Meanwhile, OANDA’s Edward Moya wrote that “Wall Street should get used to a choppy stock market for the rest of the summer as the Fed tries to navigate a soft landing.”įriday’s report found that nonfarm payrolls increased by 372,000 jobs last month, while economists polled by Reuters had forecast 268,000 jobs were added last month. “Although we think a US recession will be avoided, we still expect US equities to be weighed down by both rising discount rates and disappointing growth in corporate earnings.” “June’s US Employment Report lends support to our forecast that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates by more than is currently discounted in markets, pushing up Treasury yields this year,” analysts at Capital Economics wrote. Stocks and bonds reeled last month after data showed inflation running at its hottest pace in more than four decades, prompting a 75-basis-point interest rate increase by the Fed, its biggest hike since 1994. consumer price index report for a gauge on inflation, due next week, as well as to the start of a second-quarter earnings season that investors fear will come in weaker than forecast. Treasury yields shot higher, with the 10-year recently at nearly 3.1%. Immediate reaction to the report was muted in stocks, with the S&P 500 recently down 0.1%. “The combination of uncertainty about inflation, Fed policy and earnings trends suggest that stocks should go lower.” “We don’t know if inflation peaked, we don’t know if Fed hawkishness has peaked,” said Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Hermes. To some investors, that means the volatility that has rocked markets in the first half of the year should continue as uncertainty over how restrictive Fed policy will need to be threatens risk appetite across Wall Street. Rate futures contracts now reflect a base-case view that the Fed’s policy rate will be in the 3.5%-3.75% range by year end, higher than Fed policymakers themselves predicted three weeks ago. employers hiring far more workers than expected in June. That view took a hit on Friday, as traders bet on bigger Fed rate hikes after the report, which showed U.S. Treasury yield, which moves inversely to prices, hit a low of 2.75% this week. The S&P 500 rebounded 6% from its June lows while the 10-year U.S. Hopes that a weakening economy could push the Fed to slow or stop its rate hikes earlier than previously expected have bolstered stocks and bonds in recent days. jobs report eased some worries about an imminent recession but also bolstered the case for the Federal Reserve to continue aggressively hiking rates, threatening more turbulence for asset prices this year. ![]() NEW YORK (Reuters) – A better-than-expected U.S.
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