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Global shares, yields slip on clouded soft-landing outlook

Published 01/02/2024, 09:04 PM
Updated 01/03/2024, 04:42 PM
© Reuters. Former manager of Japanese national baseball team Hideki Kuriyama rings a bell during a ceremony marking the end of trading in 2023 at the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) in Tokyo, Japan December 29,  2023. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

By Herbert Lash

NEW YORK (Reuters) -The dollar rebounded further from last year's sell-off and global stock markets extended a New Year slide on Wednesday as doubts about the chances of a soft landing mounted even as the Federal Reserve almost declared victory in taming inflation.

Policymakers appeared increasingly convinced last month that inflation was coming under control, but they expressed growing concern about "overly restrictive" monetary policy, minutes from the Fed's Dec. 12-13 meeting show.

Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin echoed similar optimism earlier in the day, saying a soft landing is "increasingly conceivable" as the Fed makes "real progress" toward subduing inflation without inflicting major damage on the jobs market.

But the minutes and Barkin's remarks failed to shake off a dour mood in equity markets, with the major Wall Street indexes selling off after the leading German, French, Italian and Spanish stock indexes earlier closed down more than 1%.

The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes briefly climbed above 4% as market optimism about deep interest rate cuts and their impact on the economy ebbed.

The recent dramatic easing in monetary policy is likely to result in a "no landing," or continued above-trend growth that will limit how much the Fed can cut rates, said Phillip Colmar, global strategist at MRB Partners in New York.

"Fed rate cuts are not required, even if Powell & Co. are determined to provide them," Colmar said in an email, adding that monetary and financial conditions have not been restrictive. "All major asset classes, including equities, suggest that monetary conditions are plentiful."

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MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe shed 0.94%, while the pan-European STOXX 600 index closed down 0.86%.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.76%, the S&P 500 lost 0.80% and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.18%. The market is trying to figure out if a soft landing is possible with the six rate cuts by year-end the futures market has priced in or whether that scenario will be painful, said Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial (NYSE:AMP) in Troy, Michigan.

"Usually when you get that type of aggressive interest rate cuts, it comes with more economic pain," he said. "Our view is that the market has probably priced in too many rate cuts for this year."

Fed officials in December predicted 75 basis points (bps) of rate cuts this year, driving money-market bets for around double that amount amid market optimism that spurred a year-end rally in stocks and bonds.

Resilience in the U.S. labor market has kept a recession at bay. The government is expected to report on Friday that nonfarm payrolls increased by 168,000 jobs in December, according to a Reuters survey of economists, after rising 199,000 in November.

But labor market conditions are gradually easing. U.S. job openings dropped by 62,000 to 8.79 million for the third straight month in November, the Labor Department said in its monthly Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or JOLTS report.

"Today's JOLTS data is another signal that the Fed is delivering a soft landing," said Ron Temple, chief market strategist at Lazard (NYSE:LAZ), in an email.

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But the report also suggests that the Fed is unlikely to cut rates as aggressively in 2024 as the market expects given the risk of reigniting inflationary pressures, he said.

Yields on government debt retreated after earlier edging higher. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell 3.3 basis points at 3.911%.

Germany's 10-year Bund yield was down 1.7 basis points at 2.000%.

The dollar has gained more than 1% against major currencies this week, with the dollar index touching a fresh two-week high at 102.6 as rate-cut bets eased.

The euro fell 0.26% to $1.0919 and the yen weakened 0.89% at 143.25 per dollar.

Oil prices climbed about 3% after a disruption at Libya's top oilfield added to fears that mounting tensions in the Middle East could disrupt global oil supplies.

Brent futures rose $2.36 to settle at $78.25 a barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $2.32 to settle at $72.70.

Gold retreated, on course for its largest percentage decline in over three weeks, after the Fed minutes flagged uncertainty about the timing of potential interest-rate cuts.

U.S. gold futures settled 1.5% lower, at $2,042.80.

Bitcoin sank roughly 5% after climbing to more than $45,000 a day earlier, its highest level since April 2022. Still, optimism about bitcoin remained high amid a possible approval this week of a spot exchange traded fund for the world's largest cryptocurrency.

Latest comments

Three cheers for POWEL $ Co.
The only people continue harping on rates cut are the same sock puppet fortune telling analysts....no monetary authority mentioned about it at all........
all are just wall street show..... nobody talked anything except the wall street prophet....
Buy the gold dip. You'll be pleased when the ----- hits the fan.
This site would not publish my comments.
This article is a whole load of nothing. Where is the comments on other countries dropping their rates, or the expectation that US earnings will clip off higher in Q1? I would urge the editor to give balance in articles, as this is written, it gives a one sided and biased view.
Who hopes for rate cuts?  I find the current rates are at a nice spot to live with.  Mortgage rates are not impossibly high, my kids savings accounts are actually getting some interest.  These rates are the only plus to the sky high prices on everything.
The U.S. survived quite well when rates were twice what they are now.  They didn't have to lower the rates until the feds did all the equal housing mandates.  Look back and compare the dates.
 You cannot look backwards my friend. Look at mortgage applications as an example. This rates at current levels are having a slowing effect. Therefore, rate cuts should be a near certainty in March, 25 basis points perhaps.
I'll add on:  Urban sprawl is once again killing our countrysides.  People are fleeing the cities for good reason, but unfortunately to the detriment of our small towns. A mortgage is not supposed to be a right, but instead it should be a reward for hard work and credit worthiness. (Remember Bill Clinton??)   Existing houses are coming back onto the market, and at reduced prices to offset the interest rates. These rate are where they were when I bought my first house.
Tensions in the middle east? Uncertainty about the Fed rate decision? There is no news here. Bulls smashed in 10 minutes what took Bears an entire day to accomplish. Short squeeze incoming
How do you figure lol
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