Why Stocks Have Dropped

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Why Are Stocks Dropping?
  • Nasdaq Composite Chart: Below the 100 Day Moving Average

U.S. futures are rebounding with global shares after the U.K. decided against new lockdown measures due to Omicron while there is renewed hope for Biden’s spending bill.

Reports of a late Sunday call between Biden and Manchin, after Manchin announced that he would not support the bill on live TV, have revived hopes for the potential passage of Build Back Better in the weeks ahead.

The German GfK Consumer Climate Index fell to -6.8 vs. (E) -2.5 for January which points to a further deterioration in consumers’ outlook for income and spending in Europe’s largest economy.

There are no economic reports and no Fed officials speak today which will leave traders focused on the political drama surrounding Build Back Better and any new developments about Omicron and subsequent economic lockdown measures.

The one potential catalyst on the calendar is a 20-Yr Treasury Bond auction at 1:00 p.m. ET. A weak auction could send yields higher which could add renewed pressure on high multiple tech names and cause the major indexes to roll over.

Are Central Banks Tightening into a Slowdown?

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Bottom Line: Are Central Banks Tightening into a Slowdown?
  • Weekly Economic Cheat Sheet: Is the Economy Losing Momentum?
  • Weekly Market Preview: Santa Claus Rally Still Possible but Volatility is on the Rise

U.S. equity futures are sharply lower with global shares amid negative COVID headlines and surprise political drama in D.C.

Democratic Senator Joe Manchin unexpectedly rejected President Biden’s Build Back Better plan over the weekend, greatly reducing the odds of its passage which saw GS revise their Q1 growth outlook from 3% to 2%.

Meanwhile, in Europe, lockdown risks are on the rise as the spread of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 accelerates.

Looking into today’s session, it appears we are going to open deep in the red amid the combination of a deteriorating political landscape and surging Omicron fears.

There are no economic reports or Fed speakers on the calendar today however there is a 6-Month Treasury Bill auction at 11:30 a.m. ET, which is not something we typically monitor, but if we see a weak outcome, then short duration yields could spike higher, compounding last week’s fears of rate hikes beginning sooner than later which would weigh on stocks, potentially in a big way. Outside of that auction, markets will be focused on the Build Back Better headlines and the new prospects of tighter COVID restrictions, particularly in Europe as that would further weigh on the outlook for economic growth.

Are Policy Mistake Fears Rising?

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Bottom Line: Are Central Banks Tightening Policy into an Economic Slowdown?
  • Philly Fed and Flash PMI Takeaways (Both Missed Expectations)
  • Chart: Jobless Claims Remain Low

U.S. stock futures are trading lower along with most global equity markets today as investors digest the hawkish shift by most global central banks this week while concerns about the health of the economy rebound continue.

Economically, Eurozone HICP (their CPI equivalent) rose 0.4% vs. (E) 0.5% in November, easing some of the recent inflation concerns while the latest German Ifo Survey missed estimates on both current and future business expectations metrics which weighed on the regional growth outlook.

Today, there are no economic reports due out in the U.S. however there are two Fed speakers to watch: Daly (1:00 p.m. ET) and Waller (1:00 p.m. ET). The market will want to see Fed chatter echo Powell’s mostly dovish tone from the press conference on Wednesday and any hints at a more aggressive or sooner rate hiking cycle will cause more volatility today.

Finally, today is quadruple witching options expiration so expect very high trading volumes along with the threat of amplified moves as traders continue to digest this week’s hawkish pivot amid year-end rebalancing.

What the Fed Decision Means for Markets

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • What the Fed Decision Means for Markets
  • EIA and Oil Market Update

Futures are sharply higher mostly on momentum from yesterday’s strong close and despite soft economic data.

EU and UK flash PMIs missed estimates thanks to drops in the service sector and that implies Omicron is a headwind on global growth in Europe.

But, for now that concern isn’t enough to stop a year-end Santa rally as the Fed was hawkish, but not too hawkish.

Looking forward, today will be a busy day.  First, we get two important central bank decisions (Bank of England at 7:00 a.m. and ECB at 7:45 a.m), and while neither are expected to change policy if they are hawkish in a tone that could partially offset the current Fed rally.

Meanwhile, we also get a lot of economic data including, in order of importance: December Composite Flash PMI (E: 58.4), Philly Fed (E: 28.8), Jobless Claims (E: 200K), Housing Starts (E: 1.563M) and Industrial Production (E: 0.7%).  Bottom line, the market will want to see stability in the data especially given the looming rate hikes in 2022, and the last thing the market will want to see is a material weakness in the data given the Fed’s new hawkishness.

Will Politics Force a Fed Policy Error?

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Will Politics Force a Fed Policy Error?
  • PPI Takeaways: Inflation Still Rising

U.S. equity futures are flat and global markets were mixed overnight as investors digest another hotter-than-expected inflation print and soft growth data ahead of the Fed.

U.K. CPI rose 5.1% vs. (E) 4.7% in November while Chinese growth data missed expectations across the board, rekindling stagflation fears ahead of the slew of central bank meetings in the back half of the week.

There are multiple economic reports due out this morning including: Retail Sales (E: 0.8%), Empire State Manufacturing Index (E: 25.5), Import & Export Prices (E: 0.7%, 0.7%) and the Housing Market Index (E: 84). But once again, unless there are any material surprises, the market impact should be limited ahead of the Fed this afternoon.

The FOMC Announcement will hit at 2:00 p.m. ET and Fed Chair Powell’s Press Conference begins at 2:30 p.m. ET. Bottom line, the biggest risk to equities remains a more hawkish shift in tone with a faster than anticipated acceleration in tapering of QE and any hints at more than two rate hikes next year.

Tom Essaye Quoted in Nasdaq.com on December 10, 2021

History Proves That Rate Hikes Don’t Have to Dent Stocks

While the market will likely remain volatile near term, there’s no reason yet to think that stocks can’t….says Essaye of the Sevens Report. Click here to read the full article.

Fed Meeting Preview

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • FOMC Preview

U.S. futures are trading lower with most global equity markets after some negative Omicron headlines while investor focus shifts ahead to this week’s central bank meetings.

Initial studies in South Africa show the PFE vaccine has a lower efficacy rate against Omicron, rekindling concerns about the strain potentially leading to new restrictions or lockdown measures around the globe.

Economically, EU Industrial Production grew 1.1% vs. (E) 1.2% in October and the U.S. NFIB Small Business Optimism Index came in at 98.4 vs. (E) 98.3 but neither release materially changed the outlook for central bank policy.

Looking into today’s session, there is one inflation data point due ahead of the bell: PPI (E: 0.5%) but unless it is a material surprise against expectations, it should not move markets with the December FOMC meeting getting underway.

Bottom line, the focus has largely turned to this week’s central bank meetings, most importantly the FOMC, so it is likely that we see a form of “Fed paralysis” grip the markets between now and tomorrow afternoon’s meeting announcement, barring any unforeseen surprises regarding Omicron.

All Clear for a Santa Rally?

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • All Clear for a Santa Rally?
  • Weekly Market Preview:  All About the Fed
  • Weekly Economic Cheat Sheet:  First Look at December Data (Is Omicron An Economic Headwind?)

Futures are modestly higher on continued momentum from last week’s rally, following a very quiet weekend of news.

On COVID, the growing consensus is that fully vaccinated people are protected against severe illness while those with boosters are also protected against infection, so it is increasingly unlikely Omicron causes a sustained pullback.

On stimulus, Democrats are still trying to pass the $1.7-ish trillion spending bill before year-end, but Senator Manchin remains an obstacle, and passage of the bill in 2021 (or perhaps at all given high inflation and 2022 is an election year) is becoming increasingly unlikely.

Today there are no economic reports and no Fed speakers so it should be a mostly quiet day, although we could get official vaccine results vs. Omicron from PFE or MRNA any day, and if the data confirms the consensus opinion, that would be a mild tailwind on stocks.

Two Key Inflation Reports Today

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Future Headwinds on Gold?

Futures are modestly higher following a generally quiet night as markets await the latest readings on inflation via today’s CPI and inflation expectations index in Consumer sentiment.

Economic data slightly underwhelmed as UK Industrial Production (1.3% vs. (E) 1.4%) and UK GDP (0.9% vs. (E) 1.0%) both missed expectations.

There were no notable Omicron updates overnight.

Today the focus will be on inflations via the  Consumer Price Index (E: 0.7% m/m, 6.8% y/y) and the inflation expectations index in the Consumer Sentiment report (E: 67.0).  Markets are already expecting the Fed to materially accelerate the pace of tapering of QE next week, but if these inflation readings come in much hotter than expected, that likely will be a headwind on stocks as it will only encourage the Fed to get even more aggressive in tapering QE.