S&P 500 News: Stocks consolidate as market bulls await next week's Fed meeting

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  • President Joe Biden signed a bill to raise the debt ceiling on Saturday.
  • Apple introduces VR headset on Monday, but AAPL stock caves.
  • May jobs report last Friday gives lower probability of June Fed rate hike.
  • Stitch Fix, DocuSign, Nio report earnings this week.
  • S&P 500 is close to year-to-date highs, as stock markets are buoyed by dovish Fed expectations.

The S&P 500 index is unsure where to move now that the US debt ceiling standoff has been dealt with. President Joe Biden signed the agreement into law on Saturday that will lift the debt ceiling until 2025, which should put the markets at ease now that a politically-caused US debt default is out of the picture. However, last Friday’s jobs report makes it less likely that the Federal Reserve (Fed) hikes interest rates on June 14. Even though the Fed decision comes down next week, the lack of significant data on the schedule this week leaves markets more focused on next Wednesday.

Despite the stock rallying in advance, Apple’s (AAPL) much-touted unveiling of its virtual reality headset hurt the S&P 500 index on Monday when the index’s largest stock fell 0.8%. Though many were wowed by the technology, most of the negativity surrounded the Apple Vision Pro’s $3,499 price tag. AAPL stock dropped another 1% in the first half hour of Tuesday's session.

At the time of writing in Tuesday’s premarket, both S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 futures are slightly in the green but not by much.

S&P 500 News: Markets look ahead to FOMC meeting

Last Friday’s May Nonfarm Payrolls figure of 339,000 blasted expectations out of the water. Various consensus forecasts thought the US labor market would decline to between 185K and 195K new hires. Instead, the US economy produced 339,000 new positions, demonstrating that a recession does not seem to be emerging. However, 440,000 new layoffs overpowered that strong jobs figure, and unemployment jumped from 3.4% to 3.7%. Additionally, the YoY average hourly wage figure ticked down to 4.3%, so the market took this report as a sign that the Fed’s hikes have worked.

The CME FedWatch Tool just one week ago had a 66% chance of a 25-basis-point hike. Now the gauge has dropped to 25%. It seems the market believes hikes may end this month, which is of course bullish for the S&P 500. However, observers do not think the Federal Reserve is likely to cut rates anytime soon. The market leapt higher on Friday, but Monday saw a less enthusiastic response as the S&P 500 lost 0.2%.

Still, the lack of significant data this week leaves many traders sitting tight until June 14, when certainty over the Fed should lead to action in the markets.

United States Fed Interest Rate Decision

With a pre-set regularity, a nation's central bank has an economic policy meeting, in which board members took different measures, the most relevant one being the interest rate that it will charge on loans and advances to commercial banks. In the US, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve meets​ at intervals of five to eight weeks, in which they announce their latest decisions. A rate hike tends to boost the US dollar, as it is understood as a sign of healthy inflation. A rate cut, on the other hand, is seen as a sign of economic and inflationary woes and, therefore, tends to weaken the USD. If rates remain unchanged, attention turns to the tone of the FOMC statement, and whether the tone is hawkish, or dovish over future developments of inflation. Read more.

Next release: Wednesday June 14, 2023 18:00:00 GMT
Frequency: Irregular
Source: Federal Reserve

 

Data: ISM PMI demonstrates a possible slowing economy

On Monday, the Institute of Supply Management’s (ISM) Services Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) gave a reading of 50.3, which demonstrates a barely expanding services sector. Analysts had been expecting a 51.5 reading, and April saw the figure arrive at 51.9. Also the Prices Paid ISM survey showed prices in the services sector falling, as well as a reduction in employment.

The slowdown in growth is now viewed less as the sign of an impending recession, but rather just a cooldown for an overheated economy. It does jibe with a number of retail businesses cutting their 2023 outlooks during earnings calls over the past month. On Monday, KeyBanc gave Target (TGT) a downgrade based on expected softness in consumer spending. 

Washington’s debt ceiling agreement forces over 27 million US borrowers to restart the payment of their student loans come August or September. This should cut more than $11 billion in monthly spending power from this cohort. UBS analyst Jay Sole issued a research over the weekend saying that clothing brands, including Nike (NKE), will likely also get hit hardest.
 

Earnings of the week

Tuesday, June 6 - Stitch Fix (SFIX), J. M. Smucker (SJM) 

Wednesday, June 7 - GameStop (GME), Campbell Soup (CPB)

Thursday, June 8 - DocuSign (DOCU)

Friday, June 9 - Nio (NIO)

What they said about the market – Mark Zandi

Mark Zandi, the chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, said he sees lots of reasons to expect a coming recession, but the labor market and consumer spending are so far holding up against a major downturn. 

"At the end of the day, it’s about the consumer, which is the firewall between recession and no recession.”

S&P 500 forecast

The S&P 500 may just be consolidating a bit this week in light of next week’s Fed rate decision. The index is already up 12% year to date, and the completion of a debt-ceiling agreement led the S&P 500 to add 1.83% last week. Now traders are looking around for guidance, it would appear. 

Now firmly above the 4,200 resistance at 4,273 at Monday’s close, S&P 500 bulls will surely hold until they can sell at the 4,325 level that remains the index’s high since August 2022. In the meantime, the 4,200 level and the nearby 9-day moving average should provide support until bulls can reach last August’s high. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is above the halfway mark but not yet in overbought territory. This means there is almost certainly more room to run.

S&P 500 daily chart

  • President Joe Biden signed a bill to raise the debt ceiling on Saturday.
  • Apple introduces VR headset on Monday, but AAPL stock caves.
  • May jobs report last Friday gives lower probability of June Fed rate hike.
  • Stitch Fix, DocuSign, Nio report earnings this week.
  • S&P 500 is close to year-to-date highs, as stock markets are buoyed by dovish Fed expectations.

The S&P 500 index is unsure where to move now that the US debt ceiling standoff has been dealt with. President Joe Biden signed the agreement into law on Saturday that will lift the debt ceiling until 2025, which should put the markets at ease now that a politically-caused US debt default is out of the picture. However, last Friday’s jobs report makes it less likely that the Federal Reserve (Fed) hikes interest rates on June 14. Even though the Fed decision comes down next week, the lack of significant data on the schedule this week leaves markets more focused on next Wednesday.

Despite the stock rallying in advance, Apple’s (AAPL) much-touted unveiling of its virtual reality headset hurt the S&P 500 index on Monday when the index’s largest stock fell 0.8%. Though many were wowed by the technology, most of the negativity surrounded the Apple Vision Pro’s $3,499 price tag. AAPL stock dropped another 1% in the first half hour of Tuesday's session.

At the time of writing in Tuesday’s premarket, both S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 futures are slightly in the green but not by much.

S&P 500 News: Markets look ahead to FOMC meeting

Last Friday’s May Nonfarm Payrolls figure of 339,000 blasted expectations out of the water. Various consensus forecasts thought the US labor market would decline to between 185K and 195K new hires. Instead, the US economy produced 339,000 new positions, demonstrating that a recession does not seem to be emerging. However, 440,000 new layoffs overpowered that strong jobs figure, and unemployment jumped from 3.4% to 3.7%. Additionally, the YoY average hourly wage figure ticked down to 4.3%, so the market took this report as a sign that the Fed’s hikes have worked.

The CME FedWatch Tool just one week ago had a 66% chance of a 25-basis-point hike. Now the gauge has dropped to 25%. It seems the market believes hikes may end this month, which is of course bullish for the S&P 500. However, observers do not think the Federal Reserve is likely to cut rates anytime soon. The market leapt higher on Friday, but Monday saw a less enthusiastic response as the S&P 500 lost 0.2%.

Still, the lack of significant data this week leaves many traders sitting tight until June 14, when certainty over the Fed should lead to action in the markets.

United States Fed Interest Rate Decision

With a pre-set regularity, a nation's central bank has an economic policy meeting, in which board members took different measures, the most relevant one being the interest rate that it will charge on loans and advances to commercial banks. In the US, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve meets​ at intervals of five to eight weeks, in which they announce their latest decisions. A rate hike tends to boost the US dollar, as it is understood as a sign of healthy inflation. A rate cut, on the other hand, is seen as a sign of economic and inflationary woes and, therefore, tends to weaken the USD. If rates remain unchanged, attention turns to the tone of the FOMC statement, and whether the tone is hawkish, or dovish over future developments of inflation. Read more.

Next release: Wednesday June 14, 2023 18:00:00 GMT
Frequency: Irregular
Source: Federal Reserve

 

Data: ISM PMI demonstrates a possible slowing economy

On Monday, the Institute of Supply Management’s (ISM) Services Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) gave a reading of 50.3, which demonstrates a barely expanding services sector. Analysts had been expecting a 51.5 reading, and April saw the figure arrive at 51.9. Also the Prices Paid ISM survey showed prices in the services sector falling, as well as a reduction in employment.

The slowdown in growth is now viewed less as the sign of an impending recession, but rather just a cooldown for an overheated economy. It does jibe with a number of retail businesses cutting their 2023 outlooks during earnings calls over the past month. On Monday, KeyBanc gave Target (TGT) a downgrade based on expected softness in consumer spending. 

Washington’s debt ceiling agreement forces over 27 million US borrowers to restart the payment of their student loans come August or September. This should cut more than $11 billion in monthly spending power from this cohort. UBS analyst Jay Sole issued a research over the weekend saying that clothing brands, including Nike (NKE), will likely also get hit hardest.
 

Earnings of the week

Tuesday, June 6 - Stitch Fix (SFIX), J. M. Smucker (SJM) 

Wednesday, June 7 - GameStop (GME), Campbell Soup (CPB)

Thursday, June 8 - DocuSign (DOCU)

Friday, June 9 - Nio (NIO)

What they said about the market – Mark Zandi

Mark Zandi, the chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, said he sees lots of reasons to expect a coming recession, but the labor market and consumer spending are so far holding up against a major downturn. 

"At the end of the day, it’s about the consumer, which is the firewall between recession and no recession.”

S&P 500 forecast

The S&P 500 may just be consolidating a bit this week in light of next week’s Fed rate decision. The index is already up 12% year to date, and the completion of a debt-ceiling agreement led the S&P 500 to add 1.83% last week. Now traders are looking around for guidance, it would appear. 

Now firmly above the 4,200 resistance at 4,273 at Monday’s close, S&P 500 bulls will surely hold until they can sell at the 4,325 level that remains the index’s high since August 2022. In the meantime, the 4,200 level and the nearby 9-day moving average should provide support until bulls can reach last August’s high. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is above the halfway mark but not yet in overbought territory. This means there is almost certainly more room to run.

S&P 500 daily chart

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