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Weekly Market Recap

The FOMC meeting and its aftermath dominated the newsflow last week. As expected, there were no changes to the Fed Funds rate, and no specific indications as to when the Fed may begin to taper its asset purchase programs. However, changes to the “dot plot” (the annual rate forecasts from Fed policymakers) were interpreted by the market as a hawkish signal, as was confirmation from Fed Chair Jerome Powell that FOMC members were at least beginning to discuss the prospect of tapering.

Market participants collectively concluded that a rate hiking cycle may begin sooner than previously expected, and longer term inflation expectations fell. The result was a significant rotation trade away from cyclicals, commodities, and small/mid cap equities, all of which stood to benefit from stronger near-term growth, and towards assets that benefit from lower long-term inflation assumptions, including technology stocks and long-dated bonds.

As a result of these changes in assumptions, the Nasdaq outperformed the Dow by more than 3%, while small and midcap indices had their worst week of 2021. Meanwhile, the Treasury yield curve flattened significantly: 2y yields rose to 25bp (their highest level in more than a year), 10y yields were very close to unchanged, and 30y yields fell 13bp to 2.01% (their lowest level since February). This flattening was especially hard on bank stocks, which fell more than 8% on average last week after peaking in early June.

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Weekly Market Recap

US large cap stocks were strong last week, with all sectors in the S&P 500
posting positive returns except for energy. The Dow (33,801) and S&P (4,129) both closed at record highs on Friday, while the Nasdaq remains slightly below its high from mid-February. Results were mixed in other segments of the market, with US midcaps higher, US small caps lower, international developed markets posting solid gains, and emerging markets off a touch.


Bond markets also rallied over the course of last week, despite PPI data that came in higher than expected. Benchmark 10-year US Treasury yields fell 6 basis points, while 2y yields were down 4bp and 30y yields down 3bp.
Investment grade credit spreads were steady, while high yield spreads rallied ~10 basis points, allowing riskier bonds to outperform.

Energy prices fell last week as investors weighed the impact of renewed
restrictions on mobility and economic activity in Europe. The broader
commodity complex was mostly stable, as it has been for the past month.
In economic news, US PPI inflation data came in much higher than expected.


Core PPI (ex food and energy) rose 0.7% sequentially and 3.1% y/y (a 10-year high). See the Chart of the Week for a time series. Meanwhile, the newly released FOMC Meeting Minutes showed that the Fed remains committed to continuing its asset purchases until substantial further progress has been made towards its 2% inflation target (PCE Deflator) and full employment.