The power of “unlikely.” That’s the singular word, actually spoken last Wednesday, that is responsible for the fourth consecutive day of furious buying as the markets become ever more hopeful over the potential for coming rate cuts. As today’s expert put it, “Powell told the market that a hike was unlikely. Those were his words – ‘unlikely’ – and they took that to mean that he wants to cut.” The inflation outlook is still uncertain but the market hopes rates are restrictive enough to slow the economy. It’s also hopeful that the ECB is more confident about rate cuts and believe euro zone inflation will reach their 2% target by mid-next year. Volume came in at 10 billion, still below the 4-week average.
Global shares rally on rate cut hopes,
yen weakens
By Herbert Lash and Nell Mackenzie
Mon May 6, 2024 4:58 PM
DJ: 38,675.68 +450.02 NAS: 16,156.33 +315.37 S&P: 5,127.79 +63.59 5/3
DJ: 38,852.27 +176.59 NAS: 16,349.25 +192.92 S&P: 5,180.74
+52.95 5/6
NEW YORK/LONDON, May 6 (Reuters) - A gauge of global stock markets rallied on Monday on
optimism that major central banks will cut interest rates this year, while the
yen weakened against the dollar after a surge last week from Japan's suspected
currency intervention. Stocks on both
sides of the Atlantic advanced, and in Asia too, as a softer-than-expected U.S.
labor market report on Friday led traders to revive bets that the Federal
Reserve would ease monetary policy as early as September. The dollar index , a measure of the U.S.
currency against six major trading peers, was lower for a fourth straight
session after Friday's data showed the lowest jobs gain since October calmed
any angst that the Fed might even hike again.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell "told the market that a hike was unlikely. Those
were his words, 'unlikely,' and therefore they took that to mean that he wants to cut," said
Brad Conger, chief investment officer at Hirtle Callaghan & Co in
Conshohocken, Pennsylvania. However, the
inflation outlook is still
uncertain as the market
hopes rates are restrictive enough to slow the economy and reduce the
pace of price increases, Conger said. New
York Fed President John Williams on Monday said that at some
undefined point the U.S. central bank will lower its rate target, but for now
monetary policy is in a "very good place," while Richmond Fed
President Thomas Barkin said the battle against inflation will likely require a
hit to demand.
On Wall Street, the Dow
Jones Industrial Average (.DJI), opens new tab rose
0.46%, the S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab gained
1.03% and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC), opens new tab advanced
1.19%.
In Europe, the pan-regional STOXX 600 (.STOXX), opens new tab closed
up 0.53% on signs the European
Central Bank is more confident about cutting rates as euro zone
inflation continues to decelerate, three ECB policymakers said. Philip Lane, Gediminas Simkus and Boris
Vujcic said separately that the inflation and growth data cemented their
belief that euro zone
inflation, which was 2.4% in April, will slow to the central bank's 2% target by the
middle of next year.
MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe (.MIWD00000PUS), opens new tab rose
0.50% to close at 1,066.73, it's highest since June 2022. Markets in Britain
and Japan were closed for public holidays.
The dollar index fell 0.07% to 105.10, leaving the euro up 0.07% at
$1.0766.
Goldman Sachs raised its 2024 EPS growth forecast for STOXX
600 (.STOXX), opens new tab companies
to 6% from 3% earlier, the bank said in a note on Friday.
According to Goldman, a 10% annual rise in Brent prices adds
about 2.5 percentage points to annual EPS growth, and a 10% weaker euro/dollar
exchange rate adds about the same. Treasury yields ticked lower as investors assessed last week's
subdued job creation, which reinforced view that the U.S. economy was not
overheating enough to derail a rate cut.
The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notes fell 1.3 basis points to 4.487%, from 4.5% late on
Friday. Traders are now pricing in 43 basis points
of Fed rate cuts by year end, with the first cut possibly in September,
according to LSEG's rate probability app. In recent weeks, traders had priced
in just one cut due to signs of sticky inflation.
Oil prices rose after Saudi Arabia hiked June crude prices for
most regions and as the prospect of a quick agreement for a Gaza ceasefire deal
appeared slim, reviving fears that combat
between Hamas and Israeli forces will resume soon. U.S. crude settled up 37 cents at $78.48 a barrel and Brent rose
37 cents to settle at $83.33 per barrel.
Elsewhere, traders remained on alert for further volatility in the yen, after
last week's bouts of suspected intervention from Japanese
authorities to stop a sharp slide in the currency. Tokyo is believed to have spent more than 9 trillion yen ($59 billion)
to support its currency last week, as suggested by data from Bank of
Japan, taking the yen from a 34-year low of 160.245 per dollar to a roughly
one-month high of 151.86 over the span of a week. The yen gave back some of those gains on
Monday and was last 0.63% lower at 153.95 per dollar.
Gold prices climbed as
the dollar weakened. U.S. gold futures
for June delivery settled 0.9% higher at $2,331.20 per ounce. Bitcoin gained 0.65% at $63,343.00 and
ethereum declined 1.2% at $3,077.3.
Per the CBOE, volume
came in at 10 billion.
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