal, with September typically being a rough months for stocks. There also has been increased optimism that the earnings recession for American corporations may be over, she said.

    Analysts are predicting corporate earnings growth rates of 5.9% for the fourth quarter for S&P500 companies, according to John Butters, senior earnings analyst at FactSet. Estimates are for the third-quarter of 2023 after the stock index’s fourth straight quarterly earnings decline on a year-over-year basis.

    At Friday’s session lows, the S&P 500 index
    SPX
    was down 0.9%, but it ended up posting a 1.2% advance, its largest intraday comeback since March 24, 2023, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    booked a 0.9% gain and the Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP
    rose 1.6% higher.

    “The movement in stocks today is certainly encouraging given yields are up as well,” said Chris Fasciano, portfolio manager, Commonwealth Financial Network. “But we will need to see follow through next week.”

    The yield on 10-year Treasury
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    note rose for five straight weeks in a row to 4.783% on Friday, while the 30-year yield
    BX:TMUBMUSD30Y
    rose to 4.941%, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Read: Why 5% bond yields could wreak havoc on the market

    While the U.S. stock-market will be open for business on Monday, the bond market will be closed for Columbus Day and Indigenous Peoples Day holiday, giving investors somewhat of a pause before a big week of economic data that could shape the Fed’s next decision on interest rates.

    “Ultimately, stocks and bonds will take their cues next week from the economic releases,” Fasciano told MarketWatch.

    Key items on the calendar for the week will be September inflation reports, with the producer-price index on Wednesday and the consumer-price index due Thursday. In between, Fed minutes of its policy meeting in September also are due to be released Wednesday.

    “That makes next week an important week for the future direction of both the bond and equity markets as the Fed will certainly be focused on those reports prior to their next meeting on Oct. 31-Nov. 1,” Fasciano said.

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  • S&P 500, Nasdaq notch best week in over a month as stocks jump after blowout jobs number

    S&P 500, Nasdaq notch best week in over a month as stocks jump after blowout jobs number

    U.S. stock indexes rallied on Friday to finish the volatile trading week in the green as Wall Street debated on whether a blockbuster surge in jobs created last month could make the Federal Reserve raise interest rates again this year, though wages growth are moderating. The S&P 500
    SPX,
    +1.18%

    advanced a modest 0.5% for the week with the benchmark index snapping its four-week losing streak, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.87%

    was down 0.3% and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +1.60%

    jumped 1.6%, according to Dow Jones Market Data. On Friday, September jobs report showed the economy created 336,000 jobs last month, nearly twice the number expected, but the unemployment rate held steady at 3.8%, and hourly wages rose a mild 0.2% to mark their slowest annual growth rate in 18 months. A stronger-than-expected nonfarm payrolls report Friday triggered a renewed round of selling in the U.S. bond market, with the yield on the 10-year Treasury
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    4.804%

    up 5 basis points to 5.077%, after touching an intraday high of 5.21% on Friday. The yield on the 30-year Treasury
    TMUBMUSD30Y,
    4.973%

    climbed 5 basis points to 4.941%, the highest since Sept. 20, 2007, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

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  • Why 5% bond yields could wreak havoc on the market

    Why 5% bond yields could wreak havoc on the market

    The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond briefly rose above 5% again on Friday, opening the door to the likelihood of a more sustainable rise above that mark and the risk that the benchmark 10-year yield follows — moves which could wreak havoc across financial markets.

    One big reason is that investors are likely to demand greater compensation for taking risk as yields hover around some of the highest levels of the past 16 years, asset managers said. Corporate credit spreads could keep widening in a sign of worsening economic conditions and higher overall risk. And with returns on government debt becoming a more favorable option for investments, the stock market may be vulnerable to repeated drubbings.

    Read: Treasury yields are climbing: ‘There’s never really been such an attractive opportunity for fixed-income investments’

    Stock investors nonetheless shook off Friday’s stunning official jobs report for September, which saw the U.S. add almost twice as many jobs as forecasters had expected. All three major stock indexes
    DJIA

    SPX

    COMP
    finished higher even though yields climbed on everything from the 1-month T-bill
    BX:TMUBMUSD01M
    to the 30-year bond
    BX:TMUBMUSD30Y.
    The yield on the long bond finished at 4.941% — the highest level since Sept. 20, 2007 — after rising past 5% during the New York morning. The rate on the 10-year note
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    ended at 4.783%, the second-highest level of this year.

    Yields are returning to more normal-looking levels that prevailed before the 2007-2009 recession as the result of aggressive selloffs in government debt. More important than the absolute level of yields is the speed with which they have been heading to 5%. In the words of analyst Ajay Rajadhyaksha of Barclays earlier this week, there’s “no magic level” that will turn the current selloffs into a rally, and stocks have substantial room to reprice lower before bonds stabilize.

    “I think the market isn’t breaking yet, but a 5% 10-year yield is coming,” said Robert Daly, who manages $4.5 billion in assets as director of fixed income at Glenmede Investment Management in Philadelphia. “We’re already here on 30s and not that far away on 10s. Investors are trying to figure what level breaks the market, and I don’t think you can put your finger on the pulse as to what that level is.”

    Still, “a higher level of interest rates and yields is going to start having ramifications for broader markets at large,” leaving many investors hesitant to buy just about anything due to the volatility, Daly said via phone on Friday, after the release of September’s hot payrolls data.

    Friday’s data, which showed the U.S. creating 336,000 new jobs last month or almost double what economists had expected, is opening the door to a possible interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve on Nov. 1. The strong labor market means the Fed’s higher-for-longer mantra in rates is still in play and “the market is in a tenuous position to navigate all these things because of all the uncertainty,” Daly said.

    “Yields sustainably above 5% for a longer period of time will act as a weight on the market in terms of how you value risk compensation,” he said. “Investors are going to ask for more compensation to take risk and when you see liquidity evaporate more and more, that’s what’s going to turn the market over.”

    Friday’s price action was the second time this week that data related to the robust U.S. labor market has triggered a bonds selloff. On Tuesday, a snapback in U.S. job openings for August sent the 10- and 30-year yields to their highest closing levels since August-September of 2007.

    The next day, high-grade corporate-credit spreads widened for a seventh consecutive session. Daniel Krieter, a fixed-income strategist at BMO Capital Markets, wrote that “if rates continue to move higher or simply remain at these elevated levels for a significant period of time, it is going to have a pronounced effect on the creditworthiness of corporate borrowers, particularly in the high yield space.”

    In a note on Friday, Krieter’s colleagues, rates strategists Ian Lyngen and Ben Jeffery, wrote that “it’s not difficult to envision 10s maintain a range between 4.75% and 5.00%.”

    “The longer 10s hold this range, the more convinced the market will become that elevated yields are here to stay,” Lyngen and Jeffery said. “Admittedly, we’ve been surprised by the muted response in U.S. equities from the spike in yields and expect that’s due in part to the expectation for a swift reversal. In the event a correction fails to materialize, stocks will be overdue for a more meaningful reckoning.”

    The risk of “something breaking” will remain top of mind and “there is no shortage of risks facing equities and credit as rates continue to climb,” they added. “It’s not only the outright level of yields, but the length of time that borrowing costs stay elevated will also hold implications for risk asset valuations.”

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  • U.S. stocks end higher after blockbuster September jobs report as S&P 500 snaps 4-week losing streak

    U.S. stocks end higher after blockbuster September jobs report as S&P 500 snaps 4-week losing streak

    U.S. stocks closed higher Friday, with the S&P 500 eking out a modest weekly gain, as investors assessed a monthly jobs report that showed both a blockbuster surge in jobs created along with a slowdown in wage pressures.

    How stock indexes traded

    • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
      DJIA
      rose 288.01 points, or 0.9%, to close at 33,407.58.

    • The S&P 500
      SPX
      gained 50.31 points, or 1.2%, to finish at 4,308.50.

    • The Nasdaq Composite
      COMP
      climbed 211.51 points, or 1.6%, to end at 13,431.34.

    For the week, the Dow slipped 0.3% while the S&P 500 edged up 0.5% and the Nasdaq gained 1.6%. The Dow fell for a third straight week, while the S&P 500 snapped a four-week losing streak and the Nasdaq saw back-to-back weekly gains, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    What drove markets

    U.S. stocks climbed Friday, after reversing course from their slide earlier in the session as investors parsed a U.S. employment report that was stronger than forecast.

    “Wages slowed down,” said José Torres, senior economist at Interactive Brokers, in a phone interview Friday. “That was a great development” as the Federal Reserve aims to bring down inflation through monetary tightening.

    Investors have worried that a hot labor market will keep wage growth elevated, adding to inflationary pressures that could see the Fed keep interest rates higher for longer or potentially hike its benchmark rate one more time this year.

    A report Friday from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed the U.S. economy created 336,000 jobs in September, far surpassing economists’ expectations for 170,000 new jobs. Also, the report said job gains in August and July were revised higher.

    See: Jobs report shows big 336,000 gain in hiring in September. Labor market still hot.

    But other details from the report were slightly more favorable in terms of monetary policy concerns.

    For example, average hourly wages rose a mild 0.2% in September, bringing the 12-month rate of change through September to 4.2%, a slower pace than the prior month’s year-over-year rate of 4.3%.

    “Even though the headline number was 2.5 times what Wall Street had anticipated, the more important detail below the surface was that wage inflation actually cooled,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA, during a phone interview with MarketWatch.

    Renaissance Macro Research’s Neil Dutta said in a note that the jobs report was consistent with a soft landing for the economy and the Fed’s objective to lower the inflation rate back to 2%.

    Also see: Why another Fed rate hike this year ‘still a close call’ after jobs report, according to JPMorgan’s David Kelly

    “The strong labor market gives credence to the base case still being a soft landing,” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment officer at BMO Wealth Management, in a phone interview Friday. But that soft-landing narrative is “somewhat fragile and data dependent,” he said.

    See: U.S. stocks stage a surprising rally on Friday. But can the party last?

    Investors will be watching for data scheduled to be released next week on September inflation from the consumer-price index and producer-price index.

    Meanwhile, economists from Goldman Sachs Group said in a note Friday that “the continued rebalancing of the labor market” is consistent with their expectation that the Fed is done raising rates this year, despite senior Fed officials projecting another hike in their latest batch of forecasts, released last month.

    Federal-funds-futures traders are expecting the Fed will keep its benchmark rate at the current range of 5.25% to 5.5% at its policy meetings in November and December, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.

    “I’m of the belief that the Fed will not hike again this year,” BMO’s Ma said. “I don’t think it needs to.”

    Meanwhile, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    climbed 6.8 basis points to 4.783%, rising for five straight weeks, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Rising Treasury yields, particularly on the long end of the yield curve, have been blamed for a selloff in stocks over the past couple months. But the S&P 500 is now up so far in October, with a small gain of 0.5%, according to FactSet data.

    Companies in focus

    Steve Goldstein contributed to this report.

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  • S&P 500 scores best day in 3 weeks as bond yields ease back

    S&P 500 scores best day in 3 weeks as bond yields ease back

    U.S. stocks finished higher on Wednesday as yields on long government bonds retreated from 16-year highs, helping lift the S&P 500 to its best day in three weeks. The Dow Jones Industrial Index
    SPX,
    +0.81%

    gained about 125 points, or 0.4%, ending near 33,128, according to preliminary FactSet data. The boost, however, failed to push the blue-chip index back into the green for the year, a day after its gains for 2023 were erased. The S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    +0.81%

    rose 0.8%, marking its biggest daily climb since September 14, according to FactSet data. The Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    +1.35%

    shot up 1.4%. U.S. bond yields have surged since late September when the Federal Reserve indicated that rates likely will stay higher for longer than initially anticipated as it works to keep inflation in check. The sharp bond-market repricing has made buyers reluctant to step in, sending yields higher and creating ripples in financial markets. The 10-year Treasury
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    4.739%

    fell 6.6 basis points Wednesday to 4.735%, while the 30-year Treasury yield
    TMUBMUSD30Y,
    4.868%

    shed 6 basis points to 4.876%, after briefly topping 5% late Tuesday. Investors remain focused on political upheaval in Washington and the prospect of a November government shutdown. Friday also brings the monthly jobs report for September, which is expected to show a cooling labor market, but still a low 3.7% unemployment rate.

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  • What McCarthy ouster means for markets as investors fret over congressional ‘dysfunction’

    What McCarthy ouster means for markets as investors fret over congressional ‘dysfunction’

    Another round of political infighting that ended up spelling the end of Kevin McCarthy’s short tenure as House speaker on Tuesday wasn’t the primary driver of a selloff in stocks and bonds — but it didn’t help, analysts said.

    Continued dysfunction in Congress goes a long way toward explaining why the bond market has been ”out of sorts,” said Jamie Cox, managing partner for Harris Financial Group, in emailed comments.

    As the House began to vote on a motion by Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida to remove McCarthy from the speakership, stocks closed sharply lower. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    fell more than 430 points, or 1.3%, to wipe out its 2023 gain, while the S&P 500
    SPX
    posted its lowest close since June 1.

    The drop came in response to a continued surge in Treasury yields that saw the rate on the 10-year note
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    end above 4.80% at its highest since August 2007. Yields and debt prices move opposite each other.

    See: Rising Treasury yields are upsetting financial markets. Here’s why.

    McCarthy, a California Republican, lost the gavel as 216 members of the House voted in favor of ousting him while 210 supported him in a historic challenge.

    Read: Kevin McCarthy ousted as House speaker, falling after historic challenge by Matt Gaetz

    Analysts have pointed to a number of factors behind the continued climb in yields, including the Federal Reserve signaling last month that rates could stay high through 2024 and beyond.

    But market watchers said continued drama in Washington is doing nothing to soothe market volatility, with the showdown over McCarthy’s fate the result of a last-minute deal over the weekend that saw lawmakers temporarily avert a government shutdown. The latest turmoil comes just months after a debt-ceiling showdown that put the U.S. government on the brink of a first-ever default.

    “Investors are sick and tired of being jerked around with out of control spending, the inability to govern, and the constant dragging of markets to the edge of economic calamity with shutdowns and debt ceiling nonsense,” Cox wrote.

    McCarthy’s removal means a mid-November government shutdown, when stopgap funding runs out, is now an 80% probability, said Terry Haines, founder of Pangaea Policy, in a note.

    “[I]t’s not a one-off shutdown markets should be concerned about, but increased volatility for at least 3 months where markets won’t know final decisions on U.S. government annual spending, particularly in government-dependent sectors including defense, semiconductors, and healthcare,” Haines said.

    Tom Essaye, founder of Sevens Report Research, warned that the ”more dysfunctional” Congress appears, ”the higher yields go and the more stocks drop.”

    ”So, while congressional dysfunction isn’t the main reason yields are volatile, it is a contributor and the sooner Washington removes itself from the market dialogue, the better,” he said in a Tuesday morning note.

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  • Kevin McCarthy ousted as House speaker, falling after historic challenge by Matt Gaetz

    Kevin McCarthy ousted as House speaker, falling after historic challenge by Matt Gaetz

    The U.S. House of Representatives removed Rep. Kevin McCarthy from his post on Tuesday, as 216 members of his chamber voted in favor of ousting him while 210 supported him.

    Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida led the challenge against his fellow Republican, filing what’s known as a “motion to vacate” late Monday, after McCarthy relied on House Democrats to pass a short-term measure that averted a partial government shutdown.

    “I don’t think voting against Kevin McCarthy is chaos,” Gaetz said in a speech Tuesday on the House floor. “I think $33 trillion in debt is chaos. I think that facing a $2.2 trillion annual deficit is chaos. I think that not passing single-subject spending bills is chaos.”

    The Florida congressman had said on Sunday that he expected Democrats were “going to bail out” McCarthy, meaning support him enough to offset the opposition from Gaetz and some other Republicans, but the vote didn’t play out that way.

    Eight Republicans joined with all Democrats to vote against McCarthy. The eight were Andy Biggs of Arizona, Ken Buck of Colorado, Tim Burchett of Tennessee, Eli Crane of Arizona, Gaetz, Bob Good of Virginia, Nancy Mace of South Carolina and Matt Rosendale of Montana. There were a few lawmakers who were absent, such as Democratic Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California, McCarthy’s predecessor.

    See: Kevin McCarthy’s House speakership appears in peril with Democrats ‘not saving’ him

    GOP Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina is now serving as the speaker pro tempore, or temporary speaker.

    Until now, no House speaker had ever been removed by a motion to vacate. The move requires a simple majority of the House to succeed and can be triggered by a single member.

    Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota, who has been the No. 3 House Republican, was among the GOP lawmakers who spoke in favor of McCarthy.

    “Under Speaker McCarthy’s leadership, our House Republican majority has actually defied all odds and over-performed expectations again and again and again,” Emmer said on the House floor.

    There has been a view among analysts that a divided Washington’s spending might not change that much even if Gaetz managed to oust McCarthy, as MarketWatch reported.

    About 80% of Congress looks likely to vote for a spending deal that would call for some increases in outlays, Ukraine aid, money for the U.S.-Mexico border and a new commission on the nation’s debt, said Chris Krueger, managing director at TD Cowen’s Washington Research Group, in a note. That agreement would come around when a new deadline of Nov. 17 hits.

    U.S. stocks
    SPX

    DJIA

    COMP
    could end up taking a hit from the House’s drama, according to Stifel’s chief Washington policy strategist, Brian Gardner.

    “Removing Mr. McCarthy as Speaker could fuel temporary risk-off sentiment in the markets,” Gardner wrote in a note Tuesday. He suggested that markets “might react negatively to government dysfunction.”

    Stocks closed sharply lower Tuesday, after a report on job openings showed the labor market remains tight, leaving room for more interest-rate hikes.

    Read more: What McCarthy ouster means for markets as investors fret over congressional ‘dysfunction’

    A motion to vacate last went to a House vote in 1910, with then-Speaker Joseph Cannon surviving it and staying on as the chamber’s leader. Such a motion was filed in July 2015 against then-Speaker John Boehner and not voted on by the House at that time, but Boehner went on to announce his resignation in September 2015.

    In addition, a motion to vacate was considered in 1997 but ultimately not used by a small group of House Republicans who had grown disgruntled with the leadership of then-Speaker Newt Gingrich.

    Now read: Kevin McCarthy ousted: Here’s who could replace him as House speaker

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  • Stocks end mostly higher Monday despite resumed U.S. debt selloff

    Stocks end mostly higher Monday despite resumed U.S. debt selloff

    Stocks closed mostly higher to kick off October as a sharp selloff in longer-dated U.S. government debt resumed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.22%

    fell about 74 points, or 0.2%, ending near 33,433, according to preliminary FactSet data. The S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    +0.01%

    ended flat at 4,288, while the Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    +0.67%

    gained 0.7%. Surging long-term borrowing costs remain a key focus in the final quarter of 2023, with the fear being they could derail the U.S. economy and spark more corporate defaults. The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield was punching higher to about 4.682% on Monday. Evidence of the debt rout could be found in the popular iShares 20+Year Treasury Bond ETF,
    TLT,
    -1.98%

    which cemented its lowest close since since August 2007 and in the iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF,
    AGG,
    -0.70%

    which finished at its lowest since October 2008, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Investors in short U.S. government T-bills, however, have been mostly insulated from recent volatility, with yields steady in the 5.5% range, according to TradeWeb data.

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  • GameStop’s stock on pace for lowest close in two-and-a-half-years

    GameStop’s stock on pace for lowest close in two-and-a-half-years

    Shares of GameStop Corp. fell 6.9% Monday and are trading at $15.33, putting the stock on pace for its lowest close since Feb. 23, 2021, when it closed at $11.24, FactSet data show.

    The stock, which is down for four of the last five days, is on pace for its largest percent decrease since June 8, 2023, when it fell 17.89%, according to FactSet.

    Related: GameStop’s stock soars after activist investor Ryan Cohen named CEO

    Activist investor Ryan Cohen was named CEO of GameStop
    GME,
    -6.59%

    last week, marking the latest chapter in his attempt to breathe new life into the video-game retailer and original meme-stock company.

    Cohen, the co-founder and former CEO of Chewy Inc. 
    CHWY,
    +1.92%
    ,
      made his first investment in GameStop in August 2020 via his investment firm RC Ventures. News of Cohen’s 9% stake in the gaming retailer sent its stock surging. The activist investor quickly began pushing for an overhaul of GameStop, with a focus on digital sales, and he joined the company’s board in January 2021. He consolidated his power at GameStop when he became the company’s chairman in June 2021.

    Ryan Cohen becomes GameStop CEO and social media reacts: ‘Changing the paradigm on Wall Street’

    In its statement announcing Cohen’s election as CEO, GameStop confirmed that he will not receive compensation for serving as the company’s president, chief executive and chairman.

    The video game retailer reported better-than-expected second-quarter results last month, boosted by international sales and what the company described as “a significant software release.” GameStop is also ramping up its efforts to control costs.

    Ryan Cohen has no ‘new idea’: Analyst blasts ‘doomed’ GameStop after leadership announcement

    GameStop shares are down 17% in 2023, compared with the S&P 500 Index’s
    SPX
    gain of 11.2%.

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  • U.S. stocks open mostly lower as Treasury yields jump after Washington averts government shutdown

    U.S. stocks open mostly lower as Treasury yields jump after Washington averts government shutdown

    U.S. stock indexes opened mostly lower to start the month as Treasury yields resumed their climbs after U.S. legislators were able to reach a temporary agreement that averted a government shutdown. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.11%

    dropped 47 points, or 0.1%, to 33,463, while the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.24%

    was off 0.1% and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +1.06%

    was nearly flat. The U.S. Senate on Saturday night, with mere hours left before a midnight deadline for a federal government shutdown, voted to advance a short-term stopgap funding measure, which was then signed by President Joe Biden into law. The bill keeps the government open for 45 more days, an extended period that lawmakers can use to finalize funding legislation. The yield on the 2-year Treasury
    TMUBMUSD02Y,
    5.115%

    added 8 basis points to 5.113% on Monday morning, while the yield on the 10-year Treasury
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    4.669%

    rose 7 basis points to 4.645%. Investors awaited a number of Fed speakers, with Fed Chair Jerome Powell and Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker expected to make comments at a community event in York, Pennsylvania, at 11 a.m.

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