Tucker Financial Weekly Market Review: December 1st, 2023

Weekly Market Report: December 1st, 2023

Last week markets digested a very busy economic calendar and Fed speak from a dozen speaking engagements sprinkled throughout the week. Continued peak Fed and soft-landing narratives helped equity markets post a fifth consecutive week of gains. We saw some rotation out of year to date winners (magnificent 7) and broader participation across markets. Treasuries continued to rally with bond yields falling across the curve, leaving the 10yr UST (4.22%) at its lowest level since the end of August. The USD (-0.13%) continued its November trend, weakening to late August levels, while the energy patch dragged down overall commodity markets which closed down 1% on the week.

Market Anecdotes

  • Stocks and bonds wrapped up a terrific November last week with the Bloomberg Aggregate Index (+4.53%) posting its best month since 1985, bolstering what was a horrible year for bonds to a positive 1.66% return.
  • Now that we are in the last month of 2023, a brief look at the positive seasonal equity market tailwinds serves up some hopeful holiday cheer that this year rhymes with history.
  • Despite improving equity market breadth last week, a Goldman Sachs look at 2023 illustrates just how prolific the magnificent seven have been.
  • Smaller companies, being more susceptible to higher interest rates, have seen both earnings and sales declines since the FOMC began raising rates.
  • Broadly speaking, the softening labor market, coinciding with fiscal contraction and the lagged effect of higher interest rates informs our latter half 2024 cautious outlook for risk assets.
  • Global central banks have officially become net rate cutters recently but the FOMC speaking circuit last week (@12) reiterated the November meeting narrative which was dovish on balance but delivered with a higher for longer expectation.
  • Fed open market activities, now fully in QT mode, show the Fed as a clear net seller of treasuries and a Treasury department leaning heavily into the front end of the curve.
  • Crude oil traded below $75 last week despite further output cuts from OPEC+ and another potential territorial dispute stemming from a Venezuela referendum regarding a disputed oil rich territory long ruled by Guyana.

Economic Release Highlights

  • October headline (core) PCE inflation registered 3.0% (3.5%) YOY alongside MOM readings of 0% (0.2%), both generally in line with consensus forecasts. Personal Consumption and Personal Income were both in line with forecasts at 0.2% growth for the month.
  • November ISM Manufacturing Index came in below the spot consensus forecast (46.7 vs 47.5) and toward the bottom end of the forecast range. The final PMI Manufacturing registered 49.4.
  • The November Global Manufacturing PMI improved from 48.8 to 49.3.
  • October New Home Sales of 679k came in short of the spot consensus (725k) but within the forecast range of 650k-750k. Pending Home Sales fell 1.5%, slightly less than the -2% forecast.
  • The September Case-Shiller Home Price Index grew 0.7% MOM and 3.9% YOY, generally in line with the consensus forecast.
  • Consumer Confidence Index for November registered 102.0, an improvement versus the prior month and
    slightly above the spot consensus forecast of 101.5.
  • The second estimate of 3Q GDP reflected an upward revision from 4.9% to 5.2% but Personal Consumption was revised lower from 4.0% to 3.6%.
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.

Tucker Financial Weekly Market Review: November 24th, 2023

Weekly Market Report: November 24th, 2023

Markets last week, effectively a three-day workweek, were characterized by low volumes, a handful of economic reports, and hopefully a good dose of family, friends, and feasts. Global equity markets saw the S&P 500 up 1% and NASDAQ up 0.9%, both delivering a fourth consecutive week of gains. Emerging markets turned in a gain of 0.6% and we also saw a nice rally in developed internationals of 2.4%. Bond yields were relatively quiet with a small and parallel move slightly higher, closing with 10yr yields at 4.47%. Both the USD (-0.50%) and commodity markets (-0.40%) notched slight declines on the week.

Market Anecdotes

  • 3Q earnings season is over, ending with a healthy earnings growth rate of 4.3% YOY totaling $487.1b in aggregate. The beat rate (LT average) 81.9% (66%), miss rate 13.7% (20%), and magnitude 7.3% (4.1%) all compared favorably relative to their respective long-term averages.
  • Decent earnings, disinflation trends, peak FOMC rate cycle, easing financial conditions, and increased soft landing expectations have all contributed to one of the best Novembers for the S&P 500 on record thus far, currently up 8.8% with a few days remaining.
  • For all the S&P headlines in 2023, non-U.S. markets including Japan (+15.8%), Germany (+17.2%), France (+16.4%), Emerging Europe (+27%), and Brazil (+23.7%) have impressed as well. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for commonwealth countries and China (-6.3%).
  • FOMC minutes released last week showed consensus on a cautious approach regarding additional rate hikes and an expectation that tight policy will continue to weigh on growth and inflation looking into 2024. Market rate cut expectations remain aggressive regardless.
  • Interest rates have fallen from just under 5% (10yr) prior to the November FOMC meeting to under 4.5%, assisted by peak Fed, continued disinflation, and slowing growth narratives, the latter bolstered last week by slowing PMIs and durable goods orders reports.
  • The resilient U.S. consumer has been a key growth driver over the past two years which begs a credit health check in addition to consumer ‘balance sheet’ narratives. A recent look at consumer loan delinquencies from Strategas does seem to square with a cautious view of 2024.
  • The soft-landing narrative has been bolstered by the sample based estimates (2mo lag) of monthly payroll growth which has shown downward revisions every month this year with the exception of July – a sign of overstated 2023 strength following understated strength in 2021.
  • The Biden-Xi summit went relatively well but, even more so than U.S. elections, Chinese geopolitical risk is centered around the January 13th Taiwan elections and whether a pro-mainland government will assume power.
  • A Qatar negotiated temporary ceasefire in Gaza brought temporary reprieve to the war between Hamas and Israel with hostage and prisoner exchanges occurring over the weekend.

Economic Release Highlights

  • U.S. PMI for November registered a composite reading of 50.7 with Manufacturing (49.4 vs 49.9) and Services (50.8 vs 50.5) both generally in line with their respective consensus forecasts.
  • Eurozone PMI for November registered a composite reading of 47.1 with Manufacturing (43.8 vs 43.3) and Services (48.2 vs 48.0) both generally in line with their respective consensus forecasts.
  • UK PMI for November registered a composite reading of 50.1 with Manufacturing (46.7 vs 45.0) and Services (50.5 vs 49.6) slightly better than the consensus forecasts.
  • Existing Home Sales declined 4.1% MOM in October to 3.79M, down 14.6% YOY.
  • Durable Goods Orders contracted 5.4% in October, below the low end of the (-4.4% – 2.8%) range and consensus spot forecast of 3.2%.
  • U of M Consumer Sentiment Index for November was revised higher from 60.4 to 61.3 in the final release.
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.

Tucker Financial Weekly Market Review: November 17th, 2023

Weekly Market Report: November 17th, 2023

Markets last week rallied for a third consecutive week on the back of easing overall financial conditions thanks in large part to disinflation, soft landing, and peak Fed narratives. There was a fair amount of economic data, including October CPI, which leaned into the prevailing bad news is good news sentiment of late. Equity
markets were up sharply with U.S. (+2.24%), developed (+3.98%), and emerging (2.63%) all participating. Small cap U.S. stock jumped nearly 5.5% on the week. Bond markets saw the rally in Treasuries continue and the curve flatten, leaving the 10yr UST yield at 4.44%, down from 4.98% one month ago. The counter cyclical USD fell 1.84% while commodity markets were relatively flat thanks to a late week rally in oil which washed out losses from early in the week.

Market Anecdotes

  •  A healthy easing of financial conditions since late October has contributed to stock markets rallying nearly 10% and bond yields falling nearly 0.50% – very healthy gains across the majority of financial market assets as we work through a (seasonally) favorable end to the year.
  • Numerous economies including the U.S. are reporting slowing growth and disinflation trends. The most recent Atlanta Fed GDPNow model forecast for 4Q U.S. GDP is 2%.
  • The soft CPI print washed out market expectations of any remaining FOMC rate hikes which are now pricing cuts of 25bps by June and 50bps by July. However, Bianco Research issued a reminder that the next two months present some difficult YoY base effect bogeys.
  • Nineteen Fed speaking engagements last week noted favorable disinflation trends but also made clear it is far too early to declare victory – avoiding any hint of an all-clear signal for markets.
  • A Preqin report on private credit highlighted the significant growth of the asset class to roughly $1.6t in AUM and nearly $500b of dry powder across various types of private credit strategies.
  • The House and Senate passed a CR, avoiding a government shutdown, covering operations through late January to early February.
  • An FT article last week highlighted net purchases by major central banks totaled nearly $20t from 2009 through 2022 with the exit from central bank QE programs a significant source of uncertainty looking out over the next several years.
  • A weaker USD, which touched a 2 ½ month low last week, has been fueled by disinflation momentum implying a pull forward of Fed rate cut expectations.
  • A report late last week that KSI may extend their voluntary cut and OPEC+ may cut an additional 1M bpd at this week’s meeting sparked a late week rally in crude oil prices.

Economic Release Highlights

  • Headline and core CPI in October rose 3.2% and 4.1% with MOM readings 0% and 0.2% respectively, all registering 0.1% under their consensus forecasts.
  • October Retail Sales declined 0.1%, slightly better than the expected -0.3% decline. Ex-Vehicles (0.1% vs – 0.1%) and Ex-Vehicles & Gas (0.1% vs 0.2%) were also generally in line with consensus.
  • Weekly unemployment claims took the 4-week moving average to 220,250, a fifth consecutive weekly increase. Continuing Claims of 1.865mm are now at their highest in two years.
  • October Industrial Production declined 0.63%, the largest monthly decline since December 2022 and below the long-term average reading of 0.26%.
  • The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index in October registered 90.7, slightly above consensus 90.5 and within the forecast range.
  • Housing Starts (1.372mm) and Permits (1.487mm) rose slightly in October versus the prior month reading.
  • NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index fell a fourth consecutive month to 34.0.
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.

Tucker Financial Weekly Market Review: November 10th, 2023

Weekly Market Report: November 10th, 2023

In a rather uneventful week last week, equity markets added incrementally to the extraordinarily strong performance the week prior. The S&P 500 tacked on 1.3% thanks to strong performance from mega cap technology names which took year to date gains back to 15%. Other equity asset classes didn’t fare as well last week with small caps (-3.15%), developed international (-0.80%) and emerging markets (-0.29%) all in the red. The big bond market rally took a breather last week with some weakness in the belly of the curve (2y-5y). Commodity markets went the way of WTI oil last week, both down 3%-4% while the USD enjoyed a slight rebound, closing up 0.80% on the week.

Market Anecdotes

  • Economic risks have decreased marginally thanks to the recent sharp decline in developed market bond yields which feeds both trade and risk appetite globally.
  • Third quarter earnings season is drawing to a close, currently on pace for 4.1% earnings growth, with results coming in handily above expectations. Fourth quarter consensus is calling for 3.2% but 2024 estimates are currently at 6.7% for Q1 and 10.5% for Q2.
  • Nineteen FOMC speaking engagements last week were punctuated by some hawkish comments from Jerome Powell who made it clear that policy may not yet be sufficiently restrictive and additional hikes are not off the table.
  • An abnormally weak 30yr UST auction contributed to market anxiety later in the week as investors attempted to calibrate global treasury appetite in light of the increase in supply.
  • A Bloomberg estimate of annualized interest payments on the US government debt climbed over the $1t mark in October.
  • The NY Fed Consumer Credit report showed a sharp rise in delinquencies with credit card loans now above 8%, well up from the 4% low in Q4 2021.
  • Fewer job openings, slower employment growth, and incrementally higher unemployment have economists growing more cautious and policy makers breathing and as restrictive policy may finally be taking effect.

Economic Release Highlights

  • U of M Consumer Sentiment registered 60.4, well under consensus forecast of 63.7 and a notable decrease versus the prior month reading of 67.9. Longer-term inflation expectations increased to 3.2%.
  • Following a softer than expected October jobs report (150k vs 180k), we’ve seen a slight uptick in weekly unemployment claims to the current 4-week average of 212,250.
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.

Tucker Financial Weekly Market Review: October 13th, 2023

Weekly Market Report: October 13th, 2023

Last week the world began to sift through the aftermath and implications of the terror attacks in Israel which, beyond the horrific human toll, sent shock waves through global geopolitics and financial markets, beginning with interest rates and the oil sector. Global equity markets remained relatively calm with the S&P 500 up 0.46% and developed and emerging equity markets both relatively flat. The bigger moves on the week were in areas you might expect including oil (+6%), gold (+5%), and safe haven USD (+0.57%) and treasury bonds which saw yields decline across the curve and by double digits for longer maturities.

Market Anecdotes

  • Aside from the obvious human tragedy, the peculiar timing of the Hamas incursion into Israel last weekend has injected tangible uncertainty into global energy markets and geopolitical anxiety regarding the potential for escalation in the Middle East.
  • We saw a notable reversal in interest rates last week likely due to the geopolitical catalyst but also nudged by a series of dovish Fed comments noting high UST rates as lessening the need for additional tightening, suggestions that the implied market terminal rate is too high and downplaying the September CPI report.

  • High and rising UST rates mean higher debt service for businesses, government, and consumers as well as higher costs for projects and investments and mark to market losses on bond portfolios.

  • Torsten Slok from Apollo made note that with a 5.25-5.50% Fed funds rate and an estimated 2.5% neutral rate, corporate debt service coverage ratios are beginning to grind lower. Bianco Research echoed the same sentiment from the perspective of consumer interest expense.

  • Thirteen Fed speaking engagements and the release of October’s FOMC minutes reinforced a ‘no change’ rate decision at the upcoming November 1st FOMC meeting, currently priced at an 87% probability in the futures market. Future meetings carry only 32%-42% probabilities of a hike.

  • Third quarter earnings season kicked off with major banks reporting last week. Bottom line consensus is calling for -0.3% earnings growth, which if exceeded would mark the first positive YOY earnings results since 3Q22. Projected revenue growth is 1.7% and margins are expected to improve.

  • It was interesting to see UST yields decline sharply on the back of a blowout jobs report, relatively benign inflation report, and continually improving economic outlook.

Economic Release Highlights

  • September headline and core CPI registered 3.7%/4.1% YOY and 0.4%/0.3% MOM.

  • The September NFIB Small Business Optimism Index declined slightly from 91.3 to 90.8, just short of the consensus forecast of 91.2.
  • Consumer Sentiment for October registered a five-month low of 63.0, below consensus estimate of 67.5 and the prior month’s reading of 68.1.
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.

Tucker Financial Weekly Market Review: September 15th, 2023

Weekly Market Report: September 15th, 2023

Market focus points last week included some stimulative policy moves in China, risk of waning disinflation momentum, U.S. auto industry strikes, and some final key economic data points heading into this week’s closely watched FOMC meeting. Equity and bond markets responded in line with a higher for longer fashion, as U.S. equity markets closed down slightly while interest rates closed the week right in line with late August highs at levels not seen since 2007.

Market Anecdotes

  • Inflation data last week including CPI, PPI, and fundamental economic activity added anxiety to markets along the lines of the second wave inflation narrative which argues we should not be expecting a clean straight line to 2% inflation and the post pandemic world may just be different.
  • Last week’s economic data isn’t expected to influence the FOMC market base case of no change in Fed Funds rate this week but a possibility of one more move higher before year end.

  • The NY Fed Survey of Market Participants showed only a 5% chance of peak Fed funds surpassing 6%, relatively in line with futures market pricing.

  • The ECB delivered a dovish 25bps hike last week where internal projections see inflation of 5.6% in 2023 falling to 3.2% and 2.1% in ‘24 and ‘25 respectively – a public forecast followed by Lagarde presser stating these high levels maintained long enough, should drive inflation down.

  • Eaton Vance published LCD data illustrating S&P’s default forecasts for the coming six months with the current rate of 1.7% either rising to 4.5% (pessimistic), falling to 1% (optimistic), or leveling off to 2.5% (base case). Distressed loan data is also signaling some turbulence ahead.

  • A research note from Goldman last week on the U.S. equity market concentration issue painted a stark contrast between U.S. and non-U.S. markets while an unrelated note from J.P. Morgan illustrated the cost of higher rates hitting smaller companies disproportionately harder as well.

  • The UAW implemented targeted strikes at the big three automakers last week in a widely expected move given how far apart both sides are at the negotiating table.

  • The PBoC cut banking system required reserves and injected $25b into the system last week, raising hopes for recovery in China and renewed focus on stimulus measures.

Economic Release Highlights

  • August headline and core CPI registered 3.7%/4.3% YOY and 0.6%/0.3% MOM.
  • August headline and core PPI registered 1.63%/2.16% YOY and 0.74%/0.19% MOM.
  • Retail Sales for August of 0.56% (+2.5% YoY) came in higher than the 0.1% expected and above the prior two months’ pace, but gasoline sales seem to have played a large part in the report.
  • Industrial Production in August topped forecasts, growing 0.38%, down slightly from the prior month but above the long-term average of 0.26%.
  • U of M Consumer Sentiment fell from 69.5 to 67.7 (-2.6%) in September. It is up 15.53% from this time in 2022 but remains well below its historical average of 86.
  • The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index for August declined 0.6 to 91.3, slightly below consensus call of 91.5.
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.

Tucker Financial Weekly Market Review: September 8th, 2023

Weekly Market Report: September 8th, 2023

The holiday-shortened week gave us a light economic calendar and a mix of headwinds for risk assets including a backup in rates, a continued rise in energy prices, labor/geopolitical disputes, and some economic surprises translating to ‘good news is bad news’ momentum for stock prices. The S&P 500 fell 1.29% but small caps fared much worse, down 3.5%-4.5%. International developed markets were down 1.6% on sluggish economic data out of Germany while emerging markets (-1.8%) were again weighed down by China. Rates drifted higher with the biggest move in the belly of the curve, pushing the 10yr yield back above 4.25%. The USD (+0.82%) continued to rally off its mid-July low while commodities (+1.34%) rallied again thanks to another move higher in oil prices, now north of $87/barrel.

Market Anecdotes

  • Markets anticipating this week’s FOMC meeting and fresh inflation data have settled into a “good news is bad news” narrative highlighting risk asset opposition to a higher rates for longer path of monetary policy over the coming 12-18 months.
  • Adding to the complicated landscape for monetary policy is WTI oil prices surging to their highest levels since November and Brent surpassing $90 for the first time this year. Drivers include OPEC 2.0 extending production cuts and resilient demand from the U.S., EU, and China.

  • BofA FMS highlights how unlevered asset managers are holding near record net long positions in 10yr Treasury futures (a bet on falling bond yields) while leveraged fund COT data shows a near record net short position in 10yr Treasury futures (a bet on rising bond yields).

  • USD strength has been notable with the Euro falling versus the USD for an eighth consecutive week, USD/CNY hitting its highest level since December 2007, and the overall trade weighted USD bouncing higher after a fall from record highs.

  • A research note from Bianco Research reminds us of the high correlation between bank lending standards and bankruptcy filings, while credit spreads continue to see blue skies ahead, injecting a bit of caution into the summer risk asset rally.

  • Tightening lending standards leading to a credit cycle across commercial credit and real estate is becoming clear with regional, international, and local banks alongside the CMBS market holding the lion’s share of real estate loans and buy side investors of all colors holding commercial loans.

  • Apollo made note last week of the estimated $7.6trn in US government debt maturing over the next year which logically should translate to persistent upward pressure on interest rates.

  • The impact of high mortgage rates on mortgage applications and existing home sales is clear while renting as an alternative is being accommodated by record high multi-family construction.

Economic Release Highlights

  • The ISM Services Index exceeded forecasts and the high end of the range, coming in at 54.5 versus a 52.4 consensus in August. The final PMI Services Index was revised down to 50.5.

  • Initial Unemployment Claims of 216k took the 4-week average down from 237.5k to 229.25k.
  • China’s August Caixin services PMI fell to 51.8 from 54.1 and German industrial orders fell 11% in July.
  • Durable Goods New Orders declined 5.23% in July after a strong 4.29% reading in June.
  • July Factory Orders declined by 2.1%, slightly less than the -2.6% expected.
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.

Tucker Financial Weekly Market Review: September 1st, 2023

Weekly Market Report: September 1st, 2023

Equity markets put a challenging August in the rearview mirror last week with a bounce higher from short- term oversold levels. Highlights of the week included a very busy economic calendar which seemed to have left markets with somewhat of a Goldilocks feeling heading into the long Labor Day weekend. U.S. markets closed up 2.5%-3.5% while non-U.S. markets were up 0.75%-0.90%. We saw a recovery rally across technology, consumer, and communications while defensives lagged. WTI crude oil rallied to a new 2023 high, now back up over $85, and took the wider commodity complex along for the ride while bond yields retreated further, particularly in the 2-5yr belly of the curve.

Market Anecdotes

  • Bespoke reminded us that while September has historically been the worst month of the year (DJIA), October-December have historically been the best. That said, comments like that call for a reminder of the cost of timing the market which, absent a crystal ball, really doesn’t work well.
  • The first eight months of the year have been highlighted by dominant growth stocks and lagging small cap stocks. Additionally, they have produced a welcomed mirror image of 2022 when both stocks and bonds fell sharply. 2023 has seen robust gains in stocks and marginal gains in bonds.

  • U.S. equity market valuations remain alarmingly high (technology orientation), but non-U.S. market valuations are solidly attractive while market breadth is at its narrowest since 2003.

  • Last week’s inflation and job market data sent a dovish ‘JOLT’ into markets last week with softer economic data translating to increased expectations for Fed cuts in 2024.

  • A new Financial Conditions Index (FCI) created and monitored closely by the Fed suggests conditions have relaxed back toward a neutral effect on growth thanks largely to the robust equity market rally and resilient housing market valuations.

  • An illustration from MSCI lays out the increasing stress happening in commercial real estate with distress and foreclosure counts both clearly on the rise.

  • China announced a tax cut on trading and that it plans to take more stimulative steps, but the 2023 equity market is not projecting a favorable runway looking forward with the belief that more concrete steps are needed.

Economic Release Highlights

  • July Employment Report registered 187,000, above consensus estimate of 170,000 and near the high end of the forecast range of 40,000-190,000. The unemployment rate increased from 3.5% to 3.8% and labor market participation increased 0.2% to 62.8%.
  • Average Hourly Earnings grew 0.24% MOM and 4.29% YOY while Personal Income grew 0.20%, all in line with consensus and slightly lower versus the prior month’s pace.
  • July’s JOLT Survey reported a notable decline in job openings from the prior month 9.165mm reading to 8.827mm, well below consensus forecast of 9.559mm and the forecast range of 9.524mm – 9.570mm. The opening to unemployed ratio has fallen from 2.0 to 1.5 since January.
  • July headline PCE inflation registered 3.28% YOY alongside core readings of 0.20% MOM and 4.24% YOY. Personal Consumption increased from 0.63% to 0.79% MOM.
  • U.S. August ISM Manufacturing Index beat consensus (47.6a vs 46.8e) and the final Manufacturing PMI was revised higher from 47.0 to 47.9.
  • The August J.P. Morgan Global Manufacturing PMI improved slightly from 48.6 to 49.0.
  • 2Q GDP (second estimate) was revised downward from 2.4% to 2.1%, well under the forecast range of 2.4%- 2.5%.
  • Consumer Confidence in August came in well short of expectations (106.1a vs 116.5e) and well below the consensus estimate range of 113.0-119.3).
  • June Case Shiller Home Price Index grew 0.9% MOM but declined 1.2% for the year, both generally in line. July Pending Home Sales (0.9%a vs -0.4%e) were stronger than expected.
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.

Tucker Financial Weekly Market Review: August 18th, 2023

Weekly Market Report: August 18th, 2023

Market focus points last week included a continuation of the grind higher in interest rates, more concern surrounding the deteriorating economic picture in China, and a relatively light economic calendar. In lockstep with consensus outlooks leaning more into the soft landing narrative and seemingly less things for markets to worry about, we’ve seen equity markets begin to consolidate (soften). The S&P 500 lost 2% last week while international developed and emerging equity markets were down closer to 3%. 10yr UST yields closed higher for a fifth consecutive week, reaching their highest level since 2007. Commodity markets closed down 1.5% thanks to 2%-8% declines across various energy markets while the USD strengthened approximately 0.5% across most major currencies.

Market Anecdotes

  • The move higher in yields is again posing a risk to risk assets as rates have climbed to levels not seen since 2007. Resilient economic growth, inflation, and heavy UST supply are all contributing to the move higher in yields.
  • Given robust personal consumption has meaningfully underpinned economic growth, measures of excess savings, real wage growth, sentiment measures, and labor market dynamics are key metrics. That said, differing measures of excess savings are producing a variety of perspectives.

  • FOMC meeting minutes released last week suggested that September may see another policy decision to ‘skip’ but rate hikes in later months this year are in play. Markets are pricing in no move in September but two rate cuts by July of next year.

  • From a monetary policy perspective, hawkish inflation risks include strong commodity markets (energy), robust wages, and above trend growth. The Dovish/soft landing case consists of continued disinflation trends and resilient consumption.

  • The Atlanta Fed GDPNow model increased its 3Q forecast on the back of strong personal consumption (retail sales) to 5.8%. Talk of recession on corporate earnings calls fell dramatically but Bloomberg economist survey results continue to see troubled waters ahead.

  • The U.S. housing market is getting pulled in two different directions with the highest mortgage rates in 23 years freezing buyers and sellers and pushing home ownership beyond the reach of many Americans while market technicals remain supportive of new home construction.

  • Last week the PBOC cut its MTLF by 15bps to 2.5% and the reverse repo rate by 10bps to 1.8% but categorized both moves as liquidity driven, not a change in their monetary policy stance.

Economic Release Highlights

  • Retail Sales in July rose 0.7%, more than consensus 0.4% and the forecast range of 0.2%-0.5%. Ex-Vehicles (1% vs 0.4%) and Ex-Vehicles & Gas (1% vs 0.4%) also handily beat consensus.

  • August Housing Market Index registered 50, well below consensus forecast of 56 and the forecast range of 55-58.
  • July Housing Starts (1.452M vs 1.455M) and Permits (1.442M vs 1.464M) both came in slightly under their respective consensus forecasts.
  • Industrial Production in July grew 1%, more than the spot consensus of 0.3% and the forecast range of -0.2% to 0.7%. Manufacturing Output (0.5% vs 0% and Capacity Utilization 79.3% vs 79.1%) also exceeded estimates.
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.

Tucker Financial Weekly Market Review: August 11th, 2023

Weekly Market Report: August 11th, 2023

Market intake points last week were limited to a few key inflation readings and the back end of 2Q earnings reports. In typical mid-August fashion (weak tape/heavier action) the S&P 500 moved a good deal on relatively thin volume finishing with a second consecutive down week following four straight weekly gains – taking what felt like an overdue breather. Last week big technology and small caps again lagged while energy, healthcare, and rate-sensitive REITs and utilities led the way. For the week, the S&P 500 closed down 0.31% (S&P 500 equal-weight slightly outperformed again) while international developed (-0.04%) and emerging (- 2.42%) were mixed with Japan/Europe generally flat but China fell 3.2%. Bonds were weaker across the board with losses concentrated in the belly as opposed to the wings. The 10yr UST yield continued to rise, closing at 4.16%. Commodities were pretty flat with no notable moves while the USD posted a respectable 0.81% gain in sympathy with the move down in risk assets.

Market Anecdotes

  • We saw mixed but generally continued moderation in monthly inflation data last week with CPI, PPI, and U of M sentiment readings. Fed funds futures have reflected the trend, now pricing in no remaining hikes for 2023 and cuts beginning in 2024.
  • The impact of shelter on inflation data remains prominent. A new model from the San Francisco Fed to forecast OER/real estate prices, concluded U.S. shelter inflation may turn negative in 2024, exacting a meaningful deflationary force on CPI.

  • The 2yr/10yr slope has steepened (less inverted) notably over the past few weeks, declining from 0.99% on July 19th to as low as 0.67% last week – a bond market that may be signaling rate cuts on the short end but a higher inflation shelf impacting the long end.

  • The consumer is experiencing rising real wages for the first time in over two years, but conflicting data metrics (credit card and auto loan delinquencies) are simultaneously raising some concerns.

  • The U.S. Treasury market may be in the process of showing us that beyond inflation, default, and interest rate fluctuations influencing bond prices, excess supply may well be climbing the board.

  • An early read on the Atlanta Fed GDPNow model shows an acceleration in third quarter GDP to 4.1% from the Q2 reading of 2.4% with positive contributions across the C + I + G + NX board.

  • Second quarter earnings season is close to completion with the headline S&P 500 contracting approximately 5%, driven mostly by a 51% decline coming from the energy sector. Profit margins continued to normalize from the record Q1 2022 high back to normal longer-term levels.

  • Export data out of China provided a clear contractionary signal with exports falling 14.5% in USD terms, further than the expected 13.2% decline. Imports also contracted more than expected (-12.4% vs -5.6%).

Economic Release Highlights

  • July CPI was generally in line with expectations on both headline (YoY 3.2%a vs 3.3%e) (MoM 0.2%a vs 0.2%e) and core (YoY 4.7%a vs 4.8%e) (MoM 0.2%a vs 0.2%e) readings.
  • July PPI accelerated to +0.31% from a friendly prior month reading of -0.08%, surprising to the upside versus consensus forecasts on both headline and core readings.

  • July NFIB Small Business Optimism Index registered 91.9, in line with consensus expectation for 91.5 and a slight improvement over the prior month reading of 91.0.

  • August’s U of M Consumer Sentiment stayed generally in line with July’s reading, registering 71.2 but also delivered some disinflationary sentiment readings.

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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