Speaking at the Federal Reserve’s annual retreat to Jackson Hole, Wyoming on Friday, 25 August 2024, Fed Chair Jerome Powell finally committed to cutting U.S. interest rates after months of playing “will they or won’t they, even though everybody knows we’re going to.”The S&P 500 (Index: SPX) responded to the Fed’s commitment by rising 1.15%, ending the week at 5,634.61, up 1.45% from where the index closed out the preceding week.That’s less impressive than might have been predicted, but the level of the S&P 500 is consistent with investors focusing their attention on the current quarter of 2024-Q3. Investors have reason to do so because now the question at the center of billions of investment decisions is no longer “will they cut?” or “when will they cut?” but instead is now “how much will they cut?”The CME Group’s FedWatch Tool continues to anticipate the Fed will hold the Federal Funds Rate steady in its current target range of 5.25-5.50% until 18 September (2024-Q3). On that date, the Fed is expected to start a series of 0.25%-0.50% rate cuts that will occur at six-week intervals well into 2025.In the latest update for the alternative futures chart, we find the trajectory of the S&P 500 running just above the top end of the redzone forecast range.latest updateAs regular readers will recall, that redzone forecast range is based on the assumption that investors would be shifting their forward looking attention from the distant future quarter of 2025-Q2 toward the nearer term quarter of 2024-Q4 during the period it covers. Instead, the Fed’s long-awaited commitment to cutting rates has prompted investors to draw their attention back to the current quarter, which is why the S&P’s trajectory has settled where it has without any more impressive change in its level on the biggest news of the week. If we were to re-draw the redzone forecast range to show that adjustment, the actual trajectory of the S&P 500 would fall well within the projected range.As it is, without dramatic new information to compel it to perform otherwise, we think the S&P 500’s trajectory will increasing converge with the redzone forecast range shown on the chart because investors will have no reason to maintain their focus on the current quarter for much more than the next four weeks and will once again reset their forward time horizon. We think the next change will involve them shifting their attention toward 2024-Q4, which the redzone forecast range already assumes will happen.Meanwhile, other things happened during the week that was, here are the week’s market moving headlines:Monday, 19 August 2024
- US regional bank deals rise as lenders aim to bolster balance sheets
- Oil price dip keeps Brent below $80 on China demand woes
-
Fed to deliver three 25 quarter-point rate cuts this year; recession unlikely: Reuters poll
- Fed’s Kashkari says appropriate to debate Sept rate cut, WSJ reports
- Fed’s Daly says it is time to consider adjusting borrowing costs, FT reports
Tuesday, 20 August 2024
- Oil slips for a third day on Middle East tensions, China demand concerns
-
Fed officials uneasy about job market as they get ready for Jackson Hole
- Powell’s Jackson Hole message may be tilted by upcoming revision on jobs data, LPL says
- Fed’s Bowman still cautious about changing policy stance
- China’s rising youth unemployment breeds new working class: ‘Rotten-tail kids’
- BOJ highlights rising wage pressure from structural job market changes
- ECB may need to cut rates again in Sept, Rehn says
- German negotiated wage growth slows in likely relief for ECB
- Wall St ends lower ahead of Jackson Hole, snapping multi-session rally
Wednesday, 21 August 2024
-
US job growth in year through March was far lower than estimated
- US Jobs Revised Down By 818,000 In Election Year Shocker, Second Worst Revision In US History
- US Bureau of Labor Statistics under scrutiny again for latest data misstep
-
Oil slips on higher US crude stocks, easing Middle East tensions
- US oil export gains slow as output, global demand turn tepid
-
Fed steaming toward September rate cut, minutes from meeting show
- FOMC Minutes Show “Vast Majority” See September Cut As Appropriate
- China central bank warnings on long-dated bonds aim to curb systemic risks, watchdog says
- Japan’s July export growth lags expectations, volumes fall again
- BOJ to raise rates again by end-year, say 57% of economists – Reuters poll
Thursday, 22 August 2024
- US business activity edges lower; pricing power ebbs further
- US existing home sales rise more than expected in July
- Fed’s Schmid signals open mind on September rate cut
- Fed’s Harker is ready to start methodical course of rate cuts
- Fed’s Collins: will soon be appropriate to cut interest rates
- Fed has ‘clear path’ to achieving goals without recession, Collins says
- Japan’s Aug factory activity declines slow, PMI shows
- Quantitative Tightening Goes Global for the First Time, in Test for Markets
- Euro zone business activity gets boost from Olympics, PMI shows
- ECB policymakers shift focus to September meeting
- Wall St ends lower as tech shares weigh; Jackson Hole in focus
Friday, 23 August 2024
- US job market may be near tipping point, research shows
- Oil climbs over 2% after Fed’s Powell indicates US rate cuts
-
New homes sales rise 10.6% in July spurred by lower mortgage rates
- U.S. Home Sales Edged Up in July, Prices Still Near Record Highs
- US home sales ended a 4-month slide in July amid easing mortgage rates, more homes on the market
-
Fed’s Powell, in policy shift, says ‘time has come’ to cut rates
- Key quotes from Powell’s speech at Fed’s Jackson Hole conference
-
Fed policymakers flag rate cuts as job market cools
- Fed’s Goolsbee: Current rate policy too tight for economy
- Fed’s actions spoke louder than words in inflation fight, research shows
- Fed mortgage bond holdings play ‘central’ policy rule, paper says
- Japan’s core inflation picks up, but demand-driven growth below 2%
- Fed’s dovish shift a mixed blessing for BOJ rate hike plan
- Exclusive: ECB policymakers’ views converging on Sept rate cut, sources say
- ECB making good progress but job not done, Lane says
- Wall Street ends sharply higher as Powell cements September rate cut hopes
- Rate-sensitive real estate stocks outperform broader markets
The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tool’s projection of the real GDP growth rate for the current quarter of 2024-Q3 remained at +2.0% with no updates taking place during the past week. It will next be updated during the upcoming week.More By This Author:Less Than Useful Data: The Real-World Costs Of Bad Data
Summer 2024 Snapshot Of The Future For S&P 500 Dividends
Summer 2024 Snapshot Of Expected Future S&P 500 Earnings
Leave A Comment