Eyes turn to CPI

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Trading Day

Trading Day

Making sense of the forces driving global markets

 

By Jamie McGeever, Reuters Open Interest Markets Columnist 

 

Surprisingly soft U.S. producer price inflation figures on Wednesday spurred outside bets on a half a percentage point cut in U.S. interest rates next week, pushing Wall Street to new highs, lifting gold, and pulling bond yields lower.

In my column today I look at how the combination of Fed rate cuts and sticky inflation will reduce 'real' U.S. rates and yields, spelling bad news for the dollar.

I’d love to hear from you, so please reach out to me with comments at jamie.mcgeever@thomsonreuters.com. You can also follow me at @ReutersJamie and @reutersjamie.bsky.social. 

 

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Today's Key Market Moves

  • STOCKS: New highs for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, although they give back their gains. Dow, Russell 2000 fall.
  • 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.
 

Today's key reads

  1. Poland downs drones in its airspace, becoming first NATO member to fire during Ukraine war
  2. Trump's Fed governor nominee Miran moves step closer to Senate confirmation
  3. Stablecoins might reboot US 'exorbitant privilege': Mike Dolan
  4. Investors wary of Treasury's 30-year bond auction after recent disappointments
  5. Wall Street's record rise spurs growth of covered call strategies
 

Today's Talking Points:

* 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.

 

'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.

Read the full column here
 

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