By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) -TRADING DAY
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist
U.S. stocks fell on Thursday and the dollar and Treasury yields rose, as solid factory data cast a bit more doubt on the Fed’s readiness to lower interest rates next month. All eyes are now firmly on Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s Jackson Hole speech on Friday.
More on that below. In my column today, I look at the apparent contradiction between record inflows into U.S. assets from abroad, and the 125 basis points of Fed rate cuts traders are expecting by the end of next year. It doesn’t add up.
If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.
1. Fed’s expansive experiment in strategy to get a rebootat Jackson Hole 2. How Fed Chair Powell has used Jackson Hole to signalwhat’s next 3. What’s in Trump’s trade deal with Europe? 4. Washington’s chip stakes look like industrial policy onoverdrive 5. The UK is back in business. Someone forgot to tellBritish investors: Klement
Today’s Key Market Moves
* STOCKS: Britain’s FTSE 100 clocks record high for athird day, China hits 10-year high. Wall Street’s main threeindices fall – S&P 500 down for a fifth day, longest losingstreak this year. * SHARES/SECTORS: U.S. consumer staples -1.2%, biggestfall in two months. Walmart -4.5%, biggest fall in six months. * FX: Dollar rises across the board. In G10 FX, it gainsmost against low-yielding Swiss francs and yen. Japan’s currencyhas biggest fall this month. * BONDS: Japanese yields hit historic peaks – 10-yearhighest since 2008, 20-year since 1999. U.S. curve bearflattens, chance of Sept Fed hike now barely one-in-four. * COMMODITIES: Oil rises 1% on stalled Russia-Ukrainepeace talks, strong U.S. demand. WTI settles at $63.43/bbl.
Today’s Talking Points:
* Jackson Hole. Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s eighth and final Jackson Hole speech is almost upon us. There may be three broad elements of his address to focus on: near-term policy signals, a new framework for the central bank, and a defense of his tenure.
All three will be dissected, debated and debunked. The most important element for investors in the near term will be whether he leans toward a rate cut next month. These will be his first public remarks since weak jobs data three weeks ago made a September rate cut a virtual certainty, according to U.S. rate futures.
Traders are no longer quite so certain, and rates futures markets are now barely attaching a one-in-four probability of a cut, the lowest since that payrolls shock three weeks ago.