Making sense of the forces driving global markets |
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- STOCKS: New highs for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, although they give back their gains. Dow, Russell 2000 fall.
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SHARES/SECTORS: Oracle leaps as much as 43%, Klarna jumps 30% in NYSE debut. Apple slides 3.2%. Tech, utilities and energy Wall Street's biggest advancers, consumer discretionary the biggest decliner.
- FX: Dollar index ends flat. Brazil's real one of the biggest climbers, Polish zloty among the biggest decliners.
- BONDS: U.S. yields lower, down 3 bps at long end. Curve bull flattens, 10-year auction draws highest bid/cover since April.
- COMMODITIES: Gold hits new closing high, oil futures spike nearly 2% - Brent up to $67.78/bbl, WTI pops above $64/bbl.
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* Tech booming ... agAIn
The extraordinary 43% surge in Oracle's share price thrusts the whole AI bubble debate back into the sharpest focus. This is not a penny stock, startup or meme stock, this is a long-established tech giant, which is now suddenly close to joining the exclusive $1 trillion market cap club.
Oracle said on Tuesday it expects booked revenue at its Oracle Cloud Infrastructure business to exceed half a trillion dollars. Shares traded at nearly 50x estimated 12-month forward earnings on Wednesday, the highest since the dotcom crash, when its forward PE topped 120. |
* Fed Makeup
The composition - and independence - of the Federal Reserve in President Donald Trump's second term continues to dominate Fed watchers' thinking, with the focus right now centered on Governor Lisa Cook and board nominee Stephen Miran.
A federal judge has temporarily blocked Trump from firing Cook while Miran, currently a White House economic adviser, has cleared a U.S. Senate hurdle. Meanwhile, Trump on Wednesday lambasted Fed Chair Jerome Powell, calling him "a total disaster, who doesn't have a clue" and insisting that the Fed slash interest rates. * Geopolitics
Oil prices spiked on Wednesday after an Israeli attack in Qatar's capital Doha, and the Polish zloty had its worst day in over a month after Poland shot down suspected Russian drones in its airspace, the first time a member of NATO is known to have fired shots during Russia's war in Ukraine.
The moves weren't too dramatic, but were a reminder to investors of the political risk in pockets around the world that can quickly spill over into asset prices and market volatility. |
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'Real' rate dip threatens to pull down dollar |
The dollar has been beaten down this year as investors have priced in a resumption of the Federal Reserve's rate-cutting cycle. But even if lower nominal rates are already reflected in the greenback's price, lower 'real' rates may not be.
The greenback has gotten a bit of respite recently after recording its worst start to any calendar year since the era of free-floating exchange rates was introduced over 50 years ago. But it will face a renewed headwind if its real interest rate support evaporates, which currently seems likely. |
If the Fed pulls the rate cut trigger next week, as expected, it will be doing so with inflation around 3% - a percentage point above the central bank's 2% target. Further easing amid sticky prices means the gap between the U.S.'s inflation-adjusted or 'real' interest rate and those of its developed market peers should narrow – bad news for the dollar. |
What could move markets tomorrow? |
- Japan wholesale inflation (August)
- European Central Bank rate decision, ECB President Christine Lagarde press conference
- U.S. weekly jobless claims
- U.S. CPI inflation (August)
- U.S. Treasury auctions $22 billion of 30-year notes
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