Crucial Week Dawns with Inflation Data, Big Bank Earnings on Way

 | Jul 10, 2023 09:29AM ET

(Monday market open) A vital week on Wall Street packed with summer fireworks begins quietly today with investors bracing for fresh inflation data Wednesday and big bank earnings Friday. Enjoy the peace while it lasts.

The first week of earnings season gets underway with the S&P 500 Index (SPX) up 7% since the start of the previous earnings season in April, but analysts expect a 7.2% drop in year-over-year earnings per share (EPS) for Q2, according to FactSet. Forward valuations (price-earnings) are high on a historical basis near 19, but the bar is low for companies to exceed Wall Street’s forecasts.

Last week, the SPX fell 1.2%—only the second weekly decline in the past two months. The Nasdaq Composite (COMP) lost 0.9% for the week. Energy shares enjoyed the best performance on Friday thanks to a rise in crude oil prices fueled by investor enthusiasm for potential production cuts by OPEC. Volume remained below normal Friday on the New York Stock Exchange, continuing a trend of light trading, and advancers led decliners despite major indexes losing ground.

Industrial stocks like Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) and 3M Company (NYSE:MMM) (MMM) also wrapped up the week on a high note, and the materials sector topped Friday’s scorecard. This could be more evidence of widening participation in the rally beyond info tech, so consider keeping an eye on these sectors. As for mega-cap info tech, selling pressure surfaced late Friday, likely explaining the market’s decline over the last hour of trading.

Friday’s close looked weak from a chart standpoint, as the SPX was unable to hold 4,400. Stocks have a mixed tone this morning as mega-cap weakness persisted. It’s also worth watching crude oil futures (/CL), which posted nine-week highs Friday after Saudi Arabia’s most recent slice to production. Rising crude can support the energy sector, but it may put a brake on the recent rally in transport-related companies like airlines, railroads, and delivery firms.

h2 Morning rush/h2
  • The 10-year Treasury note yield (TNX) is steady at 4.04%.
  • The U.S. Dollar Index ($DXY) slipped to 102.43.
  • Cboe Volatility Index® (VIX) futures climbed to 15.36.
  • WTI Crude Oil (/CL) was steady at $73.41 per barrel.
h2 Eye on the Fed/h2
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Futures trading indicates a 92% probability that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will raise interest rates by 25 basis points at its July meeting, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. That’s basically unchanged from late last week.

This week features a packed calendar of Fed speakers, including three today. Among them is Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic, whose remarks might be worth a close look. He’s one of the few Fed officials who has sounded slightly less hawkish lately.

Jobs report redux: Last Friday’s Nonfarm Payrolls report got a mixed review from analysts, and the market didn’t seem to know what to do with it. Major indexes traded in mixed fashion following the data. The bond market got a bit of a reprieve from the cooler-than-expected June jobs growth of 209,000, but it was still a strong report by historical standards.

Jobs growth of 200,000 and above is far more than the economy needs to keep supplying workers with labor. About 100,000 new jobs a month would do the trick, economists say. The trend in jobs growth is lower this year, however, and June was the lightest month since late 2020. Much of the increase was in the government sector, which tends to lag in the business cycle. Wage growth that came in above expectations kept the inflation alarms ringing,

h2 What to Watch/h2

Inflation on deck: The U.S. government’s June Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Producer Price Index (PPI) loom this Wednesday and Thursday, respectively. These two reports outshine all others this week now that Friday’s Nonfarm Payrolls is behind us.

Early analyst consensus on Wall Street is for a 0.3% rise in both CPI and core CPI, according to Trading Economics. CPI rose 0.1% in May, while core CPI, which strips out volatile food and energy, rose 0.4%. It’s arguably unlikely the reports would affect the Fed’s rate strategy, as it seems determined to raise rates another 25 basis points at the next meeting in late July. Both CPI and PPI have been trending lower—just not as quickly as the Fed might want to reach its 2% inflation objective.

h2 Stocks in Spotlight/h2

Four of the five leading stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DJI) year-to-date were associated with the info tech industry. The fifth is American Express (NYSE:AXP). Placing sixth is Visa (NYSE:V). That says a lot about the financial services industry, which includes companies that offer payment cards. American Express reports two weeks from today, following Q1 earnings that missed analysts’ expectations. PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL) is expected to report in early August. Investors might want to pay close attention to guidance from the payment industry to see if executives forecast any sort of consumer or business slump in the second half of the trading year.

Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) holds its “Prime Day” on Tuesday and Wednesday, a good chance to see how the consumer is doing.

Halftime for bonds: Corporate bonds generally had a good first half in 2023, and the picture remains bright for the remainder of the year, according to Schwab’s mid-year outlook on corporate bonds. One thing to watch is volatility, which may increase in the high-yield arena.