Another meandering, listless, inconclusive session Friday on Wall Street. It seems to us that whatever leadership had been supplied by NVIDIA and the chips, has gone by the wayside, at least for now. Although contrary to that point, it likewise seems to us that for much of the last six months, or so, this has been a news driven market and the news has been good, especially on inflation. We’ve been skeptical of the whole idea of rate cuts, but we’ve come around and have now warmed to the idea. Apparently just as traders and investors have lost interest.
Story of our life!
In over forty years of obsessively watching the stock market we can not recall a more boring day than the one we got on Friday. The indexes were all basically flat, volume was up, but not by much—and it was a triple witching Friday, when options and futures roll over, a day when volume always spikes, so. . .
If things don’t heat up on Wall Street soon, we’re gonna have to start a podcast on, I don’t know, Taylor Swift?
If you thought stocks were boring, bonds were worse.
On Friday, we reported on a range of economic data that had come in below expectations: from construction, manufacturing, and the labor market.
On Friday, just the opposite. A number of reports were released, and all the data was good.
Standard and Poor’s released three surveys of purchasing managers: US Services, US Manufacturing and the Composite and all handily beat expectations. Likewise, existing home sales. Good economic news, indeed.
It’s Personal Consumption Expenditures week, this week. The Fed’s favorite measure of inflation, the PCE complex rolls out on Thursday and Friday. The inflation numbers have been good lately. Relative to expectations and on an absolute basis. Let’s hope that continues.
Everyone here at the Ministry of Truth is genuinely excited about the week ahead. The data is important and likely to move the markets and after the last couple of days, we could use a little excitement!