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Tag: U.S. 10 Year Treasury Note

  • S&P 500 ends above 4,500 level for first time in 15 months as stocks gain ahead of bank earnings

    S&P 500 ends above 4,500 level for first time in 15 months as stocks gain ahead of bank earnings

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    Stocks rose for a fourth day in a row on Thursday, a day ahead of second-quarter earnings from America’s biggest lenders. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.14%

    rose about 46 points, or 0.1%, ending near 34,394, according to preliminary data from FactSet. But the S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    +0.85%

    gained 0.9% to end at 4,509, clearing the 4,500 mark for the first time since April 5, 2022 when it ended at 4,545.86, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    +1.58%

    scored another blockbuster day, up 1.6%. Investors have been optimistic as inflation pressures ease and as perhaps the best-telegraphed U.S. economic recession in recent history has yet to materialize. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq have been charging higher on buzz about AI technology, with much of this year’s stock-market gains fueled by a small group of stocks. The risk-on tone ahead of earnings from JPMorgan Chase and Co.,
    JPM,
    +0.49%

    Wells Fargo
    WFC,
    +1.04%

    and Citigroup
    C,
    +0.63%
    ,
    had the U.S. dollar
    DXY,
    -0.74%

    earlier on pace to end at its lowest level since early April 2022. Treasury yields also continued to fall, with the 10-year
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.768%

    rate back down to 3.759%, after topping 4% in recent weeks. The six biggest banks are expected to issue a deluge of fresh debt after earnings, despite the Federal Reserve having sharply increased rates and borrowing costs for businesses and households to tame inflation.

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  • What’s at stake for stock and bond investors in second half of 2023

    What’s at stake for stock and bond investors in second half of 2023

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    There’s a lot riding for stock and bond investors in the second half of the year, with the biggest question centered around whether the idea of “immaculate disinflation” can come fully to fruition.

    The term refers to the notion that inflation might meaningfully dissipate from here, without a significant uptick in U.S. unemployment or a major recession. It’s considered to be the perfect scenario for investors and policy makers, who want inflation back down to their 2% target, and one in which the Federal Reserve’s main policy rate target wouldn’t need to go much higher from its current level between 5%-5.25%.

    What makes the path ahead so tricky is that core readings that represent the purest reads on inflation are proving to be stubborn and it isn’t clear whether they’ll turn meaningfully lower, fast. If they don’t, that would likely put pressure on central bankers to keep up their inflation fight and has the potential to drive up interest-rate expectations, as well as Treasury yields. Though the bond market has come around to the fact there won’t likely be any rate cuts by the Fed soon, it still isn’t completely on board with the idea of higher rates for longer — which, in turn, is helping to support equities for now.

    “The problem for the disinflation people or believers is that the core readings continue to come in too high,” said Jeffrey Cleveland, director and chief economist at Payden & Rygel, a Los Angeles-based investment management firm that oversees $148.9 billion in assets.

    Friday’s core reading from the Fed’s favorite inflation gauge — known as the PCE — was 0.3% for the month of May, and has been at or above that mark for six straight months.

    Via phone, Cleveland said his firm expects the monthly core PCE reading to end the year above 0.3%, but “you need monthly core PCE readings to be 0.1% or 0.2% to see meaningful disinflation.” If inflation surprises to the upside, “the whole Treasury curve moves up, with the 2-year rate most susceptible,” which would likely dent the performance of stocks.

    Cleveland said he expects the policy-sensitive 2-year Treasury yield BX:TMUBMUSD02Y to get back to 5% by December — a level that was last seen in March.

    The first six months of this year have turned out to be great for U.S. equities, with the Nasdaq-100
    NDX,
    +1.63%

    on track for its best first-half performance on record, as investors came around to the idea that the economy is resilient enough to absorb higher rates. The unemployment rate stood at 3.7% as of May as the U.S. added a shockingly large number of jobs, while annual core readings from the consumer-price index and PCE index came in at 5.3% and 4.6%, respectively, for May.

    Read: How stocks and every other major asset have performed in first half of 2023 — and over the last 18 months

    Meanwhile, the benchmark 10-year yield
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.812%
    ,
    which reflects investors’ long-term U.S. outlook, has remained relatively contained near 3.75% for months as robust U.S. data rolled in, accompanied by signs of overall inflation easing when waning gas and food prices are factored in.

    Data released this week reaffirmed that the U.S. economy and labor market are holding up, despite 5 percentage points of Fed rate hikes since March 2022. With policy makers signaling two more hikes may be on the way starting in July, the risk is that the economy continues to prove resistant to policy makers’ actions and requires even more tightening.

    “Not only is the U.S. economy continuing to prove resilient in the face of significantly tighter monetary policy, but it also appears the starting point of the economy for 2023 was even higher than previously anticipated with the consumer proving to be an even stronger force across the first three months,” said Stifel, Nicolaus & Co. economists Lindsey Piegza and Lauren Henderson, in a note this week. 

    Via phone, Henderson said her Chicago-based firm isn’t buying into the “immaculate disinflation” theory yet and thinks inflation “is proving stickier and more persistent than many expected.”

    Stifel, which updates its forecasts on a quarterly basis, is standing by its year-end expectations for the 2- and 10-year Treasury yields
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.812%

    to be at 4.65% and 3.45%, respectively, she said. That’s below the current levels for those rates because Stifel economists foresee a short, shallow recession “sometime in the fourth quarter or beyond,” as policy makers push the fed-funds rate target up to 5.75% by year-end and stay there through 2024, according to Henderson.

    Inside the market for fixings, or derivatives-like instruments in which bets can be made on upcoming consumer-price index reports, traders have been coalescing around the view that the annual headline CPI rate is likely to start falling toward 2% this year. They even see the core CPI reading dropping to roughly 2.5% annually and to 0.2% monthly, in relatively quick fashion.

    However, one big name has a warning. Former New York Fed President Bill Dudley said inflation could easily go higher than his estimated 2.5% long-term average, and that the 10-year Treasury yield might even go above his “conservative” estimate of 4.5%.

    On Friday, financial markets were focused on the positive aspects of the PCE report, with all three major U.S. stock indexes
    DJIA,
    +0.97%

    SPX,
    +1.31%

    COMP,
    +1.49%

    higher in afternoon trading. Meanwhile, 3-month
    TMUBMUSD03M,
    5.320%

    through 30-year Treasury yields
    TMUBMUSD30Y,
    3.854%

    all moved lower.

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  • What’s next for markets after aborted Wagner mutiny leaves Russia’s Putin weakened

    What’s next for markets after aborted Wagner mutiny leaves Russia’s Putin weakened

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    Investors will start the week nervously sorting through the aftermath of a short-lived rebellion by the mercenary Wagner Group that’s seen leaving Russian President Vladimir Putin weakened.

    “As Monday’s global markets are set to begin trading, investors are laser-focused on whether the short-lived Russia insurrection was only the beginning of a much deeper thunderbolt set to rock geopolitical, economic and market stability in the days and weeks ahead,” Greg Bassuk, chief executive officer at AXS Investments in New York, told MarketWatch on Sunday in emailed comments.

    U.S. stock-index futures edged up after the start of electronic trading Sunday night, while oil rallied. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    YM00,
    +0.14%

    rose 25 points, while S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.15%

    edged up 0.1% and Nasdaq-100 futures gained 0.2%.

    Global stocks fell last week as interest-rate hikes by European central banks stoked recession fears. In the U.S., the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.77%

    ended a streak of five straight weekly gains, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.65%

    and Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -1.01%

    also pulled back.

    See: Russia’s short-lived revolt could have long-term consequences for Putin, as questions remain over Prigozhin’s whereabouts

    ‘Real cracks’

    While a weakened Russia raises the prospects of a favorable outcome for Ukraine 16 months after Putin’s decision to invade, the potential for further internal strife in the nation with the world’s largest nuclear arsenal is less comforting, observers noted.

    “This raises profound questions. It shows real cracks,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told CBS News’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday morning.

    Putin’s hold on power “certainly seems shakier than it was a few days ago,” but there remains “no clear contender to replace him, by election or coup,” said Benjamin Friedman, policy director at Defense Priorities, a foreign-policy think tank in Washington, D.C.

    Nonetheless, the war in Ukraine “is weakening Russia in various ways, including by creating internal strife and dangerously discontented elites who have some power,” Friedman told MarketWatch. “The perception of Putin’s fallibility and weakness is growing and creates its own reality. That is dangerous to him. It’s hard to predict what additional power grabs and instability that could create,” he said.

     See: Russia’s short-lived revolt could have long-term consequences for Putin, as questions remain over Prigozhin’s whereabouts

    ‘Bloodbath’ of volatility?

    AXS Investment’s Bassuk said the further turmoil “could drive a bloodbath of market volatility amid its impact on the war with Ukraine, a shifting balance among the G-8 superpowers, and the already heightened potential for a U.S. and global recession.”

    Analysts have warned that an uptick in volatility may be overdue. The Cboe Volatility Index
    VIX,
    +4.11%
    ,
    a measure of expected volatility in the S&P 500 over the next 30 days, last week fell to its lowest since January 2020 and ended Friday below 14. Its long-term average stands near 20. The subdued performance, which has accompanied a year-to-date rally of more than 13% for the S&P 500 index, is taken by some market watchers as a sign of complacency.

    Read: Why the ‘easy money’ has been made in the stock-market rally — and what comes next

    Potential ‘nonevent’

    But the quick termination of the rebellion could make it more of a “nonevent” for capital markets as trading resumes, said Marc Chandler, managing director at Bannockburn Global Forex.

    While conventional wisdom sees signs of Putin’s weakness, the Russian leader has often been underestimated, he said.

    “The war in Ukraine is likely unaffected, and Kyiv’s counteroffense thus far seems rather muted. The risk is that the war escalates if Kyiv resorts to medium- and long-range missiles to hit Russian assets in Crimea, and possibly in Russia proper,” Chandler said.

    The rebellion, led by Wagner Group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, saw the mercenary paramilitary force take over Russia’s southern military headquarters in Rostov-on-Don amid little resistance before marching largely unchallenged toward Moscow. Putin, without mentioning him by name, accused Prigozhin of treason.

    The advance halted a little more than 120 miles from the capital before Prigozhin abruptly stood down in a deal that would see him sent to Belarus and charges against him of leading an armed rebellion dropped.

    As events unspooled Saturday, analysts warned that extended strife could spark a flight to quality when markets reopened into assets like U.S. Treasury bonds
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.720%
    ,
    the U.S. dollar
    DXY,
    -0.14%

    and other havens like the Japanese yen
    USDJPY,
    -0.21%
    ,
    Swiss franc
    USDCHF,
    -0.06%

    and gold
    GC00,
    +0.32%
    .

    The dollar was little changed versus major rivals in the early going Sunday evening, while gold for August delivery
    GCQ23,
    +0.32%

    edged up 0.2%.

    All eyes on oil

    Meanwhile, commodity and financial markets have seen big swings since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022.

    First and foremost, the invasion produced a global energy shock. Russia was the world’s third-largest crude producer behind the U.S. and Saudi Arabia, and a key supplier of natural gas to Western Europe.

    Crude-oil futures soared in the immediate aftermath of the invasion, with the global benchmark Brent crude
    BRN00,
    +0.91%

    topping out just shy of $140 a barrel in early March 2022 after closing at $94.05 on the eve of the invasion.

    Natural-gas prices had also soared, and fears of shortages led to a scramble by European governments to fill storage amid apocalyptic predictions about a harsh 2022-’23 winter.

    Energy prices subsequently fell back. Crude oil is trading well below levels seen ahead of the invasion. And despite waves of sanctions by European and U.S. governments and price caps aimed at limiting Moscow’s ability to fill its coffers, Russian crude supplies remain robust.

    Oil prices were on the rise Sunday night, with WTI up 87 cents, or 1.3%, to trade at $70.03 a barrel, while Brent gained 91 cents, or 1.2%, to $74.76 a barrel.

    August Brent crude
    BRNQ23,
    +0.95%

    settled Friday at $73.85 a barrel, falling 3.6% last week. West Texas Intermediate crude for August delivery
    CL00,
    +0.91%
    ,
    the U.S. benchmark, dropped 3.9% last week to end Friday at $69.16 a barrel.

    Jorge Leon, senior vice president at Rystad Energy, noted that in the past 35 years, geopolitical shocks involving big oil producers have seen crude futures jump by an average of 8% in the five days after the start of the triggering event (see chart below).


    Rystad Energy

    A rise of that magnitude looks unlikely given how quickly the rebellion was quelled, he said.

    “Given that the short-lived event this weekend in Russia appears to have ended, we do not expect to see such a significant increase in oil prices next week. We do, however, believe that the geopolitical risk amid internal instability in Russia has increased,” Leon said in emailed comments.

    —Barbara Kollmeyer contributed.

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  • U.S. stock futures little changed after short-lived Wagner mutiny in Russia; oil futures rise

    U.S. stock futures little changed after short-lived Wagner mutiny in Russia; oil futures rise

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    U.S. stock-index futures opened near unchanged and attempted to edge higher Sunday night, as investors reacted to chaotic weekend events that saw a short-lived rebellion that pitted the mercenary Wagner Group against the Russian military leadership. After advancing to within around two hours of Moscow, the mutiny was abruptly halted, with Wagner Group leader Yevgeny Prigozhin reportedly agreeing to depart for Belarus. Analysts said the events, while a potential plus for Ukraine 16 months after Russia’s invasion, appeared to weaken Russian President Vladimir Putin’s hold on the country, That raises concerns about the potential for further internal strife, a recipe for uncertainty that could feed volatility in financial markets. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    YM00,
    +0.09%

    rose 20 points, while S&P 500
    ES00,
    +0.10%

    futures ticked up 2.75 points and Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    +0.16%

    edged up 11.25 points shortly after the start of electronic trading. Moves for all three contracts amounted to less than 0.1%. Stocks fell last week, with the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.77%

    snappng a streak of five straight weekly gains. Oil futures rose, with West Texas Intermediate crude for August delivery
    CL.1,
    +1.26%

    CL00,
    +1.26%
    ,
    the U.S. benchmark, up 48 cents, or 0.7%, at $69.64 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

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  • What’s next for markets after aborted Wagner mutiny leaves Russia’s Putin weakened

    What’s next for markets after aborted Wagner mutiny leaves Russia’s Putin weakened

    [ad_1]

    Investors will start the week nervously sorting through the aftermath of a short-lived rebellion by the mercenary Wagner Group that’s seen leaving Russian President Vladimir Putin weakened.

    “As Monday’s global markets are set to begin trading, investors are laser-focused on whether the short-lived Russia insurrection was only the beginning of a much deeper thunderbolt set to rock geopolitical, economic and market stability in the days and weeks ahead,” Greg Bassuk, chief executive officer at AXS Investments in New York, told MarketWatch on Sunday in emailed comments.

    U.S. stock-index futures edged up after the start of electronic trading Sunday night, while oil rallied. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    YM00,
    +0.14%

    rose 75 points, while S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.12%

    edged up 0.2% and Nasdaq-100 futures gained 0.3%.

    Global stocks fell last week as interest-rate hikes by European central banks stoked recession fears. In the U.S., the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.77%

    ended a streak of five straight weekly gains, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.65%

    and Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -1.01%

    also pulled back.

    See: Russia’s short-lived revolt could have long-term consequences for Putin, as questions remain over Prigozhin’s whereabouts

    ‘Real cracks’

    While a weakened Russia raises the prospects of a favorable outcome for Ukraine 16 months after Putin’s decision to invade, the potential for further internal strife in the nation with the world’s largest nuclear arsenal is less comforting, observers noted.

    “This raises profound questions. It shows real cracks,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told CBS News’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday morning.

    Putin’s hold on power “certainly seems shakier than it was a few days ago,” but there remains “no clear contender to replace him, by election or coup,” said Benjamin Friedman, policy director at Defense Priorities, a foreign-policy think tank in Washington, D.C.

    Nonetheless, the war in Ukraine “is weakening Russia in various ways, including by creating internal strife and dangerously discontented elites who have some power,” Friedman told MarketWatch. “The perception of Putin’s fallibility and weakness is growing and creates its own reality. That is dangerous to him. It’s hard to predict what additional power grabs and instability that could create,” he said.

     See: Russia’s short-lived revolt could have long-term consequences for Putin, as questions remain over Prigozhin’s whereabouts

    ‘Bloodbath’ of volatility?

    AXS Investments’ Bassuk said the further turmoil “could drive a bloodbath of market volatility amid its impact on the war with Ukraine, a shifting balance among the G-8 superpowers, and the already heightened potential for a U.S. and global recession.”

    Analysts have warned that an uptick in volatility may be overdue. The Cboe Volatility Index
    VIX,
    +4.11%
    ,
    a measure of expected volatility in the S&P 500 over the next 30 days, last week fell to its lowest since January 2020 and ended Friday below 14. Its long-term average stands near 20. The subdued performance, which has accompanied a year-to-date rally of more than 13% for the S&P 500 index, is taken by some market watchers as a sign of complacency.

    Read: Why the ‘easy money’ has been made in the stock-market rally — and what comes next

    Potential ‘nonevent’

    But the quick termination of the rebellion could make it more of a “nonevent” for capital markets as trading resumes, said Marc Chandler, managing director at Bannockburn Global Forex.

    While conventional wisdom sees signs of Putin’s weakness, the Russian leader has often been underestimated, he said.

    “The war in Ukraine is likely unaffected, and Kyiv’s counteroffense thus far seems rather muted. The risk is that the war escalates if Kyiv resorts to medium- and long-range missiles to hit Russian assets in Crimea, and possibly in Russia proper,” Chandler said.

    The rebellion, led by Wagner Group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, saw the mercenary paramilitary force take over Russia’s southern military headquarters in Rostov-on-Don amid little resistance before marching largely unchallenged toward Moscow. Putin, without mentioning him by name, accused Prigozhin of treason.

    The advance halted a little more than 120 miles from the capital before Prigozhin abruptly stood down in a deal that would see him sent to Belarus and charges against him of leading an armed rebellion dropped.

    As events unspooled Saturday, analysts warned that extended strife could spark a flight to quality when markets reopened into assets like U.S. Treasury bonds
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.727%
    ,
    the U.S. dollar
    DXY,
    -0.11%

    and other havens like the Japanese yen
    USDJPY,
    -0.19%
    ,
    Swiss franc
    USDCHF,
    -0.03%

    and gold
    GC00,
    +0.18%
    .

    The dollar was little changed versus major rivals in the early going Sunday evening, while gold for August delivery
    GCQ23,
    +0.18%

    edged up 0.2%.

    All eyes on oil

    Meanwhile, commodity and financial markets have seen big swings since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022.

    First and foremost, the invasion produced a global energy shock. Russia was the world’s third-largest crude producer behind the U.S. and Saudi Arabia, and a key supplier of natural gas to Western Europe.

    Crude-oil futures soared in the immediate aftermath of the invasion, with the global benchmark Brent crude
    BRN00,
    +0.73%

    topping out just shy of $140 a barrel in early March 2022 after closing at $94.05 on the eve of the invasion.

    Natural-gas prices had also soared, and fears of shortages led to a scramble by European governments to fill storage amid apocalyptic predictions about a harsh 2022-’23 winter.

    Energy prices subsequently fell back. Crude oil is trading well below levels seen ahead of the invasion. And despite waves of sanctions by European and U.S. governments and price caps aimed at limiting Moscow’s ability to fill its coffers, Russian crude supplies remain robust.

    Oil prices were on the rise Sunday night, with WTI up 87 cents, or 1.3%, to trade at $70.03 a barrel, while Brent gained 91 cents, or 1.2%, to $74.76 a barrel.

    August Brent crude
    BRNQ23,
    +0.80%

    settled Friday at $73.85 a barrel, falling 3.6% last week. West Texas Intermediate crude for August delivery
    CL00,
    +0.69%
    ,
    the U.S. benchmark, dropped 3.9% last week to end Friday at $69.16 a barrel.

    Jorge Leon, senior vice president at Rystad Energy, noted that in the past 35 years, geopolitical shocks involving big oil producers have seen crude futures jump by an average of 8% in the five days after the start of the triggering event (see chart below).


    Rystad Energy

    A rise of that magnitude looks unlikely given how quickly the rebellion was quelled, he said.

    “Given that the short-lived event this weekend in Russia appears to have ended, we do not expect to see such a significant increase in oil prices next week. We do, however, believe that the geopolitical risk amid internal instability in Russia has increased,” Leon said in emailed comments.

    —Barbara Kollmeyer contributed.

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  • Rebellion in Russia could trigger selloff in U.S. stocks and flight to safe assets, analysts say. Here’s what investors should know.

    Rebellion in Russia could trigger selloff in U.S. stocks and flight to safe assets, analysts say. Here’s what investors should know.

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    Watch what happens over the next 36 hours.

    That was the advice from one financial analyst as U.S. investors awoke on Saturday to news of an apparent armed rebellion against Moscow led by Yevgeny Prigozhin, the owner of the powerful Russian mercenary organization Wagner Group.

    Others speculated that the crisis in Russia could drive U.S. stocks lower, as some traders were already betting on a selloff once markets reopen on Monday due to this sudden spike in geopolitical risk.

    “The developments in Russia are ultimately going to suggest President Putin’s leadership is weakening quickly and that resources may shift away from the war with Ukraine. It is too early to say how this will impact Wall Street, but the risk of desperate measures from Putin might make some investors nervous,” Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda, said Saturday.

    A simmering feud between Prigozhin, the leader of the military contractor whose mercenary forces have been fighting alongside Russian military troops in Ukraine, and the Russian Defense Ministry came to a head early Saturday as Prigozhin led his troops to successfully overtake a Russian military outpost near the Ukrainian frontier, which the Kremlin has used as its command center for overseeing the war in Ukraine.

    Amid the mixture of reliable information and unfounded speculation, market analysts have scrambled to make sense of the situation and what it might mean for financial markets and the global economy.

    The main theme that has emerged so far is that U.S. stocks would suffer unless the Russian military managed to quickly suppress the rebellion, as may have occurred with reports late Saturday that Prigozhin had halted a Wagner advance on Moscow and, in fact, might be relocating to neighboring Belarus. But how would something that could potentially cut short the war in Ukraine — which has been a bugbear for markets since the full-scale invasion by Russian forces in February 2022 — be a negative for stocks?

    The answer is that chaos leads to uncertainty, and that uncertainty is anathema to markets — especially when it could disrupt global oil and food supplies.

    “I’d bet on this creating more uncertainty which is generally going to be negative for risk … in the short term at least you see higher geopolitical risk premia — longer term the risks are on both sides really: does this precipitate the collapse of the Russian front and the war ends?” said Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Finalto, in a note to clients on Saturday.

    Others noted that the crisis is coming at a vulnerable time for U.S. markets, while Michael Antonelli, a market strategist at R.W. Baird & Co., suggested in a tweet that the crisis “has to be” bearish for U.S. stocks.

    The S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    -0.77%

    closed out its worst week since March on Friday as a series of interest-rate hikes in the U.K. and across Europe last week sparked fresh fears of a global recession. Some analysts noted that the pullback swiftly followed signs that investors are growing more bullish following a powerful rally that sent stocks to their highest levels in 14 months. There are concerns that this shift in sentiment could presage investors’ final capitulation.

    Sven Henrich, founder and lead strategist of Northman Trader, noted that the Cboe Volatility Index
    VIX,
    +4.11%
    ,
    the market’s so-called fear gauge, which measures the stock market’s expectations for volatility over the next 30 days, managed to finish last week below 13.5, its lowest level since January 2020, even as stocks pulled back.

    If stocks do continue to slide, that would mean new lows for the Vix have proved to be a reliable counterindicator, suggesting that investors had grown complacent before being walloped by a fresh shock.

    Asian markets will be the first to react to ongoing developments by Sunday evening Eastern time, but derivatives traders using CME Group’s Globex platform to trade swaps tracking the value of U.S. equity indexes are already betting on a selloff.

    Meanwhile, bitcoin
    BTCUSD,
    +0.11%
    ,
    an asset that does reliably trade 24/7, was down just 0.8% at $30,675, a slight pullback after achieving its highest level in a year late last week. By Saturday evening the leading cryptocurrency has reversed that earlier dip.

    Where might investors turn for safety if markets do become chaotic?

    Finalto’s Wilson said investors could seek shelter in the currency market, where the U.S. dollar
    DXY,
    +0.47%
    ,
    Swiss franc
    USDCHF,
    -0.02%

    and maybe the euro
    EURUSD,
    +0.32%

    and British pound
    GBPUSD,
    +0.02%

    could benefit from a spike in demand. More “de-risking” could send investors into ultrasafe government bonds like U.S. Treasurys
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.741%
    ,
    which could help to push yields lower, as bond yields move inversely to prices.

    Wilson anticipated that European indexes could be “more exposed to de-risking due to makeup and proximity to Russia and the war in Ukraine.” He also noted the possibility that this latest crisis could send the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -1.01%

    higher if investors decided to seek shelter in high-quality growth names like Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    -0.17%
    ,
    Nvidia Corp.
    NVDA,
    -1.90%

    or Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    -1.38%
    ,
    which have helped to drive this year’s equity-market rally.

    Whatever happens, the outcome of the crisis should be more clear within the next 35 hours, Wilson said.

    “[H]ow the market opens after the weekend will depend on what happens in the next 36 hours. … [I]t could all be over by then,” Wilson said.

    Regardless, one of the first to interpret the market’s reaction on Monday will be Melbourne-based Chris Weston, head of research at online broker Pepperstone.

    Until then, he cautioned investors against reading too much into the Wagner situation, since analysts’ visibility into a very complicated geopolitical situation is “poor.”

    “The humble market participant would simply say they have no edge in knowing how this plays out and our visibility to read this through to markets is currently poor — the information is often biased and it’s hard to truly know what is fact and what is fed to influence. … [W]ill this lead to genuine regime change, fail or perhaps inflame and lead to a market shock?” Weston said in comments provided to MarketWatch.

    “At this point we simply don’t know, but it feels like we get enough clarity on potential outcomes and even timelines in the next 24-48 hours — at this point the prospect of modest downside risk on Monday is elevated and naturally we’ll be watching crude and EU assets most closely,” he said.

    Terry Haines, founder of Pangea Policy, said in an email to clients that the ongoing uncertainty fueled by the Wagner rebellion reveals the fragility of the Putin regime, and might marginally boost chances of a Ukraine victory.

    But Haines also conceded that it’s a “developing and unstable situation with various facets that on net add to geopolitical uncertainties, to which markets usually react negatively.” Investors must also consider that, should that rebellion fail, it could be “replaced by stronger Russian control” or create further instability as “Wagner disintegrates.”

    In that same vein, Jim Bianco, head of Bianco Research, offered up a joke aimed at all the armchair geopolitical analysts suddenly flocking to Twitter.

    Markets may take a look at this crisis and view it as a “bullish development after some initial volatility, the Kobeissi Letter’s editor in chief and founder, Adam Kobeissi, told MarketWatch in Saturday comments.

    “After all, the end of the war in Ukraine is the market’s top geopolitical driver right now, and if this increases the odds of a peace agreement and/or Russia withdrawing from Ukraine, it is likely to be perceived as bullish over the next few weeks,” he said.

    He recommended that investors keep an eye on prices of oil and gold, which could be particularly sensitive to any fresh developments.

    “If this means more conflict,” he said, “then oil
    CL.1,
    +0.51%
    ,
    bonds
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.741%

    and gold
    GC00,
    +0.04%

    are poised to rally.”

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  • Goldman economists: U.S. Treasury funds will be exhausted by June 9

    Goldman economists: U.S. Treasury funds will be exhausted by June 9

    [ad_1]

    Goldman Sachs economists Alec Phillips and Tim Krupa say the Treasury’s early June deadline for the debt ceiling looks “very accurate, in our view.” Their calculation is that by June 2, the Treasury’s room under the debt ceiling will barely exceed $30 billion — the minimum cash the Treasury has targeted in prior debt-limit projections — and entirely dry by June 9. They say odds are highest that a deal will be announced late Friday or Saturday. They give an 80% chance to a full-fledged deal, a 10% probability of a short-term patch and a 10% chance Congress doesn’t act in time.

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  • Jobs report shows strong 253,000 increase in April. U.S. labor market not cooling much

    Jobs report shows strong 253,000 increase in April. U.S. labor market not cooling much

    [ad_1]

    The numbers: The U.S. created a stronger-than-expected 253,000 new jobs in April and wages rose sharply, indicating there’s still lot of demand for labor even as the economy slows.

    The increase surpassed the 180,000 forecast of economists polled by The Wall Street Journal.

    The unemployment rate, what’s more, fell a tick to 3.4% from 3.5%,…

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  • Jobs report shows strong 253,000 increase in April. U.S. labor market not cooling much

    Jobs report shows strong 253,000 increase in April. U.S. labor market not cooling much

    [ad_1]

    The numbers: The U.S. created a stronger-than-expected 253,000 new jobs in April and wages rose sharply, indicating there’s still lot of demand for labor even as the economy slows.

    The increase surpassed the 180,000 forecast of economists polled by The Wall Street Journal.

    The unemployment rate, what’s more, fell a tick to 3.4% from 3.5%,…

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • U.S. stocks head for best day in 2 weeks on strong earnings from Meta and other big-tech names

    U.S. stocks head for best day in 2 weeks on strong earnings from Meta and other big-tech names

    [ad_1]

    U.S. stocks rose on Thursday, on track for their biggest gain in two weeks, as another batch of strong big-tech earnings reports helped boost the broader market while offsetting signs of slowing economic growth.

    How are stocks trading

    On Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 229 points, or 0.68%, to 33,302 as worries about First Republic Bank FRC overshadowed upbeat big-tech earnings.

    What’s driving markets

    For…

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  • Jobs report shows 236,000 gain in March — lifting 2023 total above 1 million — but U.S. labor market shows hints of cooling

    Jobs report shows 236,000 gain in March — lifting 2023 total above 1 million — but U.S. labor market shows hints of cooling

    [ad_1]

    The numbers: The U.S. added a robust 236,000 new jobs in March, defying the Federal Reserve’s hopes for a big slowdown in hiring as the central bank struggles to tame inflation. The consensus economist forecast called for a nonfarm-payrolls expansion of 238,000.

    The solid increase in employment last month followed a revised 326,000 gain in February and a gain of 472,000 in January.

    While the increase in hiring was the smallest monthly rise in more than two years, the number of jobs created last month was much greater than is typical.

    The U.S. economy has shown recent signs of stress.

    The unemployment rate, meanwhile, slipped to 3.5% from 3.6% as more people searched for and found work. That’s another sign of labor-market vigor.

    There was some good news in the report for the Fed, though.

    Wage growth continued to moderate closer to level the Fed would prefer. Hourly wages increased a mild 0.3% last month, the government said Friday.

    The increase in pay over the past year also slowed again to a nearly two-year low of 4.2% from 4.6% in February.

    What’s more, the share of people working or looking for work rose a tick to 62.6%. That’s the highest labor-force participation rate since February 2020, the last month before the pandemic’s onset.

    When more people look for work, companies don’t have to compete as hard for workers via higher pay.

    Emerging evidence of slack in a muscular U.S. labor market could encourage the Fed to take a breather after a rapid series of interest-rate increases.

    Still, the U.S. has added a whopping 1 million–plus new jobs in the first three months of the year. The labor market is not cooling off as much as the Fed would like.

    The Black unemployment rate fell to 5% last month, the lowest level since records began being kept in the early 1970s.

    Stock-index futures rallied after the report, though the stock market itself is officially closed due to the Good Friday holiday.

    See: Why Good Friday complicates how stock-market traders will digest March jobs report

    Key details: About one-third of the new jobs created last month — 72,000 — were at service-sector companies such as bars and restaurants whose employment still has not returned to prepandemic levels.

    Americans are going out to eat a lot and spending relatively more on services than on goods.

    Government employment increased by 47,000. Hiring also rose at professional businesses and in healthcare. Retailers cut 15,000 jobs.

    Employment fell slightly in manufacturing and construction, or goods-producing industries, which are under more pressure from rising interest rates.

    The strong labor market has benefited all groups, but especially Black Americans. The Black unemployment rate fell to 5% last month, the lowest level since records began being kept in the early 1970s.

    Big picture: The ongoing tightness in the labor market could inflame inflation and even push the Fed to raise interest rates more than currently forecast to try to get prices under control.

    Higher borrowing costs reduce inflation by slowing the economy, but most Fed rate-hike cycles since World War II have been followed by recession.

    On the flip side, the U.S. economy is starting to show more signs of deterioration due to the series of rapid Fed interest-rate increases since last year.

    Manufacturers have cut production and are arguably already in recession and the much larger service side of the economy is under more stress lately.

    If these trends continue the economy — and inflation — are bound to slow.

    The U.S. is still growing for now, however, and the labor market remains an oasis of strength.

    Low unemployment and rising wages have allowed Americans to keep spending. And so far they’ve keep the economy out of a widely predicted recession.

    Looking ahead: “The U.S. labor market is losing some momentum, but remains far too vibrant for the Fed to pause [its rate-hike campaign] in May,” said senior economist Sal Guatieri at BMO Capital Markets

    “Although job growth is gradually slowing, it remains too strong for the Federal Reserve,” said Sal Guatieri of PNC Financial Services.

    See: Traders see little chance interest rates will end up where Fed thinks in 2023

    Market reaction:  Futures contracts on the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    YM00,
    +0.19%

    rose 64 points, or 0.2%, to 33,723. S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.24%

    gained 9.75 points, or 0.2%, to 4,141.75. Stock trading resumes again on Monday.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.404%

    jumped to 3.36%.

    MarketWatch personal finance: U.S. economy added 236,000 jobs in March. Is this your last chance to jump ship?

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  • Jobs report shows 236,000 gain in March — lifting 2023 total above 1 million — but U.S. labor market shows hints of cooling

    Jobs report shows 236,000 gain in March — lifting 2023 total above 1 million — but U.S. labor market shows hints of cooling

    [ad_1]

    The numbers: The U.S. added a robust 236,000 new jobs in March, defying the Federal Reserve’s hopes for a big slowdown in hiring as the central bank struggles to tame inflation. The consensus economist forecast called for a nonfarm-payrolls expansion of 238,000.

    The solid increase in employment last month followed a revised 326,000 gain in February and a gain of 472,000 in January.

    While the increase in hiring was the smallest monthly rise in more than two years, the number of jobs created last month was much greater than is typical.

    The U.S. economy has shown recent signs of stress.

    The unemployment rate, meanwhile, slipped to 3.5% from 3.6% as more people searched for and found work. That’s another sign of labor-market vigor.

    There was some good news in the report for the Fed, though.

    Wage growth continued to moderate closer to level the Fed would prefer. Hourly wages increased a mild 0.3% last month, the government said Friday.

    The increase in pay over the past year also slowed again to a nearly two-year low of 4.2% from 4.6% in February.

    What’s more, the share of people working or looking for work rose a tick to 62.6%. That’s the highest labor-force participation rate since February 2020, the last month before the pandemic’s onset.

    When more people look for work, companies don’t have to compete as hard for workers via higher pay.

    Emerging evidence of slack in a muscular U.S. labor market could encourage the Fed to take a breather after a rapid series of interest-rate increases.

    Still, the U.S. has added a whopping 1 million–plus new jobs in the first three months of the year. The labor market is not cooling off as much as the Fed would like.

    The Black unemployment rate fell to 5% last month, the lowest level since records began being kept in the early 1970s.

    Stock-index futures rallied after the report, though the stock market itself is officially closed due to the Good Friday holiday.

    See: Why Good Friday complicates how stock-market traders will digest March jobs report

    Key details: About one-third of the new jobs created last month — 72,000 — were at service-sector companies such as bars and restaurants whose employment still has not returned to prepandemic levels.

    Americans are going out to eat a lot and spending relatively more on services than on goods.

    Government employment increased by 47,000. Hiring also rose at professional businesses and in healthcare. Retailers cut 15,000 jobs.

    Employment fell slightly in manufacturing and construction, or goods-producing industries, which are under more pressure from rising interest rates.

    The strong labor market has benefited all groups, but especially Black Americans. The Black unemployment rate fell to 5% last month, the lowest level since records began being kept in the early 1970s.

    Big picture: The ongoing tightness in the labor market could inflame inflation and even push the Fed to raise interest rates more than currently forecast to try to get prices under control.

    Higher borrowing costs reduce inflation by slowing the economy, but most Fed rate-hike cycles since World War II have been followed by recession.

    On the flip side, the U.S. economy is starting to show more signs of deterioration due to the series of rapid Fed interest-rate increases since last year.

    Manufacturers have cut production and are arguably already in recession and the much larger service side of the economy is under more stress lately.

    If these trends continue the economy — and inflation — are bound to slow.

    The U.S. is still growing for now, however, and the labor market remains an oasis of strength.

    Low unemployment and rising wages have allowed Americans to keep spending. And so far they’ve keep the economy out of a widely predicted recession.

    Looking ahead: “The U.S. labor market is losing some momentum, but remains far too vibrant for the Fed to pause [its rate-hike campaign] in May,” said senior economist Sal Guatieri at BMO Capital Markets

    “Although job growth is gradually slowing, it remains too strong for the Federal Reserve,” said Sal Guatieri of PNC Financial Services.

    See: Traders see little chance interest rates will end up where Fed thinks in 2023

    Market reaction:  Futures contracts on the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    YM00,
    +0.19%

    rose 64 points, or 0.2%, to 33,723. S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.24%

    gained 9.75 points, or 0.2%, to 4,141.75. Stock trading resumes again on Monday.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.404%

    jumped to 3.36%.

    MarketWatch personal finance: U.S. economy added 236,000 jobs in March. Is this your last chance to jump ship?

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  • Jobs report shows 236,000 gain in March — lifting 2023 total above 1 million — but U.S. labor market shows hints of cooling

    Jobs report shows 236,000 gain in March — lifting 2023 total above 1 million — but U.S. labor market shows hints of cooling

    [ad_1]

    The numbers: The U.S. added a robust 236,000 new jobs in March, defying the Federal Reserve’s hopes for a big slowdown in hiring as the central bank struggles to tame inflation. The consensus economist forecast called for a nonfarm-payrolls expansion of 238,000.

    The solid increase in employment last month followed a revised 326,000 gain in February and a gain of 472,000 in January.

    While the increase in hiring was the smallest monthly rise in more than two years, the number of jobs created last month was much greater than is typical.

    The U.S. economy has shown recent signs of stress.

    The unemployment rate, meanwhile, slipped to 3.5% from 3.6% as more people searched for and found work. That’s another sign of labor-market vigor.

    There was some good news in the report for the Fed, though.

    Wage growth continued to moderate closer to level the Fed would prefer. Hourly wages increased a mild 0.3% last month, the government said Friday.

    The increase in pay over the past year also slowed again to a nearly two-year low of 4.2% from 4.6% in February.

    What’s more, the share of people working or looking for work rose a tick to 62.6%. That’s the highest labor-force participation rate since February 2020, the last month before the pandemic’s onset.

    When more people look for work, companies don’t have to compete as hard for workers via higher pay.

    Emerging evidence of slack in a muscular U.S. labor market could encourage the Fed to take a breather after a rapid series of interest-rate increases.

    Still, the U.S. has added a whopping 1 million–plus new jobs in the first three months of the year. The labor market is not cooling off as much as the Fed would like.

    The Black unemployment rate fell to 5% last month, the lowest level since records began being kept in the early 1970s.

    Stock-index futures rallied after the report, though the stock market itself is officially closed due to the Good Friday holiday.

    See: Why Good Friday complicates how stock-market traders will digest March jobs report

    Key details: About one-third of the new jobs created last month — 72,000 — were at service-sector companies such as bars and restaurants whose employment still has not returned to prepandemic levels.

    Americans are going out to eat a lot and spending relatively more on services than on goods.

    Government employment increased by 47,000. Hiring also rose at professional businesses and in healthcare. Retailers cut 15,000 jobs.

    Employment fell slightly in manufacturing and construction, or goods-producing industries, which are under more pressure from rising interest rates.

    The strong labor market has benefited all groups, but especially Black Americans. The Black unemployment rate fell to 5% last month, the lowest level since records began being kept in the early 1970s.

    Big picture: The ongoing tightness in the labor market could inflame inflation and even push the Fed to raise interest rates more than currently forecast to try to get prices under control.

    Higher borrowing costs reduce inflation by slowing the economy, but most Fed rate-hike cycles since World War II have been followed by recession.

    On the flip side, the U.S. economy is starting to show more signs of deterioration due to the series of rapid Fed interest-rate increases since last year.

    Manufacturers have cut production and are arguably already in recession and the much larger service side of the economy is under more stress lately.

    If these trends continue the economy — and inflation — are bound to slow.

    The U.S. is still growing for now, however, and the labor market remains an oasis of strength.

    Low unemployment and rising wages have allowed Americans to keep spending. And so far they’ve keep the economy out of a widely predicted recession.

    Looking ahead: “The U.S. labor market is losing some momentum, but remains far too vibrant for the Fed to pause [its rate-hike campaign] in May,” said senior economist Sal Guatieri at BMO Capital Markets

    “Although job growth is gradually slowing, it remains too strong for the Federal Reserve,” said Sal Guatieri of PNC Financial Services.

    See: Traders see little chance interest rates will end up where Fed thinks in 2023

    Market reaction:  Futures contracts on the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    YM00,
    +0.19%

    rose 64 points, or 0.2%, to 33,723. S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.24%

    gained 9.75 points, or 0.2%, to 4,141.75. Stock trading resumes again on Monday.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.404%

    jumped to 3.36%.

    MarketWatch personal finance: U.S. economy added 236,000 jobs in March. Is this your last chance to jump ship?

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    Source link

  • Dow, S&P 500 clinch 4-day win streak, energy stocks jump on oil production cuts

    Dow, S&P 500 clinch 4-day win streak, energy stocks jump on oil production cuts

    [ad_1]

    The Dow and S&P 500 both closed higher on Monday to kick off April with a 4th straight session of gains, after a group of major global oil nations on Sunday announced surprise production cuts. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.98%

    climbed about 326 points, or 1% on Monday, to end near 33,600, according to preliminary FactSet data. The S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    +0.37%

    gained 0.4%, while its energy component outperformed with a 4.9% climb. The Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    -0.27%

    shed 0.3%. Investors piled into energy stocks after the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies said Sunday they would in May cut production by more than 1 million barrels a day in an effort to support oil-market stability, including with Saudi Arabia slashing its output by 500,000 barrels a day. May WTI oil future contract
    CLK23,
    +6.44%

    climbed more than 6% to trade above $80 a barrel, the biggest daily gain in more than a year. The Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund
    XLE,
    +4.53%

    rose 4.6%. The 2-year Treasury yield
    TMUBMUSD02Y,
    3.969%

    slumped below 4%, while the 10-year Treasury
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.417%

    rate fell to 3.43%, as traders anticipated that higher oil prices could potentially act as a wretch in the Federal Reserve’s plans to bring inflation down to its 2% annual target.

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  • Fed’s Bullard: Oil price jump may make inflation-fighting more difficult 

    Fed’s Bullard: Oil price jump may make inflation-fighting more difficult 

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    The spike in oil prices after the surprise OPEC+ production cut may make the Federal Reserve’s inflation-fighting job “a little more difficult,” but it is too soon to know for sure, said St Louis Fed President James Bullard, on Monday. “This was a surprise – this OPEC decision – but whether it will have a lasting impact, I think, is an open question,” Bullard said, in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “Oil prices fluctuate around – it is hard to track exactly. Some of that might feed into inflation and make our job a little more difficult,” he added. Bullard said he had already expected higher oil prices due to the recent upgrades to the economic outlook for both China and Europe. The St. Louis Fed president thinks the Fed should raise rates to a range of 5.5%-5.75%. That’s higher than the median Fed forecast of 5%-5.25%. “I think inflation will be stickier,” he said, noting that the Dallas trimmed mean price index, which excludes each month’s volatile components of inflation, was 4.6% in February, unchanged from the prior month.

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  • U.S. stocks close lower Tuesday as Treasury yields climb

    U.S. stocks close lower Tuesday as Treasury yields climb

    [ad_1]

    U.S. stocks ended modestly lower on Tuesday, as Treasury yields rose, keeping pressure on the rate-sensitive Nasdaq Composite Index. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA shed about 37 points, or 0.1%, ending near 32,394, while the S&P 500 index SPX fell 0.2% and the Nasdaq COMP closed 0.5% lower, according to preliminary data from FactSet. Stocks fell, but ended off the session lows, as the 2-year Treasury rate BX:TMUBMUSD02Y climbed 10.5 basis points to 4.06%. Bond yields and prices move in the opposite direction. Tuesday also saw a raft of relatively upbeat economic data and increased expectations by traders in fed-funds…

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  • Dow, S&P 500 post modest gains Thursday as investor focus returns to banking risks

    Dow, S&P 500 post modest gains Thursday as investor focus returns to banking risks

    [ad_1]

    U.S. stocks ended modestly higher Thursday in choppy trade as worries about potential weakness in the banking system resurfaced a day after the Federal Reserve increased hikes by 25 basis points. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.23%

    rose about 73 points, or 0.2%, ending near 32,103, down about 400 points from the session’s high. The S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    +0.30%

    gained 0.3% and the Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    +1.01%

    closed up 1%, according to preliminary figures from FactSet. Stocks closed off the session’s highs, but gained ground after Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told a Senate committee that the federal government would take extra steps to stabilize the U.S. banking system, if necessary. Stocks closed sharply lower Wednesday after the Fed raised its policy rate to a range of 4.75% to 5%, up a year ago from close to zero. But some analysts said a catalyst of the selloff was comments from Yellen indicating she wasn’t yet considering ways to guarantee all bank deposits, despite regulators providing an exception to depositors in Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, which failed earlier this month. Sheila Bair, who ran the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. from 2006 to 2011, told MarketWatch on Thursday that the focus should be on underwater securities at all banks, not only regional lenders.

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  • Dow skids 530 points, stocks close sharply lower after Fed raises rates, says cuts unlikely this year

    Dow skids 530 points, stocks close sharply lower after Fed raises rates, says cuts unlikely this year

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    U.S. stocks closed sharply lower on Wednesday, giving up earlier gains, after the Federal Reserve raises interest rates by 25 basis points as expected, but talked down the possibility of cuts to rates this year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -1.63%

    tumbled 531 points, or 1.6%, ending near 32,028, while the S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    -1.65%

    shed 1.7% and the Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    -1.60%

    closed down 1.6%, according to preliminary FactSet figures. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said the U.S. banking system remained resilient after it and regulators rolled out liquidity measures to help shore up confidence in the banking system after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank earlier in March. Powell also said that tighter credit conditions for consumers, following the bank failures, would likely work like rate hikes in terms of lowering inflation. It will be a key area of focus for the Fed in the coming weeks and months, he said. The 10-year Treasury rate
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.444%

    fell Wednesday to 3.46%, a sign that investors in the bond market think growth will be slower.

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    Source link

  • S&P 500 pushes above 4,010 level, stocks turn higher after Fed raises rates by 25 basis points

    S&P 500 pushes above 4,010 level, stocks turn higher after Fed raises rates by 25 basis points

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    U.S. stocks turned higher, shaking off earlier weakness, after the Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised its policy rate as expected by 25 basis points to help fight inflation. The increase in interest rates comes despite recent weakness in the banking system after the collapse earlier in March of Silicon Valley Bank. The S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    -0.55%

    was up 14 points, or 0.4%, to about 4,016, at last check, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.68%

    was up 0.2% near 32,609 and the Nasdaq Composite Index was 0.7% higher. The Fed also said the U.S. banking system remains resilient, in its policy statement. The 10-year Treasury rate
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.507%

    was lower at 3.52%.

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    Source link

  • ‘Recession is what everyone is betting on’: 2023’s first trading day begins

    ‘Recession is what everyone is betting on’: 2023’s first trading day begins

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    In the first trading day of the new year, U.S. financial markets were bogged down by the almost universal view that a recession is approaching.

    A stocks rally fizzled out within the first 30 minutes of opening gains. Gold, a traditional safe haven, touched its highest level in six months, rising alongside silver and platinum. And 10- to 30-year Treasury yields, nestled in what’s known as the long end of the bond market, fell as investors jumped into government bonds — driving those yields down respectively to around 3.8% and 3.9%.

    At the heart of the market moves was the strong sense that an economic downturn is all but inevitable at this point, following months of central bank interest rate hikes around the world — with the International Monetary Fund‘s chief Kristalina Georgieva warning that the economies of the U.S., European Union and China are all slowing simultaneously. Scion Asset Management founder Michael Burry said he expects another “inflation spike” after recession rocks the U.S., and former New York Fed President William Dudley said a U.S. economic downturn “is pretty likely.”

    Read: Stock-market investors face 3 recession scenarios in 2023

    “Recession is what everyone is betting on,” said Ben Emons, senior portfolio manager and head of fixed income/macro strategy at NewEdge Wealth in New York. “And, the thinking is, therefore inflation will decelerate faster than what people anticipate and the Federal Reserve could move quicker to a rate cut. But the whole narrative of a recession is something that’s bothering the stock market and other asset classes because it will mean shrinking margins and earnings.”

    Indeed, a much-hoped for rally in stocks around this time of the year, known as the “Santa Claus rally,” is failing to materialize, with just one more trading session left on Wednesday before the end of that seasonal period. The in-house research arm of BlackRock Inc., the world’s largest asset manager, described recession as “foretold” on Tuesday and said it is “tactically underweight” developed-market stocks, which are still “not pricing the recession we see ahead.” That’s the case even though global stocks ended 2022 down by 18% and bonds fell 16%, said Jean Boivin, head of the BlackRock Investment Institute, and others.


    Sources: BlackRock Investment Institute, Refinitiv, Bloomberg.

    “We see stock rallies built on hopes for rapid rate cuts fizzling. Why? Central banks are unlikely to come to the rescue in recessions they themselves caused to bring inflation down to policy targets. Earnings expectations are also still not fully reflecting recession, in our view. But markets are now pricing in more of the damage we see – and as this continues, it would pave the way for us to turn more positive on risk assets,” Boivin and others at BlackRock Investment Institute wrote in a note Tuesday.

    “Even with a recession coming, we think we are going to be living with inflation,” they said.

    Interestingly, the financial market’s focus on a 2023 recession is being accompanied by the view that such a downturn will help cure inflation, allowing central banks to end, slow, or even reverse their monetary policy-tightening campaigns. That view was buttressed by Tuesday’s release of inflation data out of Germany, which showed that the annual rate from the consumer price index fell by more than expected in December to a four-month low. Back in the U.S., fed funds futures traders priced in a greater likelihood of a smaller-than-usual, 25-basis point rate hike by the Federal Reserve in February.

    As of Tuesday afternoon, all three major U.S. stock indexes DJIA SPX were down, led by a 1.3% drop in the Nasdaq Composite.

    Meanwhile, a rally in Treasurys moderated relative to earlier in the day. The 10-year Treasury yield
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.785%
    ,
    a benchmark for borrowing costs, dropped back to levels last seen around Dec. 23-26, a period when conditions were “totally illiquid and no one was trading,” said Emons of NewEdge Wealth.

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