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Here’s the big challenge confronting the Fed — and it’s not the taper

It would be a great few days to be a fly on the wall at the Federal Open Market Committee meeting.

Even were it normal times, there’s the scandal of regional Fed presidents engaging in stock-market trading, which at least one outside group has said was possibly illegal. But it’s not normal times.

A key issue is the fate of its bond purchase program. A slightly out-of-consensus call comes from Drew Matus, chief market strategist at MetLife Investment Management, who says the Fed will wait until the beginning of next year to start reducing its bond purchases. “They’re trying to find the perfect time to do something that people might not react kindly to, and you probably don’t want to upset the holidays for people,” he says.

There’s also the situation at property developer China Evergrande
3333,
-0.44%,
which has captured media headlines this week as it struggles to pay off creditors. Matus doesn’t expect China to be mentioned in the FOMC statement, and possibly not even the minutes. “Once they get to the point where they don’t think that there’s any sort of systemic risks to the U.S., and financial markets are functioning, that’ll be the end of the conversation, and they will migrate onto other things,” he says.

The big issue confronting the Fed is that demand has recovered more quickly than supply, creating all sorts of shortages as companies struggle to find the necessary workers and parts. “The more widespread shortages are, and the more that we talk about different products being in short supply, the more likely it is that a growing proportion of the consumer class is seeing their expectations for inflation de-anchor,” he says.

Matus says these shortages threaten the economic cycle. “It’s a race between how much do companies have to pay for things, and how much of that can they pass on to consumers,” he says. If corporate profit margins contract sharply, that would increase the chances of a recession, he says. The word “shortage” has received the most mentions in the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book of economic anecdotes since 1973, during the OPEC oil embargo. “If you think of 1973, the U.S. economy wasn’t really functioning all that well then,” he says.

He says he’s perplexed why bond yields remain so low. “When you’re looking at a 10-year note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.325%
in the U.S., you’re looking not just at inflation next year, you’re trying to estimate where inflation is going to be over the next 10 years. And so even if inflation moderates from current levels, you would expect inflation would probably average over a 10 year period much higher than the current yield is,” he says, adding he doesn’t think real yields should be negative. The 10-year TIPS yielded -0.98% on Tuesday.

What could be happening is that investors are seeking a flight to quality, he says, though that doesn’t neatly fit with stock markets near records, and other assets surging. “You have to put the money somewhere,” he replies.

Matus says investors are in an unusual position where they can’t measure critical factors like the duration of the pandemic or how it will spread. “I think for a lot of investors, it defaults to basically, ‘do I want to be in the market or do I want to be out in the market, am I risk on or am I risk off?’ And I think that’s the behavior that you’re seeing in financial markets today.”

Market focus on the Fed dot plot

The Federal Reserve decision comes at 2 p.m. Eastern, and Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference is at 2:30 p.m. Key to the market reaction will be the dot plot of interest-rate forecasts. “Today’s dotplot likely will show more dots for a rate hike in 2022, but it’s not clear that progress since the June meeting has been enough to push three more FOMC members — making a majority — into expecting action next year,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

The onshore subsidiary of China Evergrande said it has resolved the issue of its coming debt payment, as the fate of a dollar-denominated bond remains in doubt. A report said Evergrande could be restructured into three separate entities that would involve state ownership.

An example of the margin pressure Matus discussed came as shipping and logistics giant FedEx
FDX,
-8.65%
lowered its outlook for the year, citing supply-chain disruptions and a tight labor market.

Adobe
ADBE,
-4.69%
beat Wall Street estimates, though the software maker’s stock still saw pressure.

The Justice Department is investigating Zoom Video Communication’s
ZM,
-0.73%
deal to buy Five9
FIVN,
-0.54%
for $15 billion over China ties, according to a letter posted on the Federal Communications Commission website.

Restaurant payments company Toast
TOST,

is due to start trading, after pricing its initial public offering at $40 per share, significantly above the expected range to garner a $20 billion valuation.

Netflix
NFLX,
+1.66%
agreed to buy the Roald Dahl Story Co., adding popular children’s stories to its stable — and the ability to make not just films and television shows but also games and live theater.

The market

After the 10th drop in 12 sessions for the S&P 500
SPX,
+0.40%
on Tuesday, stock futures
ES00,
+0.55%

NQ00,
+0.27%
were pointing solidly higher.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.325%
was 1.32%.

Random reads

Conor McGregor is a better fighter than pitcher.

A mountain goat is a better fighter than a grizzly bear, at least this one time.

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Betting on the post-pandemic boom? Bank of America has 17 stock recommendations

Here’s one possible all-clear signal. COVID-19 is no longer a “tail risk” for investors, the first time since February 2020, says Bank of America in its latest fund manager survey. A tail risk is an unlikely event that could cause outsize losses or gains.

Scroll down for that chart.

Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve’s two-day policy meeting begins on Tuesday, and investors will be on the lookout for any hawkish signals that could take some steam out of stocks. The premarket is showing some mixed action after some disappointment over retail sales.

But many remain stuck into the idea of a post-pandemic boom, at least in the U.S. as vaccinations roll out.

Read: Value stocks are making a comeback. Don’t get left behind, these analysts say

That has kept the records coming for the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.53%
and S&P 500
SPX,
+0.65%
and those stocks geared toward a recovery. Our call of the day comes from strategists at Bank of America, who offer up 17 stocks to buy for the three R’s they see coming — recovery, reflation and rerating.

Strategists Jill Carey, Savita Subramanian and Ohsung Kwon say the economy has reached the mid-cycle phase, where inflation typically is strongest. In prior such phases, excluding the technology bubble, small-caps have outperformed larger ones, and value has beaten growth.


Uncredited

The Bank of America team says there are two reasons to like those stocks: many of the companies they highlight are still not expensive, and active funds aren’t positioning for that rising inflation, with heavier exposure to mega than smaller caps.


Uncredited


Uncredited

Onto the stocks (nearly half are small-to-midcap companies)…

Alcoa
AA,
-1.49%
— BofA has a share price target $37 for the miner. Aluminum prices could go either way, but global demand growth is a plus for Alcoa.

Axalta Coating Systems
AXTA,
-0.70%
— Share price target £37 for the global coatings group. The pace of automobile recovery will be key and a stronger dollar and lower raw material costs could be a boost.

Broadcom
AVGO,
+4.34%
— Share price target $550. Risks for the semiconductor company include sensitivity to U.S.-China trade relations and competition in networking, smartphone and other markets.

Hess
HES,
-1.40%
— Share price target $95. Among the energy company’s risks are oil and gas prices, as well as slowing developments in drilling.

Marriott International
MAR,
+2.24%
— Share price objective $150. Economic weakness and worse-than-expected spending by businesses and consumers are among the risks for the hospitality company.

Walt Disney
DIS,
-0.20%
— $223 price objective for the entertainment giant that has “best in class assets.” Downside risks include slowing ESPN growth from people deciding not to keep a cable television subscription, weaker consumer confidence, and low theme park attendance. Also watch out for potential film flops.

As for the rest, they like CNH Industrial
CNHI,
+0.59%,
Comcast
CMCSA,
+0.77%,
Emerson Electric
EMR,
-1.39%,
Herc Holdings
HRI,
+1.98%,
Knight-Swift Transportation
KNX,
-0.67%,
Occidental Petroleum
OXY,
-4.34%,
Parker Hannifin
PH,
+0.75%,
Principal Financial
PFG,
-0.45%,
Robert Half International
RHI,
-1.11%,
Union Pacific
UNP,
-0.66%
and World Fuel Services
INT,
+0.08%.

The chart

Here’s that “tail risk” chart from the latest BofA monthly fund manager survey. Bigger risks are higher-than-expected inflation and a “tantrum” in the bond market.


Uncredited

The markets

Dow and S&P futures
YM00,
-0.06%

ES00,
+0.08%
are flat, while Nasdaq-100 futures
NQ00,
+0.52%
are up. European stocks are higher
SXXP,
+0.62%.
It was also an up day for Asian markets. Elsewhere, oil
CL.1,
-1.39%
and the dollar
DXY,
-0.06%
are weak and bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-2.98%
is backing further away from the $60,000 hit over the weekend.

The buzz

Retail sales dropped a bigger-than-expected 3% in February, though they surged a revised 7.6% in January. Import prices rose 1.3%. That data will be followed by industrial production and a National Association of Home Builders index. Aside from the Fed meeting kickoff, investors will also be watching the outcome of a an auction of 20-year Treasury bonds.

Ray Dalio, the founder of Bridgewater, the world’s biggest hedge fund firm, declares investing in bonds as “stupid” and investors should stick to a “well-diversified portfolio.”

AstraZeneca
AZN,
+0.72%

AZN,
+3.37%
shares are higher after Jefferies upgraded the drug company to buy from hold. AstraZeneca has been in the hot seat as several European countries suspend its COVID-19 shots over reports of blood clots from inoculations.

Finnish telecoms group Nokia
NOKIA,
+0.52%

NOK,
+1.90%
is cutting up to 10,000 jobs to save $716 million over two years.

A team from the U.S. government’s highway safety agency is headed to Detroit to investigate a “violent” crash after a Tesla
TSLA,
+2.05%
vehicle drove under a semitrailer, leaving two people critically injured.

Random reads

Office nostalgia — Redditers swap coworkers-from-hell stories.

When a hacker gets all your texts for $16.

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A tangled market web of Tesla-bitcoin-ARK Investment could spell trouble for investors, warns strategist

Tuesday is shaping up to be a tough one for technology stocks, after a selloff greeted investors to start the week.

The Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-2.03%
— up 40% over the past 12 months — tumbled 2.5% on Monday over concerns rising bond yields could make those tech stocks look pricey. When so-called “risk-free” yields are climbing, it is that much tougher to justify equity valuations that seem lofty.

Leading techs lower in premarket is electric-car maker Tesla
TSLA,
-5.41%,
down 6% after a roughly 8% drop on Monday. Our call of the day comes from Saxo Bank’s head of equity strategy, Peter Garnry, who has been warning clients that Tesla is tangled up in a “risk cluster” that involves bitcoin and Cathie Wood’s ARK Investment Management firm.

Tesla announced a $1.5 billion bitcoin investment earlier this month. Along with Tesla weakness, bitcoin was down 10% early Tuesday, which some attributed to criticism from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen (see below). That crypto drop will “obviously illustrate the earnings volatility that Elon Musk has delivered to Tesla,” said Garnry.

Read: Tesla bitcoin gambit already made $1 billion, more than 2020 profit from car sales, estimates analyst

Meanwhile, Tesla “is also the biggest position across all ARK Invest ETFs which added pressure to its biggest fund the ARK Disruptive Innovation Fund
ARKK,
-6.11%
losing 6% yesterday. This is exactly the risk cluster that we have been worrying about and wrote about two weeks ago,” said the strategist.

Read: Stocks aren’t in a bubble, but here’s what is, according to fund manager Cathie Wood

In the Saxo note that deep-dived into the hugely popular, actively managed fund’s holdings, Garnry highlighted ARK’s concentration in biotech names that he said could be risky if the market decides to reverse. And Tesla shares represents 6.7% of total assets under management across ARK’s five actively managed ETFs, according to the data Saxo crunched two weeks ago.

“What it means is, that a correction in equities for whatever reasons, could be higher interest rates or prolonged COVID-19 lockdowns, could set in motion selloffs across either biotechnology stocks or Tesla shares and cause performance to deteriorate which could start net outflow of AUM and then the feedback loop has started,” said Garnry, at the time.

For her part, Wood, the chief executive of ARK Invest and manager of the popular ARK Innovation exchange-traded fund, last week said she was surprised by how fast companies are adopting bitcoin, and that her “confidence in Tesla has grown.”

The markets

Stocks
DJIA,
-0.43%

SPX,
-0.78%

COMP,
-2.03%
are selling off, led by techs, with European stocks
SXXP,
-0.49%
sinking apart from some travel stocks. Asian markets had a mixed day
000300,
-0.32%.
Oil prices
CL00,
-0.19%
are rising, while the closely watched yield on the 10-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.360%
is trading at around 1.35%.

The chart

Treasury Secretary Yellen may have let some steam out of bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-13.19%
after repeating some concerns about the cryptocurrency in an interview with the New York Times’ Dealbook. Bitcoin was last down 13% to $48,886, taking a bunch of other cryptos down with it.

The buzz

All eyes on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who is kicking off two-day testimony on Capitol Hill. With more than 10 million Americans still jobless, “Mr. Powell will go out of his way, I am sure, to put tapering to bed and rightly so, as I dread to think what a taper-tantrum of the 2020s will look like,” said Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst, Asia Pacific, Oanda.

We’ll also get the latest home-price indexes from S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller and the Federal Housing Finance Agency, along with an update on consumer confidence.

Shares of home-improvement retailer Home Depot
HD,
-4.49%
are dropping despite upbeat results.

Shares of special-purpose acquisition company Churchill Capital
CCIV,
-31.65%,
also known as a blank-check company, are sinking. After weeks of rumors, Churchill finally announced a deal to buy electric-vehicle company Lucid Motors.

Mourning 500,000-plus American lives lost to COVID-19, President Joe Biden observed a moment of silence late on Monday and urged the public to “mask up.”

Social-media group Facebook
FB,
+0.83%
says it will restore links to news articles in Australia, five days after proposed media law changes in the country.

Random read

“I can mouth obscenities at people and they don’t have a clue.” Redditors on pandemic positives.

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