March 22, 2024 | Daily JAM, Mid Term, Videos |
Today’s video is What Powell Said, and What the Market Heard. Jerome Powell, Chair of the Federal Reserve, tried to walk a fine line during Wednesday’s press conference. He said that while inflation is sticky; he’s still confident in a soft landing at 2.0% and that they will cut rates once they confirm that a 2.0% rate is achievable. What the market heard was “we can tolerate higher inflation for longer while still cutting rates, ” and this is backed up by the Fed’s Dot Plot economic projections . The Dot Plot lays out 2-3 cuts in 2024 even though core PCE inflation rates are expected to be at 2.6% at the end of the year–not the target of 2.0%. That 2.0% target will now not likely be reached until the end of 2026, the Fed’s own economic projections say. The market reacted to the news that they heard as “the Fed is no longer insisting on the 2.0% target and will be cutting rates this year,” by hitting its 20th all-time high for 2024. The market heard happy days are here again, and rallied.
March 18, 2024 | Daily JAM, Short Term, Videos |
Today’s video is Interest Rate Cut Transition Going Well. Well, so far. Until Wednesday, anyway. Last week we had another batch of bad inflation news: the inflation rate has stopped its decline, and even crept upward a bit. However, the market hasn’t panicked. Wall Street has moved the goalpost for a rate cut from the upcoming March 20 meeting to the June or July meeting. Last week’s bad news dropped the odds for a rate cut by the June 12 meeting on the CME Fedwatch Tool to 63.1%, down slightly from the previous day. The odds of no move on the June 12 meeting are on their way to 40%. Investors have set their sights on July. This will likely continue to push the market sideways until April when we get a bit of earnings excitement, again, around AI. Consolidation after the rally early in the year isn’t a bad thing for the market, and as long as no one panics, I think we’ll see a relatively smooth transition to the eventual interest rate cuts.
March 16, 2024 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
There’s room for disappointment in Wednesday’s Dot Plot projections from the Federal Reserve. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg were still expecting the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates three or more times in 2024 with the first cut coming in June. (To be more precise, the survey found that a majority expect three or more cuts in 2024 while more than a a third expect two or fewer cuts in 2024.) The survey was conducted from March 8 through March 13. Why do I highlight the dates?
March 10, 2024 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
A month after the stock market was rocked by a worse-than-expected inflation report, investors are fearing a reprise when the latest data arrives on Tuesday. Last Thursday stocks rallied when Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in his testimony before the Senate that the central bank is “not far” from being ready to cut interest rates. But this week Fed officials are in their regular blackout period ahead of their meeting on March 19 and 20. Absent Fed commentary on the inflation report, stocks may be volatile again.
February 24, 2024 | Daily JAM, Short Term |
I think.the market to continue to come to terms with the likelihood that the Federal Reserve will begin to cut interest rates later than expected in 2024 and will make fewer cuts than expected.
February 16, 2024 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing, Short Term |
The Labor Department reported Friday that its producer price index—which tracks inflation before it reaches consumers—rose 0.3% from December to January. The index had dropped -0.1% in December. Measured year over year, producer prices rose by 0.9% in January. But the month to month increase in producer prices and at a higher month to month rate is the latest sign that getting inflation the “last mile” down to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target rate is going to be harder and take longer than expected.
February 12, 2024 | Daily JAM, Mid Term |
When I wrote my post “Was the Meta Platform 20% pop the market top? An important sign, yes,, but not for the reasons you think” I wasn’t thinking of a three-part series. But then came Part 2 “Why his isn’t 2000–I don’t see a replay of the Dot-Com Bear Market.”
And now Part 3: “OK, It’s not 2000, but that doesn’t mean there’s no risk in the market.” Part 3 in this series is going to segue right into the new Special Report that I’ll post on Wednesday with seven concrete steps I think you should implement now to protect your portfolio. But for today, I’m going to focus on a framework for thinking thinking about reward and risk in the current market. Think of the topic as “Why your portfolio needs protection now–even if we aren’t looking at a Bear Market.”
January 16, 2024 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
Mae West said, “Too much of a good thing is never enough.” For the financial markets that’s just not true, however. The markets are prone to swing to excess and then to painfully retrace the extreme end of the swing. You can see it happening now with interest rates and the bond market.
January 5, 2024 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
The U.S. economy added 216,000 jobs in December, up from 173,000 the previous month. That was a bg surprise to Wall Street. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had expected had added 175,000 jobs . The unemployment rate held steady at 3.7% for the month from November, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Economists had expected the unemployment rate to tick higher to 3.8%. The the BLS revised previous reports of job gain donward for December and November. Looking solely at these headline numbers, you’d conclude that the labor market is running hotter than expected/hoped by investors and that this report lowered the odds that the Federal Reserve would begin cutting interest rates as early at its March 20 meeting. And that fears that the Fed would delay interest rate cuts would hurt stocks. That isn’t exactly what happened today
December 12, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
If you follow the headline numbers (what’s known as All Urban Consumers) for the Consumer Price Index (CPI), you’d say, “See inflation continues to fall; the Federal Reserve will cut rates quickly in 2024.” But you’d be following the wrong CPI number.
December 1, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
It wasn’t the most forceful pushback it’s true, but the financial markets paid attention to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s attempt to say interest rate cuts aren’t just around the corner for about two minutes. And then the rally based on a belief in 4 or 5 cuts in 2024, and as early as March (and certainly by May), was off and running again.
November 12, 2023 | Daily JAM, Short Term |
I expect Tuesday’s Consumer Price Index report for October to be critical in determining whether the Christmas rally narrative can be sustained.