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Marketmind: Inflation on the ropes, shutdown averted

Published 11/15/2023, 06:10 AM
Updated 11/15/2023, 06:17 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., September 26, 2023.  REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo

A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan

Relief at the resumption of disinflation triggered the best day for U.S. stocks and bonds since the spring as Fed rate hike bets evaporated, eyes turned to softening retail numbers and a long-feared government shutdown was averted until next year at least.

Encouraging the new found optimism overnight was a surprisingly large drop in outlying British inflation too, with forecast-beating Chinese industrial and retail numbers calming nerves about a deflationary bust there just ahead of President Xi Jinping's meeting U.S. President Joe Biden on Wednesday.

Wall Street stocks are on course for the best month of the year, with the S&P500 staging its biggest one-day gain since April and pulling the index back up to September levels.

Reflecting the disproportionate exposure of smaller firms to higher borrowing costs, the Russell 2000 index of small caps clocked its best day in over a year and rallied 5%.

With October retail sales data later in the day expected to show a stalling of red-hot high street activity into the final quarter, the warm glow of ebbing inflation and cresting borrowing costs continued early Wednesday and S&P500 futures were up another 0.25% ahead of the bell.

But the real action over the past 24 hours was in rates and bond markets, where 2- and 10-year Treasury yields plummeted around 20 basis points each in their steepest one-day drops since the regional banking shock in March and sustained most of that move overnight. Much like then, the sheer scale of the yield swoon has stoked bond volatility gauges too.

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The positive surprise in sub-forecast U.S. headline and core inflation rates for last month and encouraging momentum on disinflation at large has seen futures market remove virtually all bets on another Federal Reserve rate hike in the cycle.

What's more, a quarter point rate cut by May is now 80% priced and 100bps of easing through 2024 is now baked in.

Overreaction? The retail and producer price readouts later today will be the first reality check, but so too will be reactions from Fed officials to the latest numbers.

The relatively dovish Chicago Fed chief Austan Goolsbee on Tuesday trumpeted the makings of a spectacular soft landing for the economy - highlighting how the economy's on course for the biggest non-war-related one-year drop in inflation in a century and with the jobless rate still below 4%.

Wall St banks too seem to be falling into line. Bank of America is the latest to say it no longer sees another hike.

And will crude oil prices still on the backfoot and declining at a 10% year-on-year rate, the disinflation cheer spreads out across the world.

Catalyzing the biggest two-day gain in UK's FTSE 250 of mid-cap stocks in more than three years, British inflation cooled more than expected in October as household energy prices dropped from a year ago and lopped more than two percentage points off the headline CPI rate to 4.6%. Gilt yields and sterling dropped back.

And although it's clawed back some ground today, not least against sterling, the 1.5% drop in the dollar index on Tuesday was its biggest daily fall of the year.

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Elsewhere, Chinese stocks climbed in the slipstream of the global markets rally and better October economic news - with 4% spike in Chinese property shares spurred by a report that authorities plan to provide at least $137 billion of new funding to prop up the embattled housing market.

U.S. corporate news stays on retail later as Target reports earnings, following a beat by Home Depot (NYSE:HD) on Tuesday.

In regulatory filings, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa) said on Tuesday it has shed its holdings in General Motors (NYSE:GM) and Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) and trimmed its stake in Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) as the conglomerate controlled by billionaire Warren Buffett boosted its cash pile to a record $157.2 billion.

Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S. markets later on Wednesday:

* U.S. Oct retail sales, producer price inflation; New York Fed's November manufacturing survey; U.S. Sept business and retail inventories

* Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr, Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin both speak. Bank of England policymaker Jonathan Haskel speaks

* U.S. President Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping meet on sidelines of APEC Summit in San Francisco

* U.S. corporate earnings: Target, Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO), Palo Alto Networks (NASDAQ:PANW), TJX (NYSE:TJX), Catalent (NYSE:CTLT)

(By Mike Dolan, Editing by Bernadette Baum)

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