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Sevens Report Co-Editor, Tyler Richey, Quoted in MarketWatch on August 28th, 2023

The stock market is set up for a relief rally. Don’t chase the bounce, says technician.

The August downtrend in stocks extended through a third consecutive week as of Friday’s close after Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell said at the Jackson Hole economic symposium that it is still unclear if interest rates will need to rise further as policy makers remain unsure of whether more rate hikes are needed, said Tyler Richey, co-editor at Sevens Report Research. 

Friday’s “whipsaw drop to new lows for the week” on the S&P 500 futures ES00, 0.18% was not confirmed by new lows in the RSI indicator, which means the market is setting up for a potential relief rally to start the new week with resistance at a range of 4,465 to 4,515 in focus, Richey said.

Click here to read the full article.

Tom Essaye Quoted in Barron’s on August 28th, 2023

Stocks Open Higher Ahead of Busy Week for Economic Data

“This week will be more important than it appeared it would when we started August because of last week’s surprisingly soft flash PMIs, as there is a lot of important economic data this week,” argued Tom Essaye, president of Sevens Report Research. If it confirms that the economy is losing momentum and a hard landing is more likely than previously thought, it will pressure stocks,” he added.

Click here to read the full article.

 

Why Didn’t NVDA Earnings Spark A Rally?

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Why Didn’t NVDA Earnings Spark A Rally?

Futures are bouncing modestly following a quiet night of news and as investors look ahead to Powell’s speech later this morning.

EU economic data was soft again overnight, as German IFO Business Expectations missed estimates (82.6 vs. (E) 83.6) and added to the list of disappointing economic reports this week.

Today focus will be on Powell’s speech (10:00 a.m. ET) and if Powell’s tone implies “higher for longer” on rates, that will boost Treasury yields and pressure stocks.  Conversely, if he talks about being “patient” with the 2% inflation target, that will be seen as dovish.

Away from Powell, the only notable reports are Consumer Sentiment (E: 71.2) and the One-Year Inflation Expectations (E: 3.3%) and Five-year Inflation Expectations (E: 2.9%).   If inflation expectations are solidly under estimates, that’ll be a mild positive for markets.

Sevens Report Analysts Quoted in Investing.com on August 21st, 2023

Dow Jones, Nasdaq, S&P 500 weekly preview: All eyes on Nvidia and Powell

Sevens Report analysts: “The market of 2023 is being defined almost by hyperbolic extremes. We started 2023 with investors fearing a catastrophic recession, 1970s- style inflation and 1970s-style rate hikes. That hasn’t happened. But just because that didn’t happen, it doesn’t mean that: No economic slowdown will occur, inflation will magically crash to late 20-teens levels, and the Fed will suddenly turn dovish (as markets priced in at 4,600). The truth is in the middle, and that’s where we are now.”

Click here to read the full article.

What Is “R Star” and Why Is It Important?

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • What is “R*” and Why Is It Important?
  • Palo Alto Shares Rip Higher by 15%, Sparking Tech Rally – Chart

Stock futures are higher this morning with mega-cap tech shares extending this week’s strong advance following news that SoftBank’s Arm semiconductor unit has filed for the largest U.S. IPO in 2 years after the close yesterday while traders await NVDA earnings tomorrow.

Overseas, the PBOC set the strongest yuan fixing on record overnight which has helped the currency stabilize and that is contributing to risk-on money flows this morning.

There were no other market moving headlines overnight and no notable economic reports were released.

Looking into today’s session, there is one economic report due out in the U.S. this morning: Existing Home Sales (E: 4.160 million) but it is unlikely to impact markets with traders primarily focused on tech so far this week.

There are two Fed speakers today: Barkin (7:15 a.m. ET) and Goolsbee (2:30 p.m. ET) and their commentary could move markets as markets look ahead to Fed Chair Powell’s remarks from Jackson Hole on Friday. Anything that sparks a further rise in Treasury yields could pour cold water on this week’s tech rally which is basically entirely responsible for the week-to-date gains in the broader equity markets.

Sevens Report Analysts Quoted in ETF Trends on August 25th, 2022

Gold ETFs Could Still Find a Place in a Diversified Portfolio

If the market responds to Powell in a dovish manner that should send inflation expectations even higher, while the dollar and yields should pull back, which would all result in tailwinds on gold. However, a hawkish and ‘growth-insensitive’ Powell would likely send gold back down towards $1,700, potentially by Friday’s close…analysts at Sevens Report Research said in a note. Click here to read the full article.

What Powell’s Speech Means for Markets

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • What Powell’s Speech Means for Markets
  • Weekly Market Preview:  Are Central Banks Getting More Hawkish?
  • Weekly Economic Cheat Sheet:  How Strong is Growth (Jobs Report on Friday)

Futures are down close to 1% on follow through selling from Friday as hopes of a near term “Fed Pivot” continue to fade in reaction to Powell’s speech last week.

European shares are also sharply lower as tightening expectations for the ECB rose sharply on Friday.  Markets are now pricing in a minimum 50 bps hike next week with a 75 bps hike a real possibility.

There were no notable economic reports overnight.

Markets dropped on Friday as Powell dismissed the idea of an imminent “Fed Pivot,” but the ECB also signaled more hawkish intentions on Friday, and it was the two events that combined to cause the ugly declines.  Today there are no economic reports but there is an important Fed speaker, Brainard (2:15 p.m. ET) and if she echoes Powell’s comments from Friday, expect more losses in stocks.

Powell Speech Preview

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Powell Speech Preview

Futures are modestly higher as markets bounce back from Thursday’s declines ahead of Powell’s speech.

There were no new developments in Afghanistan overnight as evacuations continued.  The tragedy temporarily hit stocks but it won’t be an ongoing influence on markets.

Expectations for more stimulus from China rose overnight as chatter regarding a Reserve Ration cut grew louder and this, combined with some pre-Powell positioning, are the main reasons futures are higher.

Today the key event is obviously the Powell speech (10:00 a.m. ET) but as a reminder, he won’t announce anything specific regarding tapering (that will come at the Sept 22nd Fed meeting).  Instead, the key will be how much Powell discusses the Delta variant as an economic headwind (the more he mentions it, the more dovish the speech will be taken) and if he reaffirms the Fed is getting close to being able to taper QE (which will mean before year-end).

Outside of Powell, the Core PCE Price Index (E: 0.3% m/m, 3.6% y/y) is the key economic report this morning but as long as it’s much higher than expectations, it won’t move markets.

Yellen and Draghi Speech Preview, August 25, 2017

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Both Fed Chair Yellen and ECB President Draghi will speak at the conference today, and while neither is expected to say anything market moving, there are always surprises, so we want to preview their remarks briefly.

Yellen’s Speech: 10:00 A.M. EST

Key question: Will Yellen give us any color on whether we get a rate hike in December?

Likely Answer: (withheld for subscribers only—unlock specifics and ETFs by signing up for a free two-week trial).

What’s Expected: I’d give it about an 80% probability that Yellen does not even mention monetary policy
and instead just speaks broadly about the Fed’s role in helping ensure financial stability.

Wild Card to Watch: If there’s a risk of a surprise here, it’s for a “hawkish” surprise. Yellen could tie in the idea that in order to ensure future financial stability, the Fed needs to continue to remove accommodation and get interest rates back to normal levels.

Again, I think it’s unlikely she’d use this opportunity to discuss policy (unlike Bernanke, she’s never used Jackson Hole as a forum to discuss policy). Still, there is a chance  (20% if my other probability is 80%).

If she does surprise markets, though, look for a textbook (and potentially intense) “hawkish” market response: Dollar and bond yields up (maybe big), stocks down, commodities and gold down.

Draghi Speech: 3:00 P.M. EST

Key Question: Will Draghi forcefully hint at a tapering announcement in September?

Likely Answer: (withheld for subscribers only—unlock specifics and ETFs by signing up for a free two-week trial).

What’s Expected: Nothing specific. Draghi is not expected to speak or reference policy, mainly because the ECB meeting is less than three weeks away.

Wildcard to Watch: Commentary on the euro. While Draghi likely won’t say anything about expected policy, he might comment on the strength in the euro. It’s widely thought that the surging euro (up 10% vs. the dollar this year) would cause the ECB to be “dovish” and potentially delay tapering.

But, Draghi has pushed back on this notion recently, saying that the euro appreciation is the result of a better economy and rising inflation (hence virtuous).

If he reiterates those comments, or downplays the impact of a rising euro, that will be “hawkish” and the euro and German bond yields (and likely US Treasury yields) will rise, while the dollar will fall. This outcome would likely be positive for US stocks (on dollar weakness).

Bottom Line
In all likelihood, Jackson Hole should be a non-event, as it’s simply too close to the September ECB Meeting (Sept. 7) or the September Fed meeting (Sept. 20).

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