MARKET STARTS AND ENDS WEEK WITH A THUD

The Week Started With A Thud And Ended With An Even Bigger Thud. The Common Catalyst Was Fed Chair Powell's Policy Speech At The Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium.

For the week, the Russell 2000 was down 2.9%, the Nasdaq Composite was down 2.6%, the S&P 500 was down 1.2%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down just 0.2%.

On Monday, market participants were reportedly anxious that Mr. Powell's speech would sound resolutely hawkish. The S&P 500 declined 2.1% on Monday. On Friday, Mr. Powell sounded resolutely hawkish and the S&P 500 declined 3.4%, wiping out a half-hearted (and low volume) bounce off Monday's lows that was seen in the intervening sessions.

When the closing bell rang on Friday, the major indices were down 2.9-4.4% for the week. Just about everything got rolled back. The selling was indiscriminate, affecting stocks of all sizes, investment factors of all kinds, and countercyclical and cyclical sectors alike.

The only gainers of note on the week were the CBOE Volatility Index (+24.5%), oil prices (+3.0%), the S&P 500 energy sector (+4.3%), the U.S. Dollar Index (+0.6%), and the 30-yr bond (-2 bps to 3.21%).

The mega-cap stocks paced the broader market's losses. The Vanguard Mega-Cap Growth ETF (MGK) was down 5.0% for the week after falling 4.1% in Friday's session alone. With their mega-cap constituents, the information technology (-5.6%), communication services (-4.8%), and consumer discretionary (-4.8%) sectors were the biggest laggards this week.

Heavy losses were seen across the market on Friday following a short and terse speech from Fed Chair Powell who made it clear the Fed will not be shifting to a rate-cut cycle anytime soon. On the contrary, Mr. Powell pointed out the need to take rates into restrictive territory and to hold them at higher levels for some time until the Fed is confident inflation is getting back down to the Federal Open Market Committee's 2 percent goal.

The Fed Chair openly acknowledged that the effort to reduce inflation "will also bring some pain to households and businesses" and that the "historical record cautions strongly against prematurely loosening policy."

The totality of his remarks were not surprising, but his terse manner was, as it suggested the Fed is not going to pander to the stock market's interest rate wishes -- certainly not at this juncture anyway with the inflation rate still well above the Fed's target.

Notably, Friday's session started with some welcome inflation news. The PCE Price Index and core-PCE Price Index, which excludes food and energy, both moderated in July. They were up 6.3% and 4.6% year-over-year, respectively, versus 6.8% and 4.8% in June.

That was not enough, though, to make the market feel comfortable, especially since Fed Chair Powell said in his speech that "while lower inflation readings for July are welcome, a single month's improvement falls far short of what the Committee will need to see before we are confident that inflation is moving down."

The discomfort was evident in what amounted to a trend-down day after some initial volatility on Friday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average would shed more than 1,000 points as part of a washout that saw the major indices decline between 3.0-3.9% on Friday.

The Treasury market, which had already been under pressure at the thought of a more hawkish-minded Fed, held its ground better in the wake of Mr. Powell's speech. The 2-yr note yield rose just one basis point to 3.40% and the 10-yr note also rose just one basis point to 3.04%. They were up 15 basis points and five basis points for the week, respectively. When the month started, the 2-yr note yield stood at 2.90% and the 10-yr note yield stood at 2.64%.

  • DJIA: -4.2% for the week / -11.2% YTD

  • S&P 400: -3.0% for the week / -12.0% YTD

  • S&P 500: -4.0% for the week / -14.9% for the year

  • Russell 2000: -2.9% for the week / -15.4% for the year

  • Nasdaq Composite: -4.4% for the week / -22.4% for the year