Weekly Market Report: August 30th, 2024

Last week put the dog days of summer in the rearview with markets focused on some key economic and corporate earnings reports. A tidy rally toward the end of the day Friday pushed the S&P 500 into positive territory for the week, wrapping up a nice 2.3% return for the month of August which certainly did not start on a positive note with economic anxiety and Yen carry trade unwind dominating the first week. The yield curve continued to steepen with short rates flat to down and longer-term yields up, leaving the 2yr (3.91%) and the 10yr (3.91%) with nearly identical yields after two years of inversion. The USD jumped nearly 1% last week, bringing it back into positive territory for the year (+0.36%) while commodities were pretty mixed across the board leaving oil at $73.55 to close out the month.

Market Anecdotes

  • The hiking cycle of 2.5 years and 500 bps is set to end September 17-18 with limited data points between now and then, where markets firmly expect a Fed rate cutting cycle to begin, begging the question, which equity asset classes have historically benefitted the most?
  • Second quarter S&P 500 earnings were up nearly 12% YoY with 74% of firms topping estimates, including Nvidia, last week, handily beating forecasted earnings ($0.68 vs $0.65) and revenue ($30b vs $28.9b).
  • Alpine Macro published an interesting piece on AI concluding that a valuation premium exists due to market expectations of higher revenue, a boost to EBITDA, enhanced productivity, and higher GDP growth but it is not currently meeting the definition of bubble or mania. 
  • Expectations for a soft landing path for the U.S. economy to transpire has increased notably since April as data indications have maintained a positive tone and model projections, including the Atlanta Fed GDPNow model have remained consistently above 2%.
  • Along with the positive 2Q GDP revision last week, we received data on corporate profits which grew 1.7% pre-tax with after-tax aggregate profit margins edging higher from 15.2% to 15.4%.
  • Housing market data last week reinforced the tepid outlook for the time being with inventory, rates, and prices posing tangible headwinds to prospects of any near-term recovery. 
  • A Penn Wharton Budget model estimates that, despite spiraling national debt and massive budget deficits, both team R and team D are forecasted to deliver the status quo. 
  • According to Bloomberg’s data set, as recently as 2017 passive mutual funds and ETFs accounted for 35% of assets. That grew to 50.1% in December 2023 and has continued its march higher with the July 2024 tally at 51.3%.

Economic Release Highlights

  • August YoY PCE inflation was in line with expectations for both headline (2.5%) and core (2.6%) alongside MoM readings of 0.2% for both headline and core PCE. Personal income grew slightly more than forecast (0.3% vs 0.2%) and PCE was in line with spot consensus at 0.5%.
  • 2Q U.S. GDP was revised higher in the second estimate from 2.8% to 3.0% thanks in large part to stronger personal consumption which was revised up from 2.3% to 2.9%.
  • Consumer Confidence in August improved to 103.3 from July’s 101.9 reading, ahead of both the spot consensus 100.1 and forecast range of 99.5 to 103.0.,
  • Case-Shiller Home Price Index for June rose 0.4%, more than the consensus forecast of 0.2%.
  • Pending Home Sales in July fell 5.5%, well more than the forecasted 1.1% increase projected.
  • Durable Goods Orders report for July jumped 9.9%, well in excess of the 4.5% spot consensus and above the high end of the forecast range of -0.3% to 9.0%.
This communication is provided for informational purposes only and is not an offer, recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any security or other investment. This communication does not constitute, nor should it be regarded as, investment research or a research report, a securities or investment recommendation, nor does it provide information reasonably sufficient upon which to base an investment decision. Additional analysis of your or your client’s specific parameters would be required to make an investment decision. This communication is not based on the investment objectives, strategies, goals, financial circumstances, needs or risk tolerance of any client or portfolio and is not presented as suitable to any other particular client or portfolio.
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