Following the release of the June jobs report, which revealed a slight
cooling in the labour market while maintaining its strong stance, investors
are eagerly awaiting a key inflation report scheduled for Wednesday.
However, the results of the CPI report are likely to have limited impact on
the Federal Reserve’s interest rate trajectory.
In June, the labour market added 209,000 jobs, falling short of economists’
projections for a gain of 225,000 jobs. Although this represents the
smallest monthly increase since a decline in December 2020, it is important
to note that the jobs market remains robust. Average hourly earnings growth
remained steady at 0.4% from May, and a year-over-year at 4.4%, indicating
persistent wage inflation, while the unemployment rate dropped from 3.7% to
3.6%.
During their June meeting, Federal Reserve officials decided to leave
interest rates on hold, opting for a temporary pause to evaluate the impact
of the ten previous rate hikes. They emphasized that this brief pause would
allow the committee to carefully assess the effects of the aggressive
hiking, totalling 5 percentage points, which is the most substantial since
the early 1980s. The minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee’s
recent meeting indicated that nearly all Fed officials believed that
further interest rate hikes might be necessary to address the inflation
risks and the tight labour market.
The release of the non-farm payrolls report has reinforced the market’s
expectation that the Federal Reserve will resume its rate hikes. As a
result, traders overwhelmingly anticipate a 25-basis point rate hike at the
upcoming July meeting, with the CME FedWatch Tool indicating a probability
of approximately 92%.
This week, market focus turns to the release of June inflation data in the
United States. Wednesday’s CPI report is expected to show a 3.1% annual
increase in the underlying inflation, marking the slowest rise since March
2021, while core CPI is expected to decline to 5.0% from 5.3% in May.
Furthermore, the second quarter earnings season kicks off in full swing,
with financial behemoths BlackRock, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, and Wells
Fargo reporting their results this week. Earnings will be closely watched
as disappointing results from the big lenders would underscore a
deterioration in the sector’s outlook; however, corporate America is in a
good position to meet the low bar set by consensus. If companies fail to
meet expectations, it could leave U.S. equities vulnerable due to the
expanding equity valuations witnessed this year.
Source: TradingView
The benchmark equity index has started trading in the red last week with a
slowdown in momentum evident on the daily chart. The marginally higher high
and the formation of a bearish divergence between the index and the
Relative Strength Index indicator shows that momentum is deteriorating.
However, until minor support of 4,328 is broken the divergence is not
confirmed and a deeper pull back might not unfold. Should support gets
breached in the short-term a decline to the 4,100 – 4,200 area could unfold
in the coming weeks.
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