Posts

Why Did Stocks Drop Again?

Why Did Stocks Drop Again? Start a free trial of The Sevens Report.


What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Why Did Stocks Drop Again?
  • How High Can Gold Go?

Futures are bouncing modestly from Thursday’s afternoon selloff, following a quiet night of news and as investor look ahead to today’s jobs report.

Economic data overnight (German Manufacturers’ Orders and Euro Zone retail sales) slightly missed expectations but the numbers aren’t increasing growth worries.

Today the focus will be on the jobs report and expectations are as follows: 200K Job Adds, 3.9% Unemployment Rate, 4.1% y/y Wage Growth.  The risk for this market remains for a “Too Hot” report that shows strong job adds, low unemployment and hot wages, while a number modestly below expectations would be welcomed as “Goldilocks” and likely spur a rebound in stocks and bonds.

In addition to the jobs report, we also have several Fed speakers including Collins (8:30 a.m. ET), Barkin (9:15 a.m. ET), Logan (11:00 a.m. ET) and Bowman (12:15 p.m. ET). If their tone is hawkish, it could reduce June rate cut chances and increase volatility.


Sevens Report Quarterly Letter 

Our Q1 ’24 Quarterly Letter was delivered to subscribers this past Monday, complete with compliance backup and citations. We’re already receiving feedback about how it is saving advisors time and helping them communicate with their clients in this environment!

You can view our Q4 ’23 Quarterly Letter here.

To learn more about the product (including price) please click this link.

If you’re interested in subscribing, please email info@sevensreport.com.


Join thousands 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.

Is the Baltimore Bridge Collapse a Risk to Inflation?

Is the Baltimore Bridge Collapse a Risk to Inflation? Start a free trial of The Sevens Report.


What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Could the Baltimore Bridge Collapse Spark a Rebound in Inflation?
  • Durable Goods Orders Takeaways (More Weak Revisions)
  • Philly Fed Nonmanufacturing Survey (Another Whiff of Stagflation)
  • Consumer Confidence Shows Fading Household Financial Situations – Chart

Stock futures are rebounding from yesterday’s late session selloff as economic data overnight was mostly market-friendly while traders eye continued volatility in the yen.

Economically, Chinese Industrial Profits jumped by 10.2% y/y in the first two months of the year and the Eurozone Economic Sentiment headline rose to 96.3 vs. (E) 95.8. The overseas data helped ease global growth concerns.

The yen is attempting to stabilize this morning after falling to its lowest level against the dollar since 1990 overnight. A short-squeeze in the yen is a threat stocks and other risk assets as it would force traditional carry trades to unwind. The yen warrants close attention into the end of the week here.

There is no economic data today and just one Fed speaker after the close: Waller 6:00 p.m. ET.

There is a 7-Yr Treasury Note auction at 1:00 p.m. ET today. Yesterday’s 5-Yr auction was solid and investors will be looking for more strong demand for Treasuries in the belly of the duration curve today (a rise in yields would weigh on stocks).


Join thousands 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.

Data from the EIA was largely bullish

Data from the EIA was largely bullish: Sevens Report Co-Editor, Tyler Richey, Quoted in MarketWatch


Oil futures edge lower early Thursday

“Yesterday’s weekly inventory data from the EIA was largely bullish but the futures market had become overbought and there was a knee-jerk selloff in the immediate wake of the release as short-term traders booked profits on the latest breakout to new 2024 highs,” analysts at Sevens Report Research wrote in a note.

Also, click here to view the full MarketWatch article published on March 21st, 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.

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.


Join thousands 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 Is the Bitcoin “Halving?”

What Is the Bitcoin “Halving?”: Start a free trial of The Sevens Report.


What’s in Today’s Report:

  • What Is the Bitcoin “Halving?”
  • Manheim Used Vehicle Index Continues to Decline – Chart

Stock futures are little changed this morning as yields drift sideways and the dollar firms ahead of the Fed decision.

European markets were led lower by luxury brand names after soft earnings from Gucci’s parent company (Kering SA) offset favorable inflation data out of the UK.

Economically, the PBOC left the Loan Prime Rate at 3.45% which is seen as accommodative while U.K. CPI favorably fell from 5.1% to 4.5% vs. (E) 4.6% in February.

There are no notable economic reports today which will leave investor focus pretty much exclusively on the Fed with the FOMC Meeting Announcement at 2:00 p.m. ET followed by Fed Chair Powell’s press conference at 2:30 p.m. ET.

If the Fed is hawkish and signals a higher-for-longer policy stance (more so than is already priced in), expect some volatility in the wake of the decision while a dovish decision projecting confidence in a soft landing could see the 2024 rally extend to new highs.


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.

Hawkish central-bank policy is bad for the oil market

Hawkish central-bank policy is bad for the oil market: Tyler Richey, Sevens Report Co-Editor, Quoted in MarketWatch on MSN


Oil settles lower after rise in U.S. CPI and OPEC’s unchanged demand forecast

The initial market reaction to the consumer-price index release was a “hawkish one which saw oil prices decline to session lows,” Tyler Richey, co-editor at Sevens Report Research, told MarketWatch.

“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,” he said.

Also, click here to view the full MarketWatch article published by MSN on March 13th, 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 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.

How oil futures close out the week today will largely depend on how investors digest today’s jobs data

Sevens Report Analysts Quoted in MarketWatch


Jobs report could decide how oil closes out the week

“How oil futures close out the week today will largely depend on how investors digest today’s jobs data. If it is more ‘market-friendly’ data that points to slowing inflation (specifically wages) and more loosening in the jobs market, oil is likely to rally past the $80/barrel mark,” analysts at Sevens Report Research said in a note.

“Conversely, a ‘hot’ report would likely send futures back towards support in the mid-$70s,” they wrote.

Also, click here to view the full MarketWatch article published on March 8th, 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.

Money Supply and Stocks: Is There a Disconnect?

Money Supply and Stocks: Is There a Disconnect? Start a free trial of The Sevens Report.


What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Money Supply and Stocks: Is There a Disconnect?
  • ISM Services Index Takeaways (Slightly Dovish)

Futures are rebounding with global shares amid positive stimulus news out of China and mostly better-than-feared economic data overseas ahead of several important catalysts today.

Overnight, China’s State Planner and the head of the PBOC both reiterated their commitment to achieving 5% growth in 2024 which is supporting a rebound in risk assets as investors gain confidence in the prospects of a stabilizing Chinese economy.

Eurozone Retail Sales fell -1.0% vs. (E) -1.4% helping ease concerns of a sharp slowdown in the EU economy which is adding to the risk-on money flows this morning.

Looking into the U.S. session, focus will be on economic data early today starting with the: ADP Employment Report (E: +150K job adds) followed by the JOLTS release (E: 8.9 million job openings).

From there attention will turn to Capitol Hill where Fed Chair Powell will begin his semi-annual testimony at 10:00 a.m. ET. The Fed’s Daly (12:00 p.m. ET) and Kashkari (4:15 p.m. ET) will also speak today but Powell will be firmly in the spotlight as investors look for clues as to whether the FOMC plans to begin rate cuts in the second quarter (market positive) or wait until H2’24 (market negative).


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.

Is This A Teflon Market? (No. Here’s Why)

Is This A Teflon Market? (No. Here’s Why): Start a free trial of The Sevens Report.


What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Is This A Teflon Market? (No. Here’s Why)
  • Weekly Market Preview:  Can Data and Fed Speak Extend the Rally?
  • Weekly Economic Cheat Sheet:  All About Employment (Jobs Report Friday among others).

Futures are slightly lower following quiet weekend of news as markets digest Friday’s rally.

Geopolitically, hope is growing for a six-week ceasefire in Gaza that could be announced in the coming days and that’s modestly weighing on oil prices.

The S&P 500 will become even more “AI” sensitive as SMCI  (Super Microcomputer) will in added to the S&P 500, incrementally increasing tech exposure to the index.

This will be a potentially busy week of catalysts but it starts slowly today as there are no economic reports and just one Fed speaker, Harker at 11:00 a.m. ET.  So, absent any surprises, expect yields to drive stocks.  If the 10-year Treasury yield drifts lower, don’t be surprised if stocks recoup these early losses.


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.