Inflation Data Remains Key Driver for the S&P 500 This Week
December 11 2022 - 4:18PM
Finscreener.org
In the last week ended on
December 9, mixed economic data drove equity indices lower.
Investors and Wall Street are concerned over the possibility of a
recession in the United States as the Federal Reserve remains rigid
about lowering inflation rates.
The Dow
Jones fell 2.8%, while indices such as the S&P
500 and Nasdaq
fell by 3.4% and 4%, respectively, in the last five trading
sessions. Treasury yields had a slow start to the week before
rebounding higher. Crude oil prices continued to lose momentum as a
worsening global outlook continued to impact demand. The price of
the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude
fell 10% to $71 per barrel.
The Securities and Exchange
Commission recently issued a new set of guidelines for companies
that now have to disclose their crypto exposure to shareholders.
The ripple effects following the collapse of FTX and other major
crypto players in 2022 are now beginning to spread.
What next for the S&P 500 and
investors?
The BLS or Bureau of Labor
Statistics will release the Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for
November on Tuesday, which is an indicator of inflation. Prices are
expected to rise 7.6% year over year, compared to the 7.7% gain
witnessed in October and a peak of 9.1% in June.
Core inflation data excludes
energy and food costs and is expected to rise 6.2% year over year,
compared to 6.3% in October and a four-decade high of 6.6% in
September.
The FOMC (Federal Open market
Committee), which sets interest rates, will conclude the monetary
policy meeting for December on Wednesday. Wall Street expects
interest rates to increase by 50 basis points this month, setting
benchmark rates between 4.25% and 4.5%. The Fed has increased
benchmark rates by 375 basis points in 2022, which is the fastest
monetary tightening cycle in more than 40 years.
Retail sales data for November
will be reported on Thursday. A key indicator of consumer spending,
retail sales might fall by 0.1% in November (compared to the prior
month) and rise 7.9% year over year. Despite higher input prices,
retail sales continue to surge higher.
Finally, the personal savings
rate has fallen to the lowest level since 2005 to 2.3% as consumers
are spending a higher proportion of their income to finance
purchases.
Will the S&P 500 index experience another
sell-off?
According to Rich Weiss, the
chief investment officer at American Century Investment Management,
the obsession with policy hikes of the Federal Reserve have blinded
investors from economic realities.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq Index is up
10% from 52-week lows despite weak economic data from housing and
manufacturing and several earnings downgrades.
Weiss is worried the “pivot”
narrative might blindside investors from noticing deteriorating
fundamentals which might accelerate the sell-off next
year.
Historically, by the time the Fed
pivots and aims to lower interest rates, the economy is usually too
beat-up, triggering a broader market sell-off.
He explained, “The storm’s coming
now. Whether it’s going be a tropical rainstorm or a Category 4
hurricane is where people are betting. It’s just a question of how
severe and long-lasting it’s going to be.”
The triple threat of red-hot
inflation, earnings contraction, and a restrictive monetary policy
will continue to act as headwinds for equity investors in
2023.
Since the 1970s, the stock market
has fallen by 24% on average after a pivot towards a more
accommodative monetary policy.
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