With interest-rate cuts virtually locked in, investors are ramping up their focus on economic data over the next few months as they game out whether the “soft landing” narrative that has helped drive U.S. stocks in 2024 can continue.
Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell said Friday the “time has come” to begin lowering interest rates – a more dovish message than many investors had believed they would hear at the central bank’s annual conference in Jackson Hole, Wyo. That process will likely begin next month, with a 25-basis-point cut at the Fed’s monetary-policy meeting on Sept. 17-18.
The comments are far from an all-clear signal. With the S&P 500 up 18 per cent on the year and equities richly valued, market participants will need to see continued evidence that the economy is gliding to a soft landing, where growth remains resilient while inflation cools.
“What the market wanted was to hear that the rate-cutting cycle is starting,” said Alessio de Longis, senior portfolio manager and head of investments at Invesco Solutions.
However, he continued, “is the Fed telling us that they’re actually worried about the economy now? And if that is the case, maybe the excitement about the cutting cycle should take a different perspective.”
History shows that stocks tend to perform far better when rate cuts come against a background of resilient growth instead of during a sharp economic slowdown. Since 1970, the S&P 500 has climbed an average of 18 per cent one year after the first rate cut in non-recessionary periods, according to Evercore ISI strategists. In recession periods, the index climbed an average of just 2 per cent one year after the first cut. In his speech, Mr. Powell said the Fed “did not seek or welcome” any further cooling in the labour market and wanted to prevent further erosion. Jobs will be in the spotlight when the U.S. publishes a closely watched employment report on Sept. 6, after weaker-than-expected labour market data at the beginning of August.
Other important coming data include two monthly inflation reports: the personal consumption expenditures price index this Friday, and the consumer price index on Sept. 11.
More signs of economic weakness could once again rattle stocks and shift expectations toward a 50-basis-point cut next month. Expectations for such a move were priced at around 35 per cent on Friday afternoon, compared with about 29 per cent before the speech, with the remaining expectations for a 25-basis-point cut, futures data showed.
“The Fed is easing with the economy not particularly weak (and inflation still above target), and it has the potential to ease substantially in response to any acute weakness,” Rick Rieder, BlackRock’s chief investment officer of global fixed income, wrote in a note on Friday.
Quincy Krosby, chief global strategist at LPL Financial, said a key factor for stocks is whether rate cuts are coming because inflation is moderating or because of weakening in the labour market.
“The market wants a rate-cutting cycle introduced because inflation is coming down,” Ms. Krosby said. “The question remains as to whether or not we see more deterioration in the labour market.”
Encouraging data could also help bolster stocks in a period that some expect could bring turbulent trading. September is historically the weakest month for stock performance, with the S&P 500 averaging a 0.78-per-cent decline since the Second World War, according to data from CFRA.
Elevated stock valuations may also make investors less willing to hold on to equities if bad news hits. The forward price-to-earnings ratio for the S&P 500 is at 21, up from 19.6 in early August, according to LSEG Datastream. The index’s long-term average is 15.7. A tight presidential race between Vice-President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump may also stir uncertainty between now and the Nov. 5 election.
“The longer-term trends in stocks are rock-solid and any weakness is an opportunity to add exposure,” said Andre Bakhos, managing member at Ingenium Analytics LLC. In the shorter term, “we’re going to get … choppy, erratic, volatile moves because no one really knows what happens now that [Mr. Powell] has shown his hand.”
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