Bad News Good For Market? Let's Just Hope It Doesn't Get Too Bad

 | Oct 08, 2019 12:44AM ET

Too bad investing isn’t as easy as picking apples this time of year. Instead of perfectly crisp red apples sitting at eye level, stock pickers are more likely to find approaching snow, fruit out of reach and a growling farm dog. This environment is getting trickier as the U.S. and global economy slows further and the outlook for jobs and wages gets darker. The ISM data last week was pretty dismal. Some of the series around the world are starting to slow at an accelerating rate. Remember that the U.S. economy is supertanker sized, and once the ship begins to turn in a new direction, it is not easy to reverse. Many of us would like to believe that eliminating all tariffs and returning to free trade might help stop the slowdown, but it is very possible that we are too late. The poor ISM data gave way to a stock bounce late in the week as the markets shifted quickly toward betting on another Fed Funds rate cut at the end of October. Bad news is good for the markets right now. Let’s just hope the news doesn’t get too bad.

As we head into the earnings reporting period, it will be interesting to hear how the CEOs and CFOs negotiate their conference calls and year-end outlooks. We know from the surveys that pessimism is prevalent in the corner office right now and that difficult hiring decisions lay ahead. Not sure where the trigger for increased optimism would come from. We get another round of China trade talks this week, but few are hopeful for a positive outcome. Brexit and Hong Kong remain a mess. WeWork (NYSE:WEWK) is pressuring commercial real estate values given how big they have become in many major markets (18% of NYC leasing transactions in 2018). But the silver lining is that as bad as the data and numbers project, the Fed will have our back forever. Right? Zero interest rates here we come. Pick all the apples that you can until credit spreads break higher. Then drop your basket and run.

Consumer confidence might have peaked for this cycle…

“Markets peak when optimism peaks, and market and consumer optimism can frequently peak together. US consumer confidence made major tops in 1988, 2000 and 2007, all periods that were followed by decidedly worse-than-average equity and credit market returns. Today, consumer confidence is high but has started to weaken, a worrying sign that another such peak may be forming.”

( Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS))

Weak ISM data last week sent the Fed rate cut probability soaring…