Good morning to the smartest corner of the internet. Three Federal Reserve officials will speak this morning, kicking off a busy week of speeches coming out of the central bank.
Todayâs edition unpacks what the latest Fed decision means for stock market investors.
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The Federal Reserve surprised some market-watchers last week with its decision to cut interest rates by 50 basis points.
So long as the labor market doesnât unravel, central bankers donât expect to make the same decision twice â and thatâs good news for the stock market.Â
According to the dot plot, policymakers seem to believe the jumbo move was a one-and-done.
Most Fed officials see two smaller cuts coming in November and December, and four more quarter-point cuts in 2025.Â
Investors have taken the outlook in stride and put stocks on pace to notch their first winning September in five years.Â
âThe Fed delivered on what we thought was the best short-term case for stocks,â wrote Morgan Stanleyâs Mike Wilson in a note to clients early Monday.Â
During his post-meeting press conference, Fed Chair Jerome Powell maintained that his team made the call from a position of confidence, rather than panic.Â
âInflation is coming down closer to our 2% objective over time, and the labor market is still in solid shape,â Powell said. âOur intention is really to maintain the strength that we currently see in the US economy.â
To Powellâs point, the unemployment rate remains low by historical standards. And even though hiring has slowed down, that hasnât coincided with widespread firings.
The Fedâs latest outlook suggests unemployment will reach 4.4% before yearâs end, then stay at that level through 2025.Â
In Morgan Stanleyâs view, a spike in unemployment poses the biggest risk to the economy and the stock market.Â
Meanwhile, Bank of America analysts are focused on layoffs, which remain muted.Â
âAlthough job growth has undoubtedly softened, we think layoffs hold the key to a recession,â the firm wrote in a Friday note.
âA spike in layoffs would create a negative feedback loop between weakening consumption and a weakening labor market.â
Some commentators have cautioned that the Fedâs choice to kick off a policy-easing cycle with an outsized cut signals panic, rather than confidence.Â
Itâs a fair assessment. As Opening Bell Daily has covered plenty, not everything looks rosy:Â
Corporate bankruptcies have surged
Consumer confidence isnât great
Shaky manufacturing and business sector
Some Wall Street firms have lowered their GDP estimates
While uncertainty still runs high, the central bank doesnât seem concerned â and markets are mirroring that optimism.Â
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Elsewhere:
đ October market chop is coming. While September has a reputation as the weakest month of the year for stocks, next month has the greatest average stock market volatility. Dow Jones data going back more than a century shows Octoberâs volatility is 34% higher than the typical non-October month. (Barronâs)
đď¸Â Remote work has changed the housing market. Thereâs been a gradual decline of remote workers since the pandemic peak of 17.9%. However, as of 2023, roughly 22.5 million workers aged 16 and older continue to work from home. By the end of last year, every major housing market had more remote workers compared to 2019. (ResiClub)
đŚÂ Powell wants to repeat Greenspanâs success. The 1995 rate cuts helped lay the groundwork for a soft landing and a booming economy to end the century. The job market, inflation, and unemployment figures of that decade have similarities to what weâve seen in this one â but the rate environment looks wildly different today. (WSJ)
Rapid-fire:
China announced plans for a rare economic briefing by top financial regulators, fueling speculation for a policy intervention from the Peopleâs Bank of China (Bloomberg)
Israel has increased its bombardment of Lebanon and concerns of all-out war are mounting (FT)
Nvidia and Alibaba are collaborating on an AI initiative that will for Chinese autonomous cars (South China Morning Post)
Stifel analysts warned of a 12% correction in the stock market before 2025 (Business Insider)
Apollo offered a multi-billion dollar, equity-like investment in Intel (Bloomberg)
10 charts to consider with stocks at all-time highs (TKer)
Last thing:
Jeff Weniger @JeffWeniger
Here is a wild chart. The total return on Chinese stocks since 1993 is negative. In contrast, India is a 13-bagger.