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Stocks are falling again today after yesterday’s attempt at a rally in the US fizzled. The decline in Bitcoin picked up steam as investors y
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Markets Snapshot
S&P 500 Futures 5,892.5 -0.70%
Nasdaq 100 Futures 21,132.5 -1.15%
US 10-Year Treasury Yield 4.538% -0.024
Bitcoin 94,262.25 -3.15%
Stoxx Europe 600 Index 497.84 -1.74%
Market data as of 06:05 am EST. View or Create your Watchlist
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Five things you need to know

  • Stocks are falling again today after yesterday’s attempt at a rally in the US fizzled. The decline in Bitcoin picked up steam as investors yanked cash from ETFs that invest in the cryptocurrency.
  • The Republican-led House rejected a temporary funding plan backed by President-elect Donald Trump, raising the risk of a government shutdown tonight. Here’s what happens if the government shuts down and here’s an explainer on the debt ceiling.
  • Trump threatened the EU with tariffs if its member countries don’t buy more American oil and gas. The euro strengthened against the dollar in a sign investors believe the bloc will be able to meet his demands and avoid punitive measures. 
  • FedEx shares are jumping 8.6% in premarket trading after the company said it plans to spin off its freight division into a separate publicly traded company in a deal that will streamline the parcel giant.
  • Novo Nordisk shares sank as much as 27% after its experimental shot CagriSema helped patients in a clinical trial lose less weight than the Danish company had predicted. Eli Lilly, which makes competing obesity drugs, rose 8.5%.

Which assets will fare the best next year? Let us know and take the Markets Pulse survey.

Price of vigilance

Everyone says they support the fight against inflation. It's when they get punched in the face by the consequences that their resolve starts to waver.

The price of inflation-related vigilance was on display this week when markets were sent into a tailspin by mildly hawkish posturing on the part of Jerome Powell, who -- while cutting interest rates -- indicated that future monetary easing would require improving data on prices.

Stocks buckled, yields soared, and foreign currencies sold off. Investors tried and failed to stage a rally in the equity market yesterday. For the week, the S&P 500 is down 3%, heading for its biggest weekly drop in almost four months. 

A notable casualty from the lingering inflation threat has been the risk-asset incarnation of the Trump Trade, which saw things like value stocks and small caps surge as much as 8% in the weeks following his re-election. Those moves are effectively gone at this point. Even the S&P 500, which in early December was up more than 5% post-vote, sits just 1.5% higher now.

How price action like this is apt to go down with the incoming administration is a matter of at least passing interest to investors. Conventional wisdom holds that Trump cares deeply about markets, with limited patience if the Fed creates excessive drama on Wall Street by pausing its monetary-easing program.

But a report this week upended that wisdom. It cited transition insiders as saying the next administration actually wants Powell to keep up the vigilance, lest inflation revive and do to Trump what it did to Joe Biden.

Right now, in that regard, bond markets at least are doing Powell's bidding -- and conceivably Trump's, if inflation is indeed his chief concern. Treasury yields of all stripes have surged, including yesterday, when the president-elect said the federal government should shut down if its debt ceiling isn't eliminated or extended.

There are two implications. First, in the event then that borrowing costs remain elevated, it would help to wring out excesses in the business cycle that continue to fuel inflation. Second, a casualty of all this would be riskier assets like technology stocks that have soared this year, benefiting from expectations that the hawkish monetary era is well and truly over.

Will investors laud this next “wait-and-see’’ chapter of Powell’s monetary campaign? Everyone says they support the fight against inflation. The question for investors is about to become: How much. —Chris Nagi

On the move

Nike shares fall as much as 4% in premarket trading as analysts note that new CEO Elliott Hill’s turnaround plan will take time and weigh on near-term results.

  • MicroStrategy, the software company that’s loaded up on Bitcoin, is down 5.2%  this morning as the currency’s price slides. Crypto exchange Coinbase is 3.9% lower.
  • US Steel is sinking 6.2%. The company warned its fourth-quarter earnings will be lower than anticipated as steel prices remain depressed in the US and as the demand environment in Europe is weak.  — Subrat Patnaik

Triple witching

As Wall Street traders come to grips with the Fed’s plans to slow the pace of rate cuts, today’s US options expiration that has historically stoked turbulence offers a final hurdle to end-of-year calm.

The quarterly “triple-witching” will see some $6.5 trillion worth of options tied to individual stocks, indexes and exchange-traded funds fall off the board — this year’s largest and among the biggest on record, though still slightly smaller than a year ago, according to an estimate from derivatives analytical firm Asym 500. 

Bloomberg

This quarter’s expiration comes at a critical time for market positioning after the Fed on Wednesday signaled it will go more slowly than anticipated on rate cuts.

While the risk is sometimes overblown by Wall Street players, share volumes typically spike during the options expiration, which has a reputation for causing sudden price moves as contracts disappear and traders roll over their existing positions or start new ones.  —Jessica Menton

Under pressure

From Brazil to South Korea, emerging-market central banks are forming a line of defense as a rising dollar pushes their currencies to multi-year lows.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas is watching the peso’s drop closely and has stepped up intervention in the currency market, Governor Eli Remolona said. Brazil’s central bank has spent almost $14 billion in the past week to support the real while Bank Indonesia vowed to guard the rupiah “boldly” to build market confidence.

Authorities in developing economies are on the defensive as the greenback’s strength wreaks havoc across global markets, with South Korea’s won falling to the lowest in over 15 years while India’s rupee and the real crashed to all-time lows.

A rapid decline in currencies risks worsening the impact of imported inflation for emerging markets, and may also increase the cost of servicing debt on foreign liabilities.  —Marcus Wong and Prima Wirayani

Word from Wall Street

“This will inevitably increase the market volatility in the short term, especially after the Fed’s hawkish pivot two days ago. After the US election, investors have been focusing a lot on the positive side of the story – lower tax rates, loosened regulation. This time around, investors may need to focus more on the other side of the story.’’
Jasmine Duan
Senior investment strategist, RBC Wealth Management Asia, on risk of a US government shutdown

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