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Weekly Market Recap – October 11, 2024

Weekly Recap:

Domestic stocks posted gains last week despite rising bond yields and slightly higher oil prices. Inflation and monetary policy were in focus. First, the minutes from the September FOMC meeting showed a nearly even split between committee members favoring 25bp vs. 50bp rate cuts. Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s personal preference for a 50bp cut appears to have been the deciding factor.

Then on Thursday, fresh CPI data appeared to undermine the wisdom of a 50bp cut, as headline and core inflation both came in slightly hotter than expected:

* Headline CPI = +2.4% y/y; consensus = +2.3%

* Core (ex food & energy) CPI = +3.3% y/y; consensus = +3.2%

In response to a divided committee and warmth in inflation, Treasury yields rose and the curve steepened. Futures markets continue to reprice the magnitude and pace of the rate cutting cycle, settling for now on 25bp cuts at the November and December FOMC meetings, following by 4 or 5 additional 25bp cuts in 2025.

Through it all though, US equity benchmarks finished higher on the week, with notable strength returning to Nvidia on comments from CEO Jensen Huang that demand for the company’s new Blackwell chip is “insane”, while production is now fully ramped. Other semiconductor companies and A/I theme stocks benefitted from a read-thru, causing the tech sector to outperform on the week.

The biggest laggard last week was Chinese stocks, which gave back some of their recent extraordinary gains after investors were left disappointed by a speech from President Xi Jinping regarding the upcoming monetary and fiscal stimulus.

Chart of the Week: Consumer Price Index Components (y/y change)

Albion’s “Four Pillars”:

Economy & Earnings

The US economy has been resilient despite the higher interest rate environment. S&P 500 earnings are on track for high single-digit or low double-digit y/y growth in 2024, provided that the economy continues to expand.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 21.4x is well above the long run average, so valuations are likely to be a headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Eq Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns from current levels over the coming decade are likely to be in the single digits.

Interest Rates

Futures markets imply that the Fed will deliver 25 bp interest rate cuts in each of the last two FOMC meetings of 2024, with additional cuts in 2025. Belly and long end rates are already near what are likely to be their post-pandemic equilibrium levels, unless the US economy enters a recession.

Inflation

After becoming sticky in the 3-4% range in the first half of 2024, more recent data has reinforced the disinflationary trend, and the Fed has expressed confidence in the path to its 2% target. Services inflation remains somewhat elevated, in part due to heavily lagged shelter costs.


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