November Outlook: Early Events Could Set Tone As Investors Await Fed, Jobs Report

 | Oct 27, 2022 03:00PM ET

November kicks off with a trifecta of market-moving events.

First, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meets and makes its interest rate decision on November 2. Two days later, October’s Nonfarm Payrolls Report arrives. And on November 8, the entire country goes to the polls in a vote that could help shape economic and legislative policy in 2023 and beyond. That’s three critical events in less than a week; any or all of which could help set the market’s mood the rest of the month.

Against this backdrop, earnings season goes on, and at midmonth, major retailers will report Q3 numbers and how the inflation-battered consumer may spend for the holiday season.

All of this follows an October that saw the market set new two-year lows for stocks and new 14-year highs for bond yields before things started improving by the month’s close. The mood appeared a bit less gloomy after the week that ended October 21, the best for the major indexes since June. Can the positive vibes make it into November?

h2 First, As Always, With The Fed/h2

Let’s start November’s outlook at the top with a November 1-2 FOMC meeting likely to result in an unprecedented fourth consecutive 75-basis-point Fed rate hike. This will bring the central bank’s benchmark rate to between 3.75% and 4%. These levels stand in stark contrast to basically zero rates at the start of 2022 and would make this the most aggressive Fed hike in decades. Not since the Volcker era has a Fed been so relentlessly hawkish.

As of late October, the CME FedWatch Tool showed a 95% chance of the Fed raising rates 75 basis points in November, virtually guaranteeing this increase, barring some sort of economic or geopolitical catastrophe changing the game by next Wednesday. Projections for another 75-basis-point hike went to nearly unanimous from just 60% a month ago as robust economic data rolled in and inflation rolled on.

If the Fed does land on 75 basis points for November, it will take the target funds rate to the highest level since October 2006. Then the debate moves to December. However, an October 21 Wall Street Journal article suggested the Fed might be closer to a 50-point increase at its final meeting of the year—and the result was last week’s broad rally in stocks and bonds. For a potentially clearer picture, investors will want to listen closely to Fed Chairman Jerome Powell in his post-FOMC press conference on Wednesday. For what it’s worth, the CME tool now puts odds of a 75-point December hike at roughly 50-50, with 50-basis-point hike chances at 47%. 

What might move the Fed to moderate at this point? Fear, perhaps.

Some believe Fed officials may be growing worried that rising rates and the U.S. dollar could move to levels that cause some sort of financial “accident” somewhere in the world, possibly the failure of a major bank. When historic rate hikes squeeze borrowers, sometimes the contagion can go far beyond the failure of one company or a single country’s economic policies.

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We’re probably not on the precipice of anything close to that, but October’s financial uncertainty in the U.K. that quickly forced out Prime Minister Liz Truss certainly got investors’ attention. The Fed probably noticed as well. That means November will be a month to keep an eye on U.S. and European interest rates for signs of growing fear and to watch the situation in Ukraine closely for its impact on commodity prices.