A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan
After an intense month focused on election risk around the world, markets quickly switched back to the more prosaic matter of the cost of money – and whether disinflation is resuming to the extent it allows borrowing costs to finally fall.
Thursday’s U.S. consumer price update for June is the key moment of the week for many investors – with the headline rate expected to have fallen two tenths of a percentage point to 3.1% but with ‘core’ rates still stuck at 3.4%.
With Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell starting his two-pronged semi-annual congressional testimony later on Tuesday, the consensus CPI forecast probably reflects what the central bank thinks of the situation right now – encouraging but not there yet.
But as the U.S. unemployment rate is now back above 4.0% for the first time since late 2021, markets may look for a more nuanced approach from the Fed chair that sees it increasingly wary of a sudden weakening of the labor market as real time quarterly GDP estimates ebb again to about 1.5%.
There were some other reasons for Fed optimism in the lead up to the testimony.
The path U.S. inflation is expected to follow over coming years generally softened in June, amid retreating projections of price increases for a wide array of consumer goods and services, a New York Fed survey showed on Monday.
Inflation a year from now was seen at 3% as of June – down from the expected rise of 3.2% in May – and five-year expectations fell to 2.8% from 3%.
prices are better behaved this week, too, falling more than 3% from the 10-week highs hit late last week and halving the annual oil price gain to 10%.
The losses on Tuesday came after a hurricane that hit a key U.S. oil-producing hub in Texas caused less damage than many in markets had expected – easing concerns over supply disruption.
Before Powell starts speaking later, there will also be an update on U.S. small business confidence for last month.
Ahead of the bell, record high U.S. stock indexes look set to extend their gains and futures were in positive territory yet again.
Fed funds futures have two full quarter-point rate cuts priced for the remainder the year – with ten-year U.S. Treasury yields hovering below 4.3% ahead of another heavy week of debt sales. Some $119 billion of coupons go under the hammer this week, starting with 3-year notes on Tuesday and then 10s and 30s later in the week.
The dollar was marginally higher, edging up against the euro, yen, yuan and pound.
In the messier world of politics, the picture was even less clear – though most of the recent soundings from the White House suggest President Joe Biden will remain the Democrat candidate going into November’s election.
In Europe, Britain’s new government set out its stall on how to get growth moving again without much leeway in stretched public finances – concentrating initially on supply-side reforms that clear the deck for infrastructure projects and more housebuilding. UK stocks were firmer.
In France, the dust settles a bit on the weekend election there that leaves gridlock in parliament but the temporary re-appointment of centrist Prime Minister Gabriel Attal is a move that may see the country through hosting the Olympics next month and possibly a compromise 2025 budget in the Fall.
European stocks and the euro edged back after Monday’s relief rally following the failure of French far right or left alliance gaining an overall assembly majority. French government debt yields and spreads were steady.
In Asia, stocks were broadly higher – with outperforming with gains of almost 2% and Hong Kong’s on the flipside ending in the red.
Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S. markets later on Tuesday:
* US June NFIB small business survey; Mexico June inflation
* Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell testifies to the Senate Banking Committee; Fed Governor Michelle Bowman and Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr both speak
* Leaders gather in Washington for NATO Summit
* US Treasury auctions $58 billion of 3-year notes, $46 billion of 12-month bills
(By Mike Dolan, editing by XXXX mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com)
Read the full article here