Market Recap - INFLATION AND FED POLICY CONCERNS OFFSET BANK STOCK STRENGTH

The Stock Market Had A Mixed Showing This Week. The Major Indices All Registered Gains Compared To Last Week's Closing Levels, But Concerns About Inflation And Fed Policy Kept A Limit On Index Performance.

There was not a lot of big moves early in the week as investors awaited market-moving economic data followed by Q1 earnings reports from several large banks on Friday. Coinbase Global (COIN) was an exception in that regard, gaining 6.0% on Tuesday after Bitcoin breached $30,000. 

Inflation concerns rose to the fore after investors received the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for March. Total CPI fell on a year-over-year basis, which was a welcome development, but core-CPI accelerated on a year-over-year basis. The total Producer Price Index (PPI) and core-PPI declined in March, but the uptick in core-CPI offset some excitement about PPI disinflation. 

In addition, comments from Fed officials this week indicated that the latest inflation readings are not likely to convince the Fed to pause its tightening efforts just yet. Fed Governor Waller (FOMC voter) said in a speech before the open on Friday that the Fed hasn't made much progress on its inflation goal and that he thinks monetary policy needs to be tightened further and remain tight for a substantial period of time. Chicago Fed President Goolsbee (FOMC voter) did, however, indicate that he thinks the Fed needs to be cautious, given the uncertainty about where financial headwinds are going. 

The data and commentary this week did not change the market's view that much in regards to the Fed's May FOMC meeting. According to the CME FedWatch Tool, the fed funds futures market is pricing in a 77.5% probability of a 25 basis points rate hike in May, up from 71.2% a week ago. The disinflation seen in economic data this week was not enough to offset the core-CPI acceleration and negative sentiment driven by Fed official commentary. 

Market participants had been anxiously awaiting the start of Q1 earnings season on Friday. JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, BlackRock, and PNC Financials all finished Friday's session with a gain after pleasing investors with Q1 results. 

Strength from the financial sector was not enough to carry the market on Friday, though, as policy expectations and rate hike concerns drove price action. A few widely held stocks also sold off and contributed to Friday's weakness. Namely, Boeing (BA) declined on reports that it expects production and delivery delays for its 737 MAX due to parts problems and UNH sold off on investors' concerns about meeting short and long-term EPS targets in the face of Medicare Advantage changes.

In addition, regional banks were weak on Friday despite gains in their larger peers. 

Still, the S&P 500 hit its best level since mid-February this week (4,150), reaching the upper bound of an 11-month trading range. Trading this week occurred on noticeably light volume, which could be attributed to larger wait-and-see mindset as investors await the bulk of Q1 earnings season. Participants will be keenly focused on guidance and whether earnings estimates are marked down enough or if they need to come down further.

Only four S&P 500 sectors closed with a loss this week -- real estate (-1.5%), utilities (-1.3%), information technology (-0.4%), and consumer staples (-0.3%) -- while financials (+2.9%) led the outperformers by a decent margin. 

The 2-yr Treasury note yield rose 14 basis points this week to 4.10% and the 10-yr note yield rose 12 basis points to 3.52%. The U.S. Dollar Index rose 0.5% to 101.56. 

Energy complex futures rose this week. WTI crude oil futures were up 2.5% to $82.55/bbl and natural gas futures rose 4.7% to $2.13/mmbtu. 

  • Nasdaq Composite: +0.3% for the week / +15.8% YTD

  • S&P 500: +0.8% for the week / +7.8% YTD

  • S&P Midcap 400: +1.7% for the week / +2.4% YTD

  • Dow Jones Industrial Average: +1.2% for the week / +2.3% YTD

  • Russell 2000: +1.5% for the week / +1.1% YTD

Market Recap - Weak data fuels cyclical sector sell-off

The stock market mostly declined on the week.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average squeezed out a slim gain, thanks to money flowing into blue chip names, while the other major indices registered losses due to renewed growth concerns.

There was not a ton of conviction to start the week after OPEC+ surprised markets with a 1.16 million barrels per day production cut announcement, which will start in May and continue through the end of the year. This sent oil prices on a tear, rising 6.4% this week to $80.70/bbl. 

After the market digested the surprise move by OPEC+, growth concerns rose to the forefront and influenced price action for the remainder of the week. Lingering slowdown concerns were stoked by a slate of weak economic data and a contention by JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon in his annual shareholder letter that the regional banking crisis is not over yet and will have repercussions for years to come.

Many of the economic releases this week came in weaker than expected. Some of the more influential data included the March ISM Manufacturing and Non-Manufacturing Indices, February JOLTS Job Openings and Factory Orders, March ADP Employment Change, and weekly jobless claims. The latter of which featured big upward revisions to last week's numbers. 

The sticking point for stock market participants is a sense that slower growth will translate to further cuts to earnings estimates. Cyclical sectors were the biggest losers this week while defensive-oriented sectors enjoyed nice gains. 

The industrials (-3.4%), consumer discretionary (-3.0%), and materials (-1.3%) sectors were the top laggards while the utilities (+3.1%) and health care (+3.1%) sectors rose to the top of the leaderboard. The energy sector (+3.0%) was another top performer this week despite its economically-sensitive status thanks to the OPEC+ announcement. 

The Treasury market remains open Friday until 12:00 ET, so Thursday's settlement levels are not comparable for weekly yield changes.

·   Nasdaq Composite: -1.1% for the week / +15.5% YTD

·   S&P 500: -0.1% for the week / +6.9% YTD

·   S&P Midcap 400: -2.6% for the week / +0.7% YTD

·   Dow Jones Industrial Average: +0.6% for the week / +1.0% YTD

·   Russell 2000: -2.7% for the week / -0.4% YTD


Market Recap - Positive week to finish out positive quarter

It Was A Strong Week, And First Quarter, For The Stock Market.

The S&P 500 spent most of the week above its 50-day moving average and climbed past the 4,100 level by Friday's close. The major indices stuck to a decidedly narrow range in the first half of the week, though, as investors weighed the latest developments in the recent banking sector fallout, which included a two-day Congressional hearing on the SIVB bank failure. 

Participants reacted favorably to news that First Citizens Bancshares will acquire some of Silicon Valley Bank's assets along with a Bloomberg report indicating that authorities are considering expanding an emergency lending facility for banks in ways that would give First Republic Bank more time to shore up its balance sheet. Bank stocks remained under pressure, though, after FDIC Chairman Michael Barr told the Senate Banking Committee that he anticipates having to increase capital and liquidity standards for firms over $100 billion, adding that more regulation is needed.

Still, price action indicated that worries about the health of the banking sector had dissipated somewhat. The S&P 500 financial sector rose 3.7% this week, but it declined 6.1% in Q1. 

Some of the gains this week were driven by relatively strong leadership from semiconductor stocks. The PHLX Semiconductor Index rose 3.5% this week and surged 27.6% this quarter. Investors initially reacted favorably to Micron's earnings report, but sold shares on Friday due to reports that Chinese regulators are conducting a cybersecurity review of MU products.

The rally really picked up steam on Friday after investors received relatively pleasing inflation data. Briefly, the PCE Price Index slowed to 5.0% yr/yr in February from 5.3% in January while the core-PCE Price Index, the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, dipped to 4.6% from 4.7%. The direction of these moves is a welcomed development, but the pace at which these indices are decelerating leaves a bit to be desired.

All 11 S&P 500 sectors logged gains this week. Energy (+6.2%), consumer discretionary (+5.6%), and real estate (+5.2%) were the top performer while communication services (+1.5%) and health care (+1.8%) showed the slimmest gains. 

The 2-yr Treasury note yield rose 29 basis points this week to 4.06% and the 10-yr note yield rose 11 basis points to 3.49%. 

The U.S. Dollar Index fell 0.6% to 102.52. On a currency related note, China and Brazil agreed to trade in their own currencies instead of the U.S. dollar.

  • Nasdaq Composite: +3.4% for the week / +16.8% YTD

  • S&P 500: +3.5% for the week / +7.0% YTD

  • S&P Midcap 400: +4.5% for the week / +2.3% YTD

  • Russell 2000: +3.9% for the week / +3.4% YTD

  • Dow Jones Industrial Average: +3.2% for the week / +0.4% YTD

Market Recap - Banking worries and Fed policy decision induces volatility

This week started, and then ended, on a pretty firm note for the stock market.

In between, however, there was a bit of volatility as investors weighed ongoing concerns about the bank industry along with the latest policy move from the Fed.

Over the weekend, market participants learned that the Swiss National Bank brokered a UBS (UBS) acquisition of Credit Suisse (CS) for a "takeunder" price of $3.2 billion. The Federal Reserve also announced a coordinated central bank action with the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank, and the Swiss National Bank to enhance the provision of U.S. dollar liquidity while offering assurances that "the capital and liquidity positions of the U.S. banking system are strong, and the U.S. financial system is resilient."

Also, a Bloomberg report early in the week indicated the Treasury Department is looking at ways to guarantee all bank deposits, if necessary, without congressional approval. This was followed by Treasury Secretary Yellen's remark in prepared comments for the American Bankers Association that the government is prepared to intervene again "if smaller institutions suffer deposit runs that pose the risk of contagion."

Many of the recent embattled bank stocks reacted favorably and moved higher in the first half of the week as investors anxiously awaited the FOMC decision on Wednesday, which brought sharp declines at the index level that day.

Briefly, the FOMC voted unanimously to raise the target range for the fed funds rate by 25 basis points to 4.75-5.00% and the updated Summary of Economic Projections showed the Fed's median terminal rate of 5.10% unchanged from December. Stocks initially rallied on this news before taking a sharp turn lower as Fed Chair Powell gave his press conference.

The sell off was hastened by Fed Chair Powell's acknowledgment that Fed participants do not see rate cuts this year. Separately, he also acknowledged his belief that the events in the banking system do not help the possibility of a soft landing for the economy.

All together, Mr. Powell did not sound especially hawkish nor dovish in his commentary. Importantly though, he did not sound particularly confident in the outlook either and we suspect that lack of confidence played a part as well in undermining investor confidence that led to the selling during his presentation.

More central banks followed suit later in the week. The Bank of England announced a 25-bps rate hike and hinted at more increases in the future while central banks from Switzerland, Norway, Hong Kong, and Philippines also hiked their policy rates.

By the end of Friday's session, price action suggested that the market had shaken off some of the worries that drove downside moves this week. The main indices closed the session higher despite sharp declines in Europe's major indices on the news that Deutsche Bank's (DB) cost of default insurance jumped to a four-year high.

The Treasury market also exhibited volatility this week. Ultimately, the 2-yr note yield fell five basis points this week to 3.77% and the 10-yr note yield fell two basis points to 3.38%.

Only two S&P 500 sectors finished the week with declines -- real estate (-1.4%) and utilities (-1.2%) -- while the communication services (+3.4%), energy (+2.3%), and information technology (+2.0%) sectors saw the biggest gains.

·   Nasdaq Composite: +1.7% for the week / +13.0% YTD

·   S&P 500: +1.4% for the week / +3.4% YTD

·   S&P Midcap 400: +1.3% for the week / -1.1% YTD

·   Russell 2000: +0.5% for the week / -1.5% YTD

·   Dow Jones Industrial Average: +1.2% for the week / -2.7% YTD

Market Recap - BANKING WORRIES DRIVE MIXED PRICE ACTION

Banking Worries That Began To Surface Late Last Week Continued To Plague Investors Throughout This Week.

Market participants learned Sunday through a joint statement from the Federal Reserve, Treasury, and FDIC that all depositors at Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank of New York would be fully protected even though both banks had been taken over by regulators. In turn, the Fed also introduced a Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) that will help banks avert selling Treasury and other government securities at a loss by allowing them to offer those securities to the Fed, which will value them at par, as collateral.

Those actions were designed to shore up confidence in the banking industry, but price action in the bank stocks this week suggested confidence has still not been restored.

First Republic Bank (FRC) was at the epicenter of the bank stock trade, having been the beneficiary of news that 11 large banks, including JPMorgan Chase (JPM), will collectively make $30 billion of uninsured deposits into the bank. That news on Thursday triggered a massive reversal in shares of FRC to the upside, but by Friday, FRC was seeing large losses again after announcing the suspension of its common share dividend and that its borrowing from the Federal Reserve from March 10-15 varied from $20 billion to $109 billion. 

The latter news coupled with the report that banks borrowed $11.9 billion from the newly announced Bank Term Funding Program and approximately $153 billion from the Fed's discount window for the week ending March 15 once again rattled investors and led to widespread selling of the bank stocks to end the week. 

With investors lacking confidence in the banking industry, a risk-off mentality drove price action for most of the week. Buyers piled into mega cap stocks that are viewed as being distant from the banking sector fallout, having strong balance sheets and being more resilient in an economic slowdown. Alphabet, NVIDIA, and Microsoft all gained more than 12.0% this week. 

The Mega Cap Growth Index jumped 5.7% this week, helping to prop up returns at the index level for an otherwise weak market. To wit, the S&P 500 Equal Weight Index declined 1.7% this week while the market-cap weighted S&P 500 ended the week up 1.4%.

The influence of the mega cap stocks was evident in the outperformance of the communication services (+6.9%), information technology (+5.7%), and consumer discretionary (+2.4%) sectors, all of which house mega cap constituents. That outperformance was more of a safety trade that also manifested itself in the outperformance of the defensive-oriented utilities (+3.9%), consumer staples (+1.3%), and health care (+1.3%) sectors.

Similarly, price action in the Treasury market also reflected a flight to safety in conjunction with concerns the economy may weaken considerably because of the banking sector's problems. On a related note, oil prices dropped 13.5% this week to $66.33/bbl on demand concerns.

The 2-yr note yield plunged 77 basis points this week to 3.82% and the 10-yr note yield fell 30 basis points to 3.40%, also driven in part by a belief that the Fed isn't going to be able to raise rates as much as previously thought and may be forced to cut rates relatively soon.

The latter point notwithstanding, the CME FedWatch Tool shows a 64.2% probability that the Fed will raise rates by 25 basis points at the March 21-22 FOMC meeting. That is up from 59.8% a week ago. Notably, the European Central Bank agreed this week to raise its key policy rates by 50 basis points despite worries surrounding Credit Suisse, saying it did so because "inflation is projected to remain too high for too long."

·   Nasdaq Composite: +4.4% for the week / +11.1% YTD

·   Russell 2000: -2.6% for the week / -2.0% YTD

·   S&P Midcap 400: -3.2% for the week / -2.3% YTD

·   S&P 500: +1.4% for the week / +2.0% YTD

·   Dow Jones Industrial Average: -0.2% for the week / -3.9% YTD

Market Recap - Sharp decline on Powell testimony and SVB Financial problems

It was a losing week for the stock market as investors digested Fed Chair Powell’s testimony before Congress, the February employment report, and news of SVB Financial’s Silicon Valley Bank being shut down.

Downside moves this week had the S&P 500 slice through support at its 50-day moving average, then its 200-day moving average. 

The market started to get a bit shaky after Fed Chair Powell's remarks to the Senate Banking Committee and House Financial Services Committee had investors rethinking the possibility of a 50 basis points rate hike at the March FOMC meeting. 

Participants took notice of the following remarks from his prepared testimony:

"Although inflation has been moderating in recent months, the process of getting inflation back down to 2 percent has a long way to go and is likely to be bumpy. As I mentioned, the latest economic data have come in stronger than expected, which suggests that the ultimate level of interest rates is likely to be higher than previously anticipated. If the totality of the data were to indicate that faster tightening is warranted, we would be prepared to increase the pace of rate hikes. Restoring price stability will likely require that we maintain a restrictive stance of monetary policy for some time."

Mr. Powell, in the Q&A portion of his testimony, acknowledged that it is likely that the ultimate rate the Fed writes down in its Summary of Economic projections at the March meeting is likely to be higher than what was written down at the December meeting. He also added that the economic data thus far suggests that the Fed has not overtightened and still has more work to do.

Notably, the fed funds futures market saw an abrupt turn in expectations for the March FOMC meeting, pricing in a 78.6% probability of a 50 basis points rate hike versus just 31.9% before Fed Chair Powell's testimony. 

The reaction to Fed Chair Powell's remarks was jarring enough for the capital markets, but things would get even more challenging in the wake of news on Thursday that SVB Financial (SIVB) was seeking to raise capital after it saw elevated cash burn from its clients. That news was disconcerting for market participants knowing that something typically "breaks" when the Fed is in an aggressive tightening cycle, and that the banks, whether they are the specific problem in that regard, will likely get pulled into it nonetheless given their lending role.

Around 12:30 p.m. ET Friday, it was announced that SVB Financial Group's Silicon Valley Bank was shut down as the FDIC created a Deposit Insurance National Bank of Santa Clara to protect insured depositors of Silicon Valley Bank, Santa Clara, California. That news contributed to added flight to safety interest in the Treasury market and further prompted market participants to rein in their risk exposure amid concerns about a possible contagion effect. 

The 2-yr note yield declined 27 basis points this week to 4.59% while the 10-yr note yield dropped 26 basis points to 3.70%.

With the fallout surrounding SVB Financial, the fed funds futures market pivoted back to thinking that the Fed is likely to raise rates by only 25 basis points at the March FOMC meeting. To that end, the CME FedWatch Tool indicates only a 39.5% probability now of a 50 basis points rate increase.

The SVB Financial situation largely overshadowed a relatively pleasing February employment report on Friday that was accented with stronger than expected nonfarm payrolls and weaker than expected average hourly earnings growth. 

The S&P 500 settled Friday near its lowest levels of the week with losses in all 11 sectors. 

For the week, the worst performing sector was the financial sector, which declined 8.5%, followed by a 7.6% decline in the materials sector, a 7.0% drop in the real estate sector, a 5.6% decline in the consumer discretionary sector, a 5.4% decline for the energy sector, and a 4.5% drop for the industrial sector. The best performing sector this week was the consumer staples sector, which was down 1.9%.

·   Nasdaq Composite: -4.7% for the week / +6.4% YTD

·   Russell 2000: -8.1% for the week / +0.7% YTD

·   S&P Midcap 400: -7.4% for the week / +0.9% YTD

·   S&P 500: -4.6% for the week / +0.6% YTD

·   Dow Jones Industrial Average: -4.4% for the week / -3.7% YTD

Market Recap - Technicals and rates dictating price action

The stock market was able to break its losing streak this week despite ongoing concerns about sticky inflation and the Fed raising rates higher for longer.

The upside bias was supported by technical buying interest, along with a drop in market rates by the end of the week.  

There may have also been a feeling that the market was oversold on a short-term basis driving this week's gains. Entering Monday's session, the S&P 500 had declined 5.0% from its close on February 2 (the day before the January employment report was released). 

Inflation concerns were stoked this week by data releases, including the February ISM Manufacturing Index, the weekly initial jobless claims, and the revised Q4 productivity. Weekly claims remained remarkably low, reflecting a tight labor market, while Q4 unit labor costs rose 6.3% from the same quarter last year, reflecting stubbornly high wage-based inflation. The sticking point from the ISM Manufacturing Index was that the Prices Index rose to 51.3% from 44.5%, marking the first price increase in four months. This price data, we would add, followed a higher-than-expected February CPI reading for Germany. 

The Treasury market responded strongly to this week's data. The 10-yr note yield surged past 4.00%, hitting 4.07% at its high, before pulling back to 3.96% by Friday's close. The 2-yr note yield, which is more sensitive to changes in the Fed funds rate, rose eight basis points this week to 4.86%. 

Despite the rising market rates, the main indices held up okay thanks to technical support. Buyers stepped in when the S&P 500 breached its 200-day moving average, and by Friday's close the index was comfortably back above its 50-day moving average.  

Most of the S&P 500 sectors logged a gain this week led by materials (+4.0%), communication services (+3.3%), and industrials (+3.3%). The materials and industrials sectors may have been reacting to China reporting stronger-than-expected Manufacturing PMI and Non-Manufacturing readings for February. 

The only sectors to decline this week were utilities (-0.7%) and consumer staples (-0.4%).  

The U.S. Dollar Index fell 0.7% for the week to 104.50. 

WTI crude oil futures rose 4.6% this week to $79.79/bbl and natural gas futures surged 28.7% to $3.14/mmbtu.  

·   Nasdaq Composite: +2.6% for the week / +11.7% YTD 

·   Russell 2000: +2.0% for the week / +9.5% YTD 

·   S&P Midcap 400: +1.8% for the week / +9.0% YTD 

·   S&P 500: +1.9% for the week / +5.4% YTD 

·   Dow Jones Industrial Average: +1.8% for the week / +0.7% YTD 

Market Recap - Short Week Brings Sizable Losses

This Holiday-Shortened Week Was Another Losing One For The Stock Market. Investors Were Still Saddled With The Same Issues That Drove Last Week's Downbeat Price Action.  

Those issues included a lingering sense that the market was due for consolidation, another jump in Treasury yields, and a growing belief that the Fed is likely to keep rates higher than expected for longer than expected. 

The latter point was drawn to the forefront midweek when investors received the FOMC Minutes for the Jan. 31-Feb. 1 meeting. They weren't overly hawkish-sounding and they weren't overly-dovish sounding. That doesn't mean, however, that they were just right. That's because they weren't really dovish at all. The default position continues to be a rate-hike position.

Market participants are cognizant that many of the data releases following the last FOMC meeting are not likely to change members' mindsets. Namely, a stronger than expected January employment report, the stronger than expected ISM Services PMI, the January CPI and PPI reports, all capped off by this week's stronger than expected core-PCE Price Index, which is the Fed's preferred inflation gauge.

Some anxiousness surrounding rate hikes may have been tempered on Friday by St. Louis Fed President Bullard (not an FOMC voter), who is generally a more hawkish Fed official. Mr. Bullard, after the hotter than expected core-PCE Price Index was released, remarked that "it appears that the Fed may be able to disinflate in an orderly manner and achieve a relatively soft landing." 

There were some upside moves in the market following NVIDIA's pleasing earnings and guidance before the positive bias was overshadowed by rate hike concerns. The downside bias this week had the S&P 500 take out support at its 50-day moving average before flirting with its 200-day moving average, which ultimately held up. 

Price action in the Treasury market was another headwind for equities this week, creating valuation concerns and worries about competition for stocks. The 2-yr note yield rose 17 basis points to 4.78% and the 10-yr note yield, which tested the 4.00% level, rose 12 basis points to 3.95%. The U.S. Dollar Index also rose noticeably this week, up 1.4% to 105.26. 

Only one of the 11 S&P 500 sectors registered a gain this week -- energy (+0.2%) -- while the consumer discretionary (-4.4%) and communication services (-4.4%) sectors suffered the steepest losses. 

WTI crude oil futures fell 0.1% this week to $76.41/bbl. Natural gas futures surged 10.1% to $2.50/mmbtu.  

  • Nasdaq Composite: -3.3% for the week / +8.9% YTD

  • Russell 2000: -2.9% for the week / +7.3% YTD

  • S&P Midcap 400: -2.5% for the week / +7.0% YTD

  • S&P 500: -2.7% for the week / +3.4% YTD

  • Dow Jones Industrial Average: -3.0% for the week / -1.0% YTD

Market Recap - Grappling with lingering rate hike concerns

The S&P 500 And Dow Jones Industrial Average Closed Lower For The Week As Investors Reacted To This Week's Economic Releases, Along With Comments From Several Fed Officials. 

Month over month inflation data in the January Consumer Price Index (CPI) was not pleasing, but the report reflected continued deceleration on a year over year basis. Services inflation, less energy services, was a notable exception, having accelerated to 7.2% year-over-year from 7.0% in December. 

On the heels of the CPI report, market participants received a much stronger than expected January retail sales report, higher-than-expected producer price data for January, and another remarkably low level of weekly initial jobless claims. 

The positive economic news, along with accelerating services inflation, fueled concerns about the possibility of the Fed raising rates more than previously expected and keeping them higher for longer than previously expected.

On a related note, Fed officials made comments corroborating the market's concerns. Cleveland Fed President Mester (non-FOMC voter) said she advocated for a 50-basis point rate hike at the February 1 FOMC meeting,  St. Louis Fed President Bullard (non-FOMC voter) said he wouldn't rule out supporting a 50-basis point rate hike at the March FOMC meeting, and Fed Governor Bowman (FOMC voter) said that rate hikes should continue until "a lot more progress" has been made on inflation.

Rate hike concerns were evident in Treasury market action this week, creating some headwinds due to valuation constraints and increased competition for stocks. The 2-yr note yield reached a high of 4.71% before settling up ten basis points to 4.61%. The 10-yr note yield reached a high of 3.92% before settling up nine basis points to 3.83%. Notably, the 1-yr T-bill yield hit 5.00% this week and settled at 5.06%. 

The U.S. Dollar Index rose 0.2% for the week to 103.88. 

Roughly half of the 11 S&P 500 sectors logged a gain this week led by consumer discretionary (+1.6%) and consumer staples (+0.9%). Meanwhile, the energy sector (-6.9%) was the worst performer by a wide margin amid falling oil prices. WTI crude oil futures fell 4.0% this week to $76.57/bbl. 

·    Nasdaq Composite: +0.6% for the week / +12.6% YTD

·    Russell 2000: +1.4% for the week / +10.5% YTD

·    S&P Midcap 400: +1.0% for the week / +9.7% YTD

·    S&P 500: -0.3% for the week / +6.2% YTD

·    Dow Jones Industrial Average: -0.1% for the week / +2.1% YTD

Below are truncated summaries of daily action:

Monday: 

Market participants were still willing to buy into weakness on Monday coming off last week's losses, which has been the case since the start of 2023. A quick dip right out of the gate had the S&P 500 slip below the 4,100 level before buyers stepped in and a rally effort took root, helped along by some short-covering activity and a fear of missing out on further gains.

Upside leadership from the mega cap space was an important driver of index level gains. Meta Platforms and Microsoft each rose more than 3.0% on Monday with no specific news catalysts and helped drive a 1.5% gain in the Mega Cap Growth Index.

There was no U.S. economic data of note on Monday, but participants received the NY Fed's Survey of Consumer Expectations. The survey showed that inflation expectations are mostly stable, but household income growth expectations have dropped. Some of the key findings from the survey included:

"Median inflation expectations remained unchanged at the one-year-ahead horizon, decreased by 0.2 percentage point at the three-year-ahead horizon, and increased by 0.1 percentage point at the five-year-ahead horizon, to 5.0%, 2.7% and 2.5%, respectively. The survey's measure of disagreement across respondents (the difference between the 75th and 25th percentile of inflation expectations) decreased slightly at the one-year horizon, remained unchanged at the three-year horizon, and increased at the five-year horizon.

After increasing each month since September of last year, the median expected growth in household income dropped by 1.3 percentage point to 3.3%. This is the largest one-month drop in the nearly ten-year history of the series. The January reading, however, is only slightly below its 12-month trailing average of 3.5%, and the series remains well above its pre-pandemic levels. January's decrease was more pronounced among respondents with no more than a high school education, respondents older than 60, and those with annual household incomes below $50k."

Tuesday:

Tuesday's trade was mixed as investors digested the January Consumer Price Index (CPI). 

Briefly, total CPI increased 0.5% month-over-month (Briefing.com consensus 0.5%) following last month's upwardly revised 0.1% increase (from -0.1%) and core-CPI, which excludes food and energy, increased 0.4% month-over-month (Briefing.com consensus 0.4%) on top of last month's upwardly revised 0.4% increase (from 0.3%). On a year-over-year basis, total CPI was up 6.4% -- the smallest 12-month increase since the period ending October 2021 -- and core-CPI was up 5.6% -- the smallest 12-month increase since December 2021.

The year-over-year levels were not as low as expected; and it didn't escape notice that services inflation, less energy services, accelerated to 7.2% year-over-year from 7.0% in December. 

The stock market moved higher shortly after the open with investors seemingly still willing to buy on weakness before the early gains faded and the S&P 500 briefly slipped below the 4,100 level. The major indices were able to bounce somewhat, though, as Treasury yields back off their highs. The main indices ultimately closed the session well above their intraday lows.  

The Treasury market was more resolute with its reaction to the CPI data. The 2-yr note yield, which stood at 4.50% just before the report, surged to 4.66% before settling the session at 4.63%. The 10-yr note yield, at 3.68% before the report, surged to 3.79% before settling the session at 3.76%.

Reviewing Tuesday's economic data:

·    Total CPI increased 0.5% month-over-month (Briefing.com consensus 0.5%) following last month's upwardly revised 0.1% increase (from -0.1%) and core-CPI, which excludes food and energy, increased 0.4% month-over-month (Briefing.com consensus 0.4%) on top of last month's upwardly revised 0.4% increase (from 0.3%). The index for shelter accounted for nearly half of the monthly all items increase.

·    On a year-over-year basis, total CPI was up 6.4% -- the smallest 12-month increase since the period ending October 2021 -- and core-CPI was up 5.6% -- the smallest 12-month increase since December 2021. Still, the year-over-year levels were not as low as expected.

·         The key takeaway from the report is that there has been a clear deceleration from peak inflation; however, the inflation rates are not nearly low enough to suggest the Fed would even be thinking about cutting rates this year.

Wednesday: 

Market participants received a much stronger than expected January retail sales report ahead of Wednesday's open, which reflected continued strength in the economy, but left the market concerned that the Fed will raise rates more than expected. Briefly, total sales in January were up 3.0% month-over-month (Briefing.com consensus 1.7%) and sales, excluding autos, up 2.3% (Briefing.com consensus 0.8%).

Equities started the day in retreat mode, but true to 2023 form, investors stepped in to buy the early weakness. The main indices all closed the session at or near their best levels of the day. The rebound in the stock market, in spite of rising market rates, suggests perhaps that buyers were influenced more by the hopeful economic implications of the January retail sales data than its potentially adverse implications for monetary policy.

High-beta stocks, uplifted by the positive earnings news and guidance from the likes of Airbnb, Roblox, and Analog Devices, paced Wednesday's gains.

Reviewing Wednesday's economic data:

·    Weekly MBA Mortgage Applications Index -7.7%; Prior -7.4%

·    January Retail Sales 3.0% (Briefing.com consensus 1.7%); Prior -1.1%; January Retail Sales ex-auto 2.3% (Briefing.com consensus 0.8%); Prior was revised to -0.9% from -1.1%

·         The key takeaway from the report is that consumers were spending freely on goods in January despite the ongoing inflation pressure; in fact, every single sales category showed a month-over-month increase, led by a 7.2% surge in sales at food services and drinking places.

·    February Empire State Manufacturing -5.8 (Briefing.com consensus -19.0); Prior -32.9

·    January Industrial Production 0.0% (Briefing.com consensus 0.5%); Prior was revised to -1.0% from -0.7%; January Capacity Utilization 78.3% (Briefing.com consensus 79.1%); Prior was revised to 78.4% from 78.8%

·         The key takeaway from the report is that the soft reading for January can be attributed entirely to a drop in the output of utilities. Otherwise, there was some welcome rebound strength in both mining and manufacturing output, the latter of which saw advances in durable, nondurable, and other manufacturing activity.

·    December Business Inventories 0.3% (Briefing.com consensus 0.3%); Prior was revised to 0.3% from 0.4%

·    February NAHB Housing Market Index 42 (Briefing.com consensus 37); Prior 35

Thursday:

The stock market started, and ended, Thursday's session on a decidedly downbeat note. The negative bias was in response to a higher-than-expected Producer Price Index (PPI) number for January, paired with another remarkably low level of weekly initial jobless claims, which fueled concerns that the Fed will not pause its rate hikes in the near future.

The main indices sank shortly after the open, but there was a fairly strong recovery effort taking place throughout most of the session. The recovery coincided with buyers stepping in when the S&P 500 breached the 4,100 level, along with Treasury yields backing down from their post-data release highs.

There was a sharp reversal in the last hour of trading that had the major indices close the session at or near their worst levels of the day, which took the S&P 500 below 4,100 again. The late afternoon plunge was precipitated by St. Louis Fed President James Bullard (not an FOMC voter) saying that he wouldn't rule out supporting a 50-basis point rate hike at the March FOMC meeting, adding that he advocated for a 50-basis point rate hike at the February 1 meeting, according to Bloomberg.

To be fair, the initial recovery effort happened after Cleveland Fed President Mester (not an FOMC voter) said earlier today that she, too, was advocating for a 50-basis point rate hike at the February 1 meeting. Nonetheless, the stock market used Mr. Bullard's position as an excuse to rein in some of its recovery enthusiasm.

Reviewing Thursday's economic data:

·    January Housing Starts 1.309 mln (Briefing.com consensus 1.355 mln); Prior was revised to 1.371 mln from 1.382 mln; January Building Permits 1.339 mln (Briefing.com consensus 1.350 mln); Prior was revised to 1.337 mln from 1.330 mln

·         The key takeaway from the report was the lack of growth in both single-family starts (-4.3%) and permits (-1.8%), which is a reflection of the adverse impact of rising interest rates and ongoing inflation pressures that are crimping builders' willingness to build new homes and buyers' willingness to purchase new homes due to affordability constraints.

·    January PPI 0.7% (Briefing.com consensus 0.4%); Prior was revised to -0.2% from -0.5%; January Core PPI 0.5% (Briefing.com consensus 0.3%); Prior was revised to 0.3% from 0.1%

·         The key takeaway from the report for the market is that headline inflation was hotter than expected on a monthly basis. That will stoke worries about inflation pressures persisting at higher levels for longer than expected -- and the Fed keeping rates higher for longer -- even though there was improvement on a year-over-year basis.

·    Weekly Initial Claims 194K (Briefing.com consensus 203K); Prior was revised to 195K from 196K; Weekly Continuing Claims 1.696 mln; Prior was revised to 1.680 mln from 1.688 mln

·         The key takeaway from the report is that the persistence of initial claims below 200,000 reflects a very tight labor market, and a reluctance on the part of most companies to cut their workforce, which will continue to drive worries at the Fed about tight labor market conditions feeding into stickier wage-based inflation pressures.

·    February Philadelphia Fed Index -24.3 (Briefing.com consensus -8.0); Prior -8.9

Friday: 

The stock market opened decidedly weak, carrying over Thursday's downside momentum, as investors looked to take some money off the table after a big run recently. Concerns about the Fed raising rates higher than expected for longer than expected also contributed to the early weakness.

The general tone started to shift, however, as market rates backed down from overnight highs. The 2-yr note yield, which hit 4.71% overnight, settled the session down two basis points to 4.61%. The 10-yr note yield, which hit 3.92% overnight, also fell two basis points today to 3.83%.

Ultimately, the main indices closed the session near their best levels of the day, which had the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Russell 2000 sporting slim gains. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq had their upside moves limited somewhat by downside pressure from the mega cap space.

Reviewing Friday's economic data:

·    January Import prices -0.2%; Prior was revised to -0.1% from 0.4%

·    January Import Prices ex-oil 0.3%; Prior 0.4%

·    January Export Prices 0.8%; Prior was revised to -3.2% from -2.6%

·    January Export Prices ex-ag. 0.8%; Prior was revised to -3.3% from -2.7%

·    January Leading Indicators -0.3% (Briefing.com consensus -0.3%); Prior was revised to -0.8% from -1.0%

Market Recap - Market pulls back in consolidation trade

The stock market lost some ground this week due to a sense that the market was due for a period of consolidation on the back of rate-hike and valuation concerns.

Coming off last Friday's much stronger than expected January employment report, there wasn't a great deal of conviction on the sell side or the buy side this week. Ultimately, the major indices all registered losses, which had the S&P 500 settle Friday's session below the 4,100 level.

Monday:

Market participants were hesitant in front of Fed Chair Powell's "Conversation with David Rubenstein" at the Economic Club of Washington, D.C. on Tuesday and there was also some increased geopolitical tension after the U.S. shot down China's suspected spy balloon off the South Carolina coast last Saturday.

The indices started the session in a southerly direction, and while they rebounded from their early lows that saw the S&P 500 slip below 4,100, they could never sustain any upward momentum. Instead, they spent much of Monday's session moving laterally in a relatively tight trading range below their flatlines. The Dow Jones Industrial Average briefly scooted above its flatline in late afternoon trading before fading again into negative territory.

There was no U.S. economic data of note on Monday.

Tuesday:

The stock market kicked off Tuesday's session on a mixed note. The main indices oscillated around their flat lines in the first half of the day as investors awaited Fed Chair Powell's "Conversation with David Rubenstein" at the Economic Club of Washington, D.C. at 12:40 p.m. ET.

Mr. Powell didn't say anything too surprising, but the market responded with some volatile price action nonetheless. The main indices initially shot higher, a move that was attributed to Mr. Powell's relatively calm demeanor when asked about Friday's stronger than expected January jobs report.

That initial upside momentum quickly gave way to selling pressure, though, after Mr. Powell said that the Fed will react to the incoming data and will do more rate hikes if the data suggest that is necessary. That disclaimer has been provided by him in the past, however, so it was not surprising either. He also said that the Fed has a significant road ahead to get inflation down to 2.0% and that he doesn't think it will be a quick move to 2.0%.

The aforementioned reversal in the major indices saw the S&P 500 breach support at the 4,100 level, where buyers stepped in (again) and a technical rebound effort took root, supported by short-covering activity. Ultimately, the main indices closed near their best levels on Tuesday.

Also helping late Tuesday was a ramp in Microsoft and other AI-related stocks after Microsoft announced its new AI-powered Microsoft Bing search engine and Edge browser.

Participants received the following data on Tuesday:

·    December Trade Balance -$67.4 bln (Briefing.com consensus -$68.5 bln); Prior was revised to -$61.0 bln from -$61.5 bln

·         The key takeaway from the report is that it reflected a slowdown in global trade, evidenced by a $2.1 billion decline in the three-month moving average for the goods and services deficit to $68.6 billion that resulted from a $2.6 billion decrease in average exports and a $4.7 billion decrease in average imports.

·    Consumer credit increased by $11.6 bln in November (Briefing.com consensus $24.5 bln) following an upwardly revised $33.1 bln (from $27.9 bln) in November.

·         The key takeaway from the report is that total consumer credit expansion slowed in December, with higher interest rates crimping loan demand. Nonrevolving credit saw its smallest expansion ($4.3 billion) since August 2020.

Wednesday:

Equities spent Wednesday's session in retreat mode largely due to concerns that the market got overextended and was due for some consolidation. Selling efforts were broad based but generally modest in scope from a sector and index standpoint. 

A notable exception was Alphabet, however, which plunged 7.4% on Wednesday. Shares of GOOG were reeling on concerns the company is behind in the AI space -- a concern that was magnified by a report that its Bard AI bot provided an incorrect answer at the company's launch event.

Wednesday's weakness followed on the heels of President Biden's State of the Union address in which he called for a billionaire minimum tax, a quadrupling of the tax on corporate stock buybacks, and raising the debt limit without conditions. He also made a case for more antitrust regulation of technology companies.

Given the divided Congress, the market wasn't overly concerned about new tax policies being passed, but it was certainly interested in what happens with the debt limit discussions and the possibility of increased regulations.

Participants received the following data on Wednesday:

·    Weekly MBA Mortgage Applications Index 7.4%; Prior -9.0%

·    December Wholesale Inventories 0.1% (Briefing.com consensus 0.5%); Prior was revised to 0.9% from 1.0%

Thursday:

The stock market started Thursday's session with a distinct bullish bias, yet the bulls were soon corralled and the major indices spent nearly the entire session retracing their opening steps in what became a trend-down day. The selling that took place was broad based, but orderly; nonetheless, it left the S&P 500 below 4,100 at the closing bell.

A favorable response to Walt Disney's better-than-expected fiscal Q1 earnings report and restructuring announcement, falling Treasury yields, and another weekly initial jobless claims report that was supportive of the soft landing scenario provided the fuel for the opening bid.

The market's footing started to slide when Treasury yields began moving up from their overnight lows. The jump in market rates compounded the selling pressure that had already taken root.

Separately, Thursday's early rally effort also fostered some pressing concerns about the market trading at a premium valuation despite declining earnings estimates. Those concerns triggered renewed selling interest that was fairly unrelenting over the course of Thursday's session.

Participants received the following data on Thursday:

·    Initial claims for the week ending February 4 increased by 13,000 to 196,000 (Briefing.com consensus 194,000). Continuing jobless claims for the week ending increased by 38,000 to 1.688 million.

·         Notwithstanding the jump in initial claims, the key takeaway is that claims remain below 200,000, which is indicative of a very tight labor market and a reluctance on the part of most companies to cut their workforce.

Friday:

Friday's trade was decidedly lackluster ahead of key data releases next week, including the Consumer Price Index, Retail Sales, Industrial Production, Housing Starts, and Producer Price Index reports all from January.

There was a lack of conviction from both buyers and sellers, which left the S&P 500 and Dow with modest gains while the Nasdaq logged a modest loss. Lagging mega cap stocks kept pressure on index level performance. Tesla was a losing standout among the mega cap stocks amid investors' concerns that a potential Department of Transportation order could force Tesla to make its charging stations available to other electric vehicles.

Oil prices reclaimed some lost ground on Friday, which also pressured the equity market, in response to Russia saying it is going to cut production by 500,000 barrels per day in March in response to international sanctions. WTI crude oil futures rose 8.7% this week to $79.66/bbl.

Participants received the following data on Friday:

·    February Univ. of Michigan Consumer Sentiment - Prelim 66.4 (Briefing.com consensus 65.0); Prior 64.9

·         The key takeaway from the report is the understanding that the year-ahead inflation expectation increased versus January, raising concerns, along with angst over rising unemployment, about consumers' future discretionary spending capacity.

·    The Treasury Budget for January showed a deficit of $38.8 bln versus a surplus of $118.7 bln a year ago. The Treasury Budget data is not seasonally adjusted, so the January deficit cannot be compared to the deficit of $85.0 bln for December.

Only one of the 11 S&P 500 sectors logged a gain this week -- energy (+5.0%) -- while the communication services sector (-6.6%) registered the largest decline by a wide margin.

The 2-yr Treasury note yield rose 22 basis points this week to 4.51% and the 10-yr note yield rose 21 basis points to 3.74%.

Those moves in the Treasury market reflected some budding angst that last Friday's January employment report will give the Fed more room to raise rates and to keep rates higher for longer. This sentiment was also evident in the fed funds futures market, which is now pricing in a 78.0% probability of a third, 25-basis point rate increase at the May FOMC meeting, according to the CME FedWatch Tool, versus only a 30% probability last Thursday (i.e., the day before the employment report).

·    Nasdaq Composite: -2.4% for the week / +12.0% YTD

·    Russell 2000: -3.4% for the week / +9.0% YTD

·    S&P Midcap 400: -2.5% for the week / +8.6% YTD

·    S&P 500: -1.1% for the week / +6.5% YTD

·    Dow Jones Industrial Average: -0.2% for the week / +2.2% YTD