Bad news for the economy is good news for stocks
Signs that growth and inflation might be moderating helped stocks rally sharply over the week, lifting the S&P 500 out of bear market territory. With the exception of energy, all sectors in the index recorded strong gains. Several economic data signaled that the Fed’s monetary tightening was having the intended effect of slowing the US economy and moderating inflation. E.g US home sales fell to their lowest level in May since June 2020, the S&P Global’s index of June manufacturing activity came in well below forecasts (52.4 versus roughly 56) while the University of Michigan’s of June consumer sentiment was revised down to 50.0, its lowest level in records dating back over four decades. On Wednesday and Thursday, Fed Chair Powell testified before Congress that inflation expectations appeared to remain anchored. His comments, along with the weaker-than-expected economic readings, briefly pushed the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note near 3.0%, down significantly from the previous week’s peak of nearly 3.5%. Shares in Europe snapped three weeks of losses as signs that the economy is slowing cast doubt on whether central banks would seek to increase interest rates aggressively. Chinese stock markets advanced on stimulus hopes after President Xi Jinping pledged to roll out more measures to support the economy and minimize the impact of COVID-19. Cryptos have moved sharply higher, with bitcoin +20% and eth +40% from last Saturday's lows.
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Most US equities indexes ended the week lower, although the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite advanced modestly and cleared the 20,000 mark for the first time. The Russell 2000 Index recorded a second consecutive week of underperformance against the S&P 500 Index. Growth stocks posted a third consecutive week of outperformance versus value, thanks in part to gains in shares of Tesla (12%) and Alphabet (8.4%). On the macro-economic side, stagflation fears started to rise once again. Indeed, YoY CPI and PPI both accelerated. Meanwhile overall macro surprises disappointed for the fourth week in a row: on Thursday, the Labor Department reported a surprise jump in weekly initial jobless claims to a two-month high of 242,000.