Bassanese Bites: Correction continues – April 22 2024
Global markets – week in review
The global equity market correction continued last week, with a solid US retail sales report and a hawkish tilt by Fed chair Powell further unsettling bond and equity markets. One market reprieve was signs that Iran is seeking to avoid further escalating its stoush with Israel.
The US economic juggernaut rolls on, with March retail spending up 0.7% – much healthier than the 0.4% market expectation. As I warned last week: “Wall Street remains vulnerable to a deeper correction if the bad run on inflation continues and/or the Fed starts to sound more hawkish.”
Last week the Fed did indeed turn hawkish – which should not be too much of a surprise after three consecutive higher-than-expected CPI reports. Fed chair Powell noted recent data had not given him “greater confidence” that inflation is falling in a way that could justify rate cuts any time soon. This is likely a signal that he no longer thinks three rate cuts this year – as included in the latest dot plot forecasts – is appropriate. As is stands, the market is now expecting only one to two rate cuts later this year.
The week ahead
We’ll learn more on the US inflation front with the all-important consumption deflator on Friday. The market anticipates that both the headline and core measures rose 0.3% in March, which would see annual core inflation edge down from 2.8% to 2.6% but headline annual inflation edge higher from 2.5% to 2.6%. A higher number could see the market fully price out US rate cuts this year and potentially deepen the US equity market correction.
Also this week, four of the Magnificent 7 companies (Tesla, Meta, Alphabet and Microsoft) report Q1 earnings. Given jittery market sentiment and high tech valuations, any earnings disappointments are likely to be severely punished.