Opening Bell: After New U.S. Highs, Stocks Stall On China, Korea

 | Sep 14, 2017 06:56AM ET

by Pinchas Cohen
h2 Global Financial Affairs
/h2

Investors this week proved that even a negative can be transformed into a positive, at least insofar as market gains and multiple all-time highs are concerned:

  • Saturday: North Korea did not fire another intercontinental nuclear missile as expected on its “foundation day.”
  • Sunday: Hurricane Irma didn't cause as much damage as feared
  • Monday: Trump and the opposition party Democrats reached a debt-ceiling deal (albeit temporary)
  • Wednesday: Democratic party leaders aka the opposition dine with Trump, discuss a variety of issues including DACA, tax bill, infrastructure
  • Wednesday: Republicans promise new tax framework in 2 weeks even though nothing yet exists

Market-Risk Dissipates

As the week progressed, investors came out of hiding, and developed an appetite for profit after multiple risks faded into the background—at least for now—spurring stock indices to back-to-back fresh records and the dollar to its sharpest rally since March.

h3 Renewed Potential for Tax Reform/h3

President Donald Trump had dinner Wednesday with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. On Sunday, we noted that the potential trigger for a market sell-off could be the debt-ceiling deal reached between Trump and the Democrats, if investors realize the deal could reduce the possibility of a tax overhaul bill, having weakened Republicans and strengthened Democrats.

However, perhaps the President’s dinner with 'Nancy and Chuck,' suggests the debt-ceiling extension deal was part of a secret plan for a tax bill. What is known right now is that Trump and the Republicans have promised a new tax framework in two weeks.

h3 Is That You, Inflation? Long Time No See!/h3

Investors assessed the latest inflation readings for clues on the Fed's next policy moves. The latest releases are heating up, as higher gasoline prices post-Hurricane Harvey boost US producer inflation.

While economists say this uptick is unlikely to allay Fed concerns about ongoing flat-to-depressed inflation, Thursday’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) data announcement for the month of August may confirm a new uptrend for inflation.

While investors are anticipating higher inflation, spurred by the impact of hurricanes Harvey and Irma—expected to boost prices for oil and gas, as well as from the expense of rebuilding—the Bureau of Labor Statistic’s CPI read will predate the hurricanes’ impact. If the report shows that inflation already climbed before the hurricane double whammy, it would demonstrate a trend, one that will be even sharper when the impact of the hurricanes kicks in.

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On the one hand, this will imbue investors with confidence in the economy; on the other hand, it will increase the probability of a Fed hike in December, which would renew faith in the US economy – a positive for bond yields and the dollar – but raise the cost of borrowing which would be a negative for stocks over the long-term, since share prices have been propped up by the availability of cheap money.

The question is, how long would it take equity traders to become aware of the implications that ending semi-free money will have on stock prices? Since the Brexit vote they seem to have developed a narrow market view.

h3 New U.S. Highs
/h3

All three US major indices registered new, fresh record highs yesterday. It was the third straight gain for both the S&P 500 and NASDAQ Composite and the fourth day of a winning streak for the Dow Jones Industrial Average. For the SPX it was also the third straight record close; the second straight for the the Dow and NASDAQ.

From a technical perspective, equities are due a correction upon reaching points of resistance, formed by an expected increase in selling, which could be the case shortly for each of these indices.