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Tom Essaye interviewed by Barron’s

 Durable-goods number showed stable growth: Tom Essaye Interviewed by Barron’s


Market’s Spirit Isn’t Dampened by Mixed Economic Data

In an interview with Barron’s, Tom Essaye of Sevens Report Research said the durable-goods number showed stable growth while the consumer confidence reading was light.

“Every time the market is reminded that we’ve got stable growth, still falling inflation, a looming rate cut —which was reinforced last week—and positive AI headlines, the default reaction is to rally. And rightly so. And that’s exactly what’s happening today,” he said.

Essaye also called the collapse of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge a “tremendous tragedy”and thinks the disaster could trickle into economic reports at a time when the Federal Reserve is watching all numbers closely.

“This is going to cloud some of the economic data, potentially, which has some risk associated with it because the data is really important right now,” Essaye said. “It will probably send some noisiness into the data. We’re just going to have to look through that as best we can over the next couple of months. That’s something to pay attention to.”

Also, click here to view the full Barron’s article published on March 26th, 2024. However, to see the Sevens Report’s full comments on the current market environment sign up here.

It’ll be Very Hard for This Market to RallyIf you want research that comes with no long term commitment, yet provides independent, value added, plain English analysis of complex macro topics, then begin your Sevens Report subscription today by clicking here.

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Updated Risk/Reward Outlook

Updated Risk/Reward Outlook: Start a free trial of The Sevens Report.


What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Updated Risk/Reward Outlook

Futures are modestly lower following a quiet weekend of news as investors digest last week’s Fed decision, AI news and economic data.

Atlanta Fed President Bostic stated over the weekend he only expected one rate cut in 2024, pushing back slightly on the 2024 dot (which showed three cuts).

Oil rose above $81/bbl on rising geo-political tensions as Russia attacked Ukrainian energy infrastructure.

Today there are two notable economic reports, Chicago Fed (E: -0.50) and New Home Sales (E: 675k) but they’d have to be big surprises (positively or negatively) to move markets.  There are also two Fed speakers, Bostic (8:25 a.m.) and Cook (10:30 a.m.) and if they both push back on the idea of three cuts in 2024 that would slightly weigh on stocks.


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Fed Preview

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What’s in Today’s Report:

  • FOMC Preview: Hawkish-If vs. Dovish-If
  • 10-Yr Treasury Note Yield Hits 2024 High: Chart

U.S. equity futures are giving back some of yesterday’s tech-led rally as there was a modest “sell the news” reaction to NVDA’s new AI chip (Blackwell) release while central bank decisions overnight favored policy doves.

Overnight, the BOJ delivered a dovish hike and the RBA signaled an end to rate hikes which sent both currencies lower and bolstered the dollar as this week’s Fed decision comes into focus.

Today, there is just one economic report to watch: Housing Starts (E: 1.449 million) and the Treasury will hold a 20-Yr Bond auction at 1:00 p.m. ET. Neither should meaningfully move markets ahead of the Fed, but if the housing data is hot or there is weak demand for the Bonds (sending yields higher) we could see a hawkish/risk-off move in markets today.

The March FOMC meeting begins today and barring any material “tape bombs” the markets should fall into a familiar positioning churn ahead of tomorrow’s policy announcement and Powell’s press conference.


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The initial market reaction to the CPI release was a hawkish one

Oil prices decline to session lows: Sevens Report Co-Editor, Tyler Richey, Quoted in MarketWatch


Oil futures move up after CPI data, OPEC’s latest forecast for growth in oil demand

The initial market reaction to the CPI release was “a hawkish one, which saw oil prices decline to session lows,” said Tyler Richey, co-editor at Sevens Report Research. “Hawkish central bank policy is bad for the oil market because high interest rates over time act as a steady headwind on global growth and ultimately that weighs on consumer demand expectations.”

Looking at the reaction in the rates markets, “hawkish money flows were only modest, and investors are still pricing in a June rate cut from the Fed, just with a slight dip in confidence,” Richey said.

Also, click here to view the full MarketWatch article published on March 12th, 2024. However, to see the Sevens Report’s full comments on the current market environment sign up here.


If you want research that comes with no long term commitment, yet provides independent, value added, plain English analysis of complex macro topics, then begin your Sevens Report subscription today by clicking here.

To strengthen your market knowledge take a free trial of The Sevens Report.

Market Multiple Table: March Update

Market Multiple Table: March Update: Start a free trial of The Sevens Report.


What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Market Multiple Table – March Update
  • CPI Takeaways – Minimal Impact on Fed Rate Expectations

U.S. equity futures are flat as investors digest yesterday’s tech-led rally to fresh record highs in the S&P 500.

Overseas, Chinese developer Country Garden Holdings missed a yuan-denominated bond payment overnight which weighed on Asian markets.

Economically, U.K. monthly GDP and Industrial Production both largely met estimates, but Eurozone Industrial Production badly missed, falling -6.7% vs. (E) -2.7% in January.

Looking into today’s session, there are no economic reports or Fed speakers on the calendar which will leave traders focused on AI-focused names to see if the tech sector can lead stocks to new highs.

The one notable catalyst on the schedule today is a 30-Yr Treasury Bond auction at 1:00 p.m. ET. A weak outcome could send yields higher which would act as a renewed headwind on stocks while a pullback in yields would be welcomed.


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“It doesn’t mean the economy’s rolling over”

Tom Essaye Interviewed by Barron’s


Stocks Are in a Holding Pattern. It’s All About Inflation Data.

Sevens Report Research’s Tom Essaye told Barron’s in a phone interview that recent economic data, including durable goods and retail sales, have come in softer than expected.

“It doesn’t mean the economy’s rolling over,” he says. “But for a market that is priced for zero slowdown whatsoever, that is the risk that I think people need to watch. About the most surprising thing that I feel could happen to this market right now is that growth suddenly slows.”

“They’re behaving for now, but if you start seeing the 10-year climb far above 4.25%, I think that begins to become a headwind on the market,” Essaye says. “Until we get that inflation data, you kind of got markets in a bit of a holding pattern.”

Also, click here to view the full Barron’s article published on February 27th, 2024. However, to see the Sevens Report’s full comments on the current market environment sign up here.

If you want research that comes with no long term commitment, yet provides independent, value added, plain English analysis of complex macro topics, then begin your Sevens Report subscription today by clicking here.

To strengthen your market knowledge take a free trial of The Sevens Report.


Join hundreds of advisors from huge brokerage firms like Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Wells Fargo Advisors, Raymond James, and more! To start your quarterly subscription and see how The Sevens Report can help you grow your business, click here.

What Number Would Make Core PCE Negative for Stocks?

What Number Would Make Core PCE Negative for Stocks? Start a free trial of The Sevens Report.


What’s in Today’s Report:

  • What Number Would Make Core PCE Negative for Stocks?
  • EIA and Oil Market Analysis

Futures are modestly lower as EU inflation data disappointed overnight while tech earnings underwhelmed.

Economically, French and Spanish CPIs showed on going disinflation but it was slower than expected (mirroring what we’ve seen recently in the U.S.).

On earnings, CRM and SNOW posted underwhelming earnings and that’s modestly weighting on tech shares.

Today focus will be on the Core PCE Price Index (E: 0.4% m/m, 2.8% y/y) as that’s the most important report of the week.  Risk/reward into this number is skewed slightly positive as inflation concerns are already elevated and partially priced in, so it should take a solidly hot number to weigh on markets, while just an “in-line” reading would be welcomed.

Other data notable data today includes Jobless Claims (E: 210K) and Pending Home Sales (E: 0.8%) and we have three Fed speakers, Bostic (10:50 a.m.), Goolsbee (11:00 a.m.) and Mester (1:15 p.m. ET) although barring a major surprise from those reports/speakers, they shouldn’t move markets.


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Why Didn’t Hot Inflation Data Cause a Bigger Drop?

Why Didn’t Hot Inflation Data Cause a Bigger Drop? Start a free trial of The Sevens Report.


What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Why Didn’t the Hot Inflation Data Cause a Bigger Drop?
  • Economic Takeaways – Are Stagflation Risks Rising?

Stock futures are lower to start the week as a rate cut by China’s central bank failed to bolster investors’ appetite for risk overseas while domestic focus shifts to NVDA earnings.

The PBOC slashed the 5-Yr Loan Prime Rate by a record 25 bp overnight (E: -5 bp) but the rate cut failed to ease lingering concerns about the health of the property market and markets are trading with a moderate risk-off tone this morning.

Looking into today’s session, there are two economic reports to watch: Leading Economic Indicators (E: -0.1%) which has been flashing a recession signal for months, and Canadian CPI (E: 0.4%) which could further stoke inflation worries if the number comes in hot.

There are no Fed officials scheduled to speak today, however the Treasury will hold 3-Month and 6-Month Bill auctions at 11:30 a.m. ET and a 52-Week Bill action at 1:00 p.m. ET. Based on the market’s increased sensitivity to rising bond yields in recent weeks, signs of weak demand in the auction could send yields to new highs which would act as a strengthening headwind on risk assets as we start the week.


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The Reason Stocks Dropped Was Because The CPI Report

The Reason Stocks Dropped Was Because The CPI Report: Tom Essaye Quoted in Blockworks


Bitcoin breaks $52k, outperforms stocks to new 2024 high

After markets digested the CPI print in the US, inflation data from the United Kingdom came in lower than expected, showing prices are holding steadily at 4% higher year-over-year. The more positive inflationary data helped stock futures rise ahead of Wednesday’s open, Tom Essaye, founder of Sevens Report Research said.

It’s important to realize that while the hot CPI was the catalyst for yesterday’s stock and bond market declines, stocks didn’t decline because CPI implied inflation was bouncing back,” Essaye said. “Instead, the reason stocks dropped was because the CPI report was the first data point in 2024 to not confirm these fantastically positive assumptions that have driven this rally.”

Also, click here to view the full Blockwork article published on February 14th, 2024. However, to see the Sevens Report’s full comments on the current market environment sign up here.

If you want research that comes with no long term commitment, yet provides independent, value added, plain English analysis of complex macro topics, then begin your Sevens Report subscription today by clicking here.

To strengthen your market knowledge take a free trial of The Sevens Report.


Join hundreds of advisors from huge brokerage firms like Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Wells Fargo Advisors, Raymond James, and more! To start your quarterly subscription and see how The Sevens Report can help you grow your business, click here.

The Market Had Gotten Ahead Of Itself

The Market Had Gotten Ahead Of Itself: Tom Essaye Quoted in Barron’s


Stocks Drop as Market Dials Back Fed Rate-Cut Expectations After CPI Data

Sevens Report Research’s Tom Essaye told Barron’s in a phone interview that while the report didn’t imply that inflation was bouncing back significantly, the market had gotten ahead of itself by pricing in inflation crashing to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

“I think this is more symptomatic of a market that’s frankly, gotten ahead of itself on what it expects to happen,” Essaye says. “And we’re having that expectation dialed back now.”

“It’s just one report, but I think it is a little bit of a reminder, and an important one, that what has really fueled this rally since October has been the assumption of Fed rate cuts and falling inflation,” Essaye says. “And while that likely will happen later this year, it may not happen as soon as they expected. And I think that’s what we’re seeing in markets.”

Also, click here to view the full Barron’s article published on February 13th, 2024. However, to see the Sevens Report’s full comments on the current market environment sign up here.

It’ll be Very Hard for This Market to Rally

If you want research that comes with no long term commitment, yet provides independent, value added, plain English analysis of complex macro topics, then begin your Sevens Report subscription today by clicking here.

To strengthen your market knowledge take a free trial of The Sevens Report.


Join hundreds of advisors from huge brokerage firms like Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Wells Fargo Advisors, Raymond James, and more! To start your quarterly subscription and see how The Sevens Report can help you grow your business, click here.