World Week Ahead: Investors seek new inputs
World Week Ahead: Investors seek new inputs
By Margreet Dietz
May 25 (BusinessDesk) - As earnings season fades and data continues to disappoint, investors are searching for fresh reasons to extend their equities bets after global markets mostly extended their bull-market rallies last week in lighter than usual volume.
Both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and
the Standard & Poor's 500 Index touched record highs last
week, though they eased ahead of the weekend. On Friday
Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen confirmed in a speech
that the central bank remains intent on lifting its
benchmark interest rate at some point this year. But she was
cautious about what lies ahead too.
“If the
economy continues to improve as I expect, I think it will be
appropriate at some point this year to take the initial step
to raise the federal funds rate target and begin the process
of normalising monetary policy,” Yellen said on
Friday.
“To support taking this step, however, I
will need to see continued improvement in labour market
conditions, and I will need to be reasonably confident that
inflation will move back to 2 percent over the medium
term,” Yellen added. “After we begin raising the federal
funds rate, I anticipate that the pace of normalisation is
likely to be gradual.”
Inflation is gathering
steam. A Labor Department report on Friday showed the
so-called core consumer price index, which excludes food and
energy, rose a higher-than-expected 0.3 percent in
April.
Last week, the S&P 500 rose 0.2 percent,
while the Nasdaq Composite Index added 0.8 percent. The Dow
slipped 0.2 percent. Today, US markets are closed for the
Memorial Day holiday.
US Treasuries fell, sending
yields on 10-year notes seven basis points higher last week
to 2.21 percent, according to Bloomberg.
"This is
probably the most telegraphed Fed lift-off in some time,"
Bruce Zaro, chief technical strategist at Bolton Global
Asset Management, told Reuters. "I think they're concerned
about the market's reaction—they don't want to have a
period of volatility that causes the market to react in a
crash-type form.”
The futures contracts show that
traders see a 61 percent chance that the first Fed rate hike
will come this December, based on CME FedWatch, which tracks
rate expectations using its Fed funds futures contracts,
according to Reuters.
“It gives the Fed more
ammunition in terms of when they want to hike,” Aaron
Kohli, US interest-rate strategist in New York with BNP
Paribas SA, one of 22 primary dealers that trade with the
Fed, told Bloomberg. “After this, I can see the Fed being
more aggressive.”
Not everyone agrees.
"We are of the camp that this rate cycle will be
low and slow," Collin Martin, director of fixed income at
Schwab Center for Financial Research in New York, told
Reuters. “The remarks from Yellen confirmed
that.”
For any further clues on the timing of an
increase investors will eye Fed officials speaking this
week. They include Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester in
Iceland, and Fed Vice Chair Stanley Fischer, in Israel
today; Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker, on Tuesday; as
well as San Francisco Fed President John Williams in
Singapore, and Minneapolis Fed President Narayana
Kocherlakota, on Thursday.
Yellen on Friday also
noted that the US housing market still lacks lustre, despite
improvements in home prices and home sales. In the coming
days fresh clues will arrive in the form of the FHFA house
price index, S&P Case-Shiller home price index, and new home
sales on Tuesday, and the pending home sales index, on
Thursday.
“Activity in the housing sector is
likely to improve only gradually,” Yellen
said.
Other economic data scheduled for release
this week include durable goods orders, PMI services,
consumer confidence, Richmond Fed manufacturing index, and
the Dallas Fed manufacturing survey, due Tuesday; weekly
jobless claims, due Thursday; GDP, Chicago PMI, and consumer
sentiment, due Friday.
In Europe, the Stoxx 600
Index climbed 2.9 percent last week.
Today UK,
German and Swiss markets are closed for public
holidays.
Here, reports slated for release in the
coming days include German consumer sentiment on Wednesday,
and euro-zone confidence on Thursday.
In Athens on
Saturday, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said progress is
being made on a new financial accord with the nation's
creditors though some work
remains.
(BusinessDesk)