Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…

Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…

There’s no magic spell from the Federal Reserve that compels markets to believe Friday’s higher interest rates for longer speech from Fed chair Jerome Powell. I’d look for substantial pushback from investors and traders–and big money managers–who even on Friday were arguing that nothing had changed and that the Fed would still move to cut interest rates in the second half of 2022. I’m not sure that even a 75-basis-point increase in the benchmark interest rate at the Fed’s September 21 meeting would be enough to convince this group. While I think logic argues against it, I wouldn’t be surprised to see a bounce back from Fridays selling this week. I wouldn’t buy into such as move as a longer-term trend.

Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…

Powell says Fed committed to raising interest rates, and keeping them high, until inflation is under control

Well, that was short and direct. Especially for the Federal Reserve. In a speech of less than 10 minutes Fed chair Jerome Powell warned financial markets to expect that the central bank will keep raising interest rates and will then leave them at higher levels for some time in order to control inflation. Stocks dropped on Powell’s remarks with the S&P 500 down 2.80% at 3 p.m. New York time.

Stocks are overlooking risk from Fed’s balance sheet runoff

Reading the interest-rate tea leaves before Jackson Hold and September 21 Fed meeting

Yesterday’s minutes from interest rate meetings at two of the Federal Reserve’s 12 regional banks show these banks favored a 100 basis-point increase in the Fed’s discount rate in July 14 votes at the two banks. (The discount rate is the rate that the Fed charges banks to borrow at the Fed’s discount window.) The votes came from the boards of the St. Louis and Minneapolis banks. At the July 27 meeting the Fed’s Open Market Committee voted unanimously for a 75-basis-point increase in the Fed’s benchmark interest rate. The committee also raised the discount rate by the same 75 basis points to 2.5%. For those of us trying to figure out what Fed chair Jerome Powell will say at his Friday speech at the Fed’s Jackson Hole central bankers conference, this is something of an indicator that there’s considerable sentiment at the Fed to keep aggressively raising interest rates.

Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…

Bearish Treasury bets soar ahead of Fed’s Jackson Hole conference

Hedge funds are pouring millions into bets that Jerome Powells’ Federal Reserve will use its Jackson Hole central bankers’ confab this week to emphasize its strategy of higher interest rates until inflation is under control. Stocks haven’t liked the increase in yields today. As of 1 p.m. New York time, the Standard & Poor’s 500 was down 1.76% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was off 1.53%. The NASDAQ Composite had dropped by 2.14%.

Stocks are overlooking risk from Fed’s balance sheet runoff

Saturday Night Quarterback says on a Sunday), For the week ahead expect…

The Federal Reserve will do everything it can to talk the financial markets out of optimism about future interest rate increases.
The difference of opinion isn’t focused on the September 21 meeting. The market has pretty much decided that the central bank will raise interest rates by either 50 basis points or 75 basis points at that meeting. (The odds on the CME FedWatch tool as of Friday, August 19, were 59% for a 50-basis-point increase, and 41% for a 75 basis-point move. It’s a question of what comes after the September, November, and December Fed meetings. The market seems to have decided that the Federal Reserve will end this cycle of interest rate increases shortly after those meetings. The Fed, in recent remarks, has been trying to convince the market that the fight against inflation is likely to take longer than that. And that the market should expect further interest rate increases into 2023. This week’s central bankers conference in Jackson Hole provides a pulpit for the Fed to preach its message. And I’d expect Fed chair Jerome Powell to use his 10 a.m. Friday speech to say that the Fed isn’t thinking that its inflation fighting work is near done.

Will a jump in oil prices end this Bar Market Rally? And boost oil stocks?

Will a jump in oil prices end this Bar Market Rally? And boost oil stocks?

Ho, hum. Another day another big upside move in stocks. Because we all know that the inflation rate has peaked and is coming down. After all the headline CPI inflation number on Wednesday, August 10, told us so. In July all-items inflation ran at a year-to-year rate of just 8.5%, down from the 9.1% rate in June, and below the 8.7% rate economists were expecting.

Today, August 12, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index w up 1.73%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was higher by 1.27%, and the NASDAQ Composite ended the day up 2.-5%. The NASDAQ `100 closed higher by 2.06%. The Russell 2000 small-cap index gained 2.09%.

Given, however, that the bulk of the lower-than-expected inflation rate in July resulted from a huge drop in gasoline prices, it’s important to take a look at where oil prices (and the price of gasoline at the pump) might be headed. In the short run there’s nothing so likely to derail this rally than a return to $4.00 a gallon PLUS gas prices.

CPI headline inflation falls more than expected; core inflation remains steady

CPI headline inflation falls more than expected; core inflation remains steady

The annual rate of inflation as measured by the headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) dipped in July to 8.5%. That was down from June’s annual rate of 9.1%. Economists had expected the inflation rate to drop to 8.7% However, the news wasn’t as positive on the core inflation front. This measure, which strips out more volatile energy and food prices rose at a 5.9% annual rate in July. That’s unchanged from the June rate. The divergence in the headline and core inflation numbers is all about gasoline.

Watch my new YouTube video: The Fed Talks but the Market’s Not Listening

Watch my new YouTube video: The Fed Talks but the Market’s Not Listening

My one-hundred-and-sixty-fifth YouTube video “Trend of the Week The Fed Talks but the Market’s Not Listening” went up today. The market has strongly rallied in the last month, in good part on the optimistic belief in a “soft landing” from the Fed that controls inflation without a recession and puts an end to rate increases. The fact is, everything the Fed has said thus far indicates they plan to raise rates by an additional 1.5% in 2022 to fight inflation and that they are sticking to their 2% inflation goal in mind. When will the market start paying attention?

Trick or trend: Anticipation of bigger interest rate increase from the Fed leads to a stronger dollar–add to dollar ETF UUP

Trick or trend: Anticipation of bigger interest rate increase from the Fed leads to a stronger dollar–add to dollar ETF UUP

In the last week, as odds have climbed of a 75-basis-point interest rate increase from the Federal Reserve at its September 22 meeting, the U.S. dollar has reversed its slide during the last two weeks of July.
Stands to reason. Higher U.S. interest rates make dollar-denominated assets, such as Treasuries, more attractive. More dollar buying, stronger dollar.