Daily market snapshot

Published June 27, 2024
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Thursday, 6/27/2024 a.m.

  • Stocks open higher: Stocks are opening higher Thursday morning, with the S&P 500 on pace for its third consecutive day of gains. Communication services is the top-performing sector of the S&P 500 in early trading, while financials and utilities are among the laggards. On the economic front, initial jobless claims came in slightly lower than consensus expectations, while headline durable goods orders rose by 0.1% in May, above expectations for no change.* Overseas, Asian markets were mostly lower overnight in response to sluggish industrial profit growth in China, while European markets are mostly lower following a lower-than-expected eurozone economic-sentiment reading.* Bond yields are moving lower to start the day, with the 10-year Treasury yield ticking down to about 4.29% while the 2-year yield is down to 4.72%.* In the commodity space, oil prices are rising to over $81 per barrel, while gold is higher by roughly 0.8%.*
  • Markets eye inflation data and its implications on monetary policy: Market focus will shift to inflation with the release of personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation for May out tomorrow morning. Expectations are for headline PCE to be flat on a month-over-month basis and rise by 2.6% year-over-year.* Core PCE, the Fed's preferred measure of inflation, is expected to rise by a modest 0.1% month-over-month and 2.6% year-over-year. Earlier this month, consumer price index and producer price index inflation came in lower than expectations, providing markets with confidence that the trend in inflation remains lower after three consecutive months of higher-than-expected inflation readings to begin the year. In response, markets are now pricing in roughly two Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts in 2024 compared with only one at the end of April.** In our view, two rate cuts from the Fed in 2024 are a reasonable expectation but far from a certainty. In order to gain the confidence necessary to begin lowering rates, we expect the Fed will need to see several more consecutive months of lower inflation data. Perhaps more important to markets than the exact timing of rate cuts is the direction of policy rates, which we expect will be lower over the coming years. In our view, a multiyear rate-cutting cycle from the Fed in the absence of a recession should be supportive to stock and bond markets.
  • Jobless claims hold steady: Initial jobless claims for last week were 233,000, below expectations for 235,000 and below the prior reading of 239,000.* With today's reading, the four-week moving average rose to 236,000, which, while low by historical standards, is the highest reading since September 2023.* The modest uptick in jobless claims is consistent with our view that labor-market conditions will loosen in the months ahead. We would, however, reiterate that while we expect the labor market to cool, we don't expect a meaningful uptick in firing or unemployment. Rather, we'd expect the strong pace of job creation in recent months to potentially slow as the imbalance between supply and demand for labor normalizes. A healthy albeit easing labor market should provide support to consumer spending and help extend the economic expansion.

Brock Weimer, CFA
Associate Analyst

*FactSet **Bloomberg


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