Uphill Battle Likely as Skittish Market Eyes Debt Ceiling Debate, FOMC Meeting

 | May 30, 2023 04:05PM ET

Despite Washington, D.C. dabbling with possible default, stocks spent much of May dressed in green for the season. Resilience was the theme, though the rally mainly reflected a few mega-cap tech stocks scampering ahead, while most of the market jogged in place.

The challenge in June—assuming Congress and the White House can avoid a first-ever default on U.S. debt payments—is to keep the market’s late-spring pace intact. That may be tough given next month’s uncharacteristically heavy schedule for potentially market-moving economic events.

Seasonally, June tends to be weak, though historical trends aren’t guaranteed to repeat. The dollar and interest rates rebounded in May and could form speedbumps for Wall Street in the new month. So could expectations of a weak Q2 earnings season beginning in July.

There’s also been the constant drumbeat of hawkish talk from Fed officials ahead of the next Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting June 13 – 14. Between that and some relatively hot economic data late in May, the CME FedWatch Tool recently indicated investors dialing back hopes for a rate pause in June and rate cuts later this year. By May 30, the tool indicated a 60% probability that June would bring another 25-basis-point rate increase. Chances of rate cuts by late 2023 have declined steeply, as futures market trading suggests.

There’s plenty happening around the world too as June begins. Geopolitics remain fraught as China just slapped new restrictions on U.S. chipmaker Micron (NASDAQ:MU), and the Ukraine war shows no sign of easing. Rates keep rising in Europe as the European Central Bank (ECB) struggles with inflation. There’s also technical resistance as major U.S. indexes bump against long-term levels they haven’t been able to sprint past since last summer.

In the background, banking worries haven’t completely retreated. The credit “crash” some analysts had expected after three major bank failures this spring hasn’t happened, but credit tightening is underway, possibly slowing economic growth later this year.

All of this assumes the month isn’t overtaken by debt ceiling misfortunes. The Treasury Department pegs June 5 as the likely date the United States might run out of money to pay its bills. If there’s a default or even a close call, June could grow volatile very quickly, but it’s too soon to say how this might play out.

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June opens after a May rally led by a handful of major info tech and communication services companies accounting for roughly 25% of the S&P 500 index’s market capitalization. The SPX is market cap-weighted, meaning the index can rise while most stocks in it fall.

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As of late May, the SPX was up 9% year to date, reflecting robust gains from $1 trillion market-cap stocks like Meta (NASDAQ:META), also in the tech and communications sectors.

However, the equal-weight S&P 500 Equal Weighted (SPXEW), which weighs all 500 stocks the same, tells a different story. SPXEW is up barely 1% since December 30, and other major indexes like the small-cap Russell 2000 (RUT) have also struggled in 2023.

While this year’s banking turmoil continues to slow the financials sector, lower Q1 earnings from retail leaders like Home Depot (NYSE:HD), Target (NYSE:TGT), Lowe’s Companies Inc (NYSE:LOW), and Foot Locker (NYSE:FL) demonstrated how consumers are juggling credit, inflation, and recession worries. Traditional dividend sectors like utilities and staples got dragged by strong yield competition, with money market funds and Treasuries offering competitive or higher rates.

Wall Street’s bifurcation heading into summer might remind veteran investors of mid-2018, when the so-called FAANG stocks dominated Wall Street and most other companies shares sagged. That proved untenable in the long run. The market broke down in September that year and eventually fell almost 20% when investor enthusiasm waned for big tech. Some analysts fear if tech stocks dominating this year’s action lose ground, the entire SPX rally could quickly vanish.

This isn’t a prediction or a guarantee. It’s just a reminder that we haven’t had a broad-based, healthy rally where most sectors climbed.

What did climb is interest rates, not generally helpful for stocks.

And interest rates may go higher, especially if the FOMC decides not to pause at the June meeting. Recent remarks from Fed officials suggest additional rate increases if inflation growth doesn’t ease more quickly. Data in May featured resilience, especially in housing and wages. The Fed’s worried that even after raising rates 500 basis points in 14 months, the economy hasn’t slowed enough to stop the disheartening price increases on anything from a pound of beef to a used car.