With Central Banks Downbeat On Economies, Market Remains Subdued

 | Mar 21, 2019 01:08PM ET

(Thursday Market Open) Now that this week’s Fed meeting is out of the way and there’s not too much on the corporate earnings front, investors will likely be looking for international catalysts for stock market direction, such as news on the U.S.-China trade front or Britain’s exit from the European Union.

With just a little over a week before Britain is scheduled to leave the bloc, the Bank of England voted to leave a key interest rate unchanged. The decision comes after the bank sharply downgraded its 2019 forecast for economic growth and as Britain’s prime minister has asked the EU for an extension to the Brexit deadline.

It was a similar situation on this side of the pond yesterday as the Fed held its key interest rate steady and downgraded its estimate for 2019 gross domestic product, providing an initial jolt to the market that ended up fading away, with the subdued sentiment continuing this morning.

The downbeat tune comes after comments by President Trump earlier in the week that he’s prepared to leave tariffs in place on Chinese goods for a “substantial amount of time” continue to weigh on the market.

h3 Seesawing Sentiment/h3

Although sectors like Communication Services and Energy did pretty well Wednesday, Financials dropped more than 2%, helping bring the whole S&P 500 (SPX) down a touch. Despite an initial bounce after the Fed announcement, the broad market benchmark couldn’t hold on to gains.

On the one hand, investors appeared to be broadly pleased with the Fed’s more accommodative stance, which has helped the market rally this year after tumbling late last year in part on worries that the central bank would be too hawkish.

In reinforcing its dovish view Wednesday—with rates staying unchanged, a new dot plot signaling the unlikelihood of a rate increase this year, and the Fed saying it would end its balance-sheet reduction program in September after a slowdown—the central bank gave the market more to cheer about.

But like doves that quickly fly away after being released at a wedding, the celebratory mood dispersed as the afternoon went on.

The central bank’s dovishness comes with a sobering assessment of U.S. economic growth, as the Fed cut its GDP estimate for 2019 to 2.1% from 2.3%.

Worries about slowing growth at home also dovetail with concerns about the global economy if the U.S.-China trade war can’t be resolved soon, as well as a faltering European economy facing sluggish manufacturing and a big political unknown in the form of Brexit.

In fact, before the Fed decision Wednesday, U.S. stock indices were in the red because of concerns about the U.S.-China tariff situation.

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According to media reports, Trump said Wednesday that the U.S. could leave tariffs on Chinese goods for “a substantial period of time because we have to make sure that if we do the deal with China that China lives by the deal.” Before then, there was hope that a deal might soon mean an end to or at least a cut in U.S. and Chinese tariffs on each others’ goods.

Results from FedEx (NYSE:FDX), which reported weaker-than-expected earnings and sales and reduced guidance as it cited a weak international trade situation, underscored the trade tensions, as did pressure on China-sensitive stocks like Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT), Deere (NYSE:DE) and semiconductor companies after Trump’s comments.

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But it wasn’t just trade issues that weighed on the market. Bank shares tumbled at the prospect of no more rate hikes this year and as the Fed also indicated that rates could be 50 basis points lower by the end of 2020 than it had forecast just three months ago.

Treasury yields dropped sharply after the announcement, with the 10-year yield falling to its lowest point in more than a year. And the yield curve between the 10-year Treasury and the 3-month Treasury flattened.

Lower interest rate environments can make it harder for banks to earn money on loans. And a flattening yield curve can make for a shrinking profit margin between what banks earn on their longer term loans compared with what they pay in shorter term rates on deposits.

h3 Energy Shines/h3

Energy was a bright spot for bulls on Wednesday. Energy shares rose nearly 0.9% as crude oil prices rallied after government data showed U.S. oil stockpiles plunged by 9.6 million barrels in the week through Friday. A Reuters survey of analysts had been expecting a build, CNBC reported. U.S. crude oil inventories are about 2% below the five year average for this time of year, the government said, and gasoline inventories also fell pretty dramatically.

The U.S. inventory decline comes amid production cuts by OPEC and U.S. sanctions against Iran and Venezuela. A weakening in the U.S. dollar also seems to be helping oil prices. Since oil is priced in dollars, a weakening greenback can help boost demand by making crude cheaper in terms of foreign currencies.