Stocks kept pushing higher, adding to a rally that’s already topped $3 trillion from this month’s lows amid hopes the Federal Reserve will signal it’s ready to start cutting interest rates.
The S&P 500 climbed for an eighth straight day — the longest winning streak in 2024. A bumpy stretch for investors in the dog days of July and August hasn’t tempered their zest for equities, with allocations to the asset class still robust despite a bout of recent volatility and heightened uncertainty around the economic outlook. Momentum traders and a surge in corporate buybacks promise to drive a US stock rally over the next four weeks, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s trading desk.
“The pain trade for equities is higher and the bar for being bearish at the beach into a Labor Day barbecue party is high,” Goldman’s Scott Rubner wrote.
With the central bank approaching a crucial pivot point, it’s difficult to overstate how much attention financial markets will be paying. For starters, they’re looking for confirmation from Jerome Powell Friday that the Fed will lower rates in September. But more drama surrounds what happens after that and the pace of additional cuts over the next several months as the Fed confronts the dual risks to both inflation and employment.
At Bank of America Corp., Ohsung Kwon says the Fed is unlikely to “out-dove” the market, but as long as growth is “OK,” equities shoule be able to withstand a less-dovish Fed.
“Stocks just need a nod that growth is going to be supported,” Kwon said. “While our view is that risk is to the upside, we do not believe that Jackson Hole will spur the large equity moves that it has in the past when the Fed used it as forum to telegraph upcoming policy decisions.”
The S&P 500 hovered near 5,595. Volume was 30% below the past month average. A Bloomberg gauge of the “Magnificent Seven” megacaps climbed 1.2%. The Russell 2000 of small firms added 1%. Advanced Micro Devices Inc. agreed to buy server maker ZT Systems in a deal valued at $4.9 billion. Estée Lauder Cos. gave a disappointing sales forecast. Lowe’s Cos, Target Corp. and TJX Cos are among the major retail names reporting this week.
Treasury 10-year yields fell two basis points to 3.87%. Oil sank about 3%. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has accepted a cease-fire proposal for Gaza and “the next important step is for Hamas to say yes.”
To Neil Dutta at Renaissance Macro Research, the Fed is cutting in September, the only question is by how much.
“I don’t think Powell is going to greenlight a big move, but he won’t torpedo the idea entirely either,” Dutta said. “Powell is likely to acknowledge that the balance of risks has changed, dramatically since the June Summary of Economic Projections. Removing optionality in such a situation is not prudent.”
“So, in this regard, I think the fabled ‘Powell Put’ makes a comeback this week,” Dutta said.
All told, Dutta notes the equity market seems “a bit too enthusiastic” relative to the tone of the incoming economic information. Looking ahead, there is good reason to assume the pace of consumers’ spending slows, he concluded.
“Investors ‘climbed a wall of worry’ as the stock-market relief rally gained momentum,” said Craig Johnson at Piper Sandler. “Equities will likely consolidate ahead of Fed commentary at Jackson Hole this week.”
Equity positioning is back up to moderately overweight, a week after sliding to underweight, according to Deutsche Bank AG strategists including Parag Thatte and Binky Chadha, who said exposure remains well below the mid-July highs at the top of the historical band.
Recent economic data and earnings readouts have reinvigorated confidence among JPMorgan Chase & Co. traders that US stocks can rally into the end of the year.
“While upside appears to be more muted than when we adopted this stance earlier this year, there remains material upside,” the team led by Andrew Tyler wrote.
The trajectory for stocks is likely to be dictated by the week-to-week cadence of macroeconomic data until August’s key jobs report, due in the first week of September, according to Morgan Stanley strategists led by Michael Wilson.
“The true test for the market will be the August jobs report,” they wrote. “A strong jobs report that reverses July’s softness will provide confidence that growth risks have subsided for now. Another weak report would likely lead to growth concerns resurfacing.”
“While we do remain generally bullish, we don’t see a straight line up in the market, as the economy is slowing and there will likely be a mix of conflicting economic data points over the coming months, which is set to continue this recessionary debate,” said Greg Marcus at UBS Private Wealth Management.
Marcus believes the Fed is on track to cut interest rates by 25 basis points in September, barring a significant shock to the downside between now and then.
“Investors should be extending duration with their cash holdings in preparation for rate cuts,” he said. “It’s important to diversify within US stocks and prepare for a broadening out in the market, as we believe this broadening of market participation is likely to include value stocks and small caps.”
In past rate-cut cycles, growth stocks have a better rate of outperformance over value across both large and small caps — but on median, they’ve fallen more, according to Bloomberg Intelligence strategists Gina Martin Adams and Michael Casper.
Likewise, defensive sectors have had the edge over cyclicals. Measuring Fed rate cut cycles from the date of the first cut to that of the last one shows large-cap value posting a median 2.4% drop versus a 24.5% decline for growth — though the latter led in four of five instances. In the Russell 2000, value posted a median 2.7% gain to growth’s 21.5% drop, again with the latter ahead in three of five cut cycles.
However, across each cut cycle, S&P 500 staples, health care and communications had the most consistent performance while energy and industrials struggled most often. Russell 2000 communications and health care fared best while real estate and energy struggled.
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