Tag Archives: Tumble

Shares of YG tumble over 13% after report three Blackpink members will not renew contracts – CNBC

  1. Shares of YG tumble over 13% after report three Blackpink members will not renew contracts CNBC
  2. [BREAKING] BLACKPINK’s Rosé is reportedly the only one to renew with YG + the other members ‘turned down astronomical renewal offer amounts’ allkpop
  3. Media Outlet Reports BLACKPINK’s Lisa Is Likely To Sign With An American Agency Koreaboo
  4. YG Entertainment Briefly Responds To Reports Regarding BLACKPINK Members’ Contract Renewal soompi
  5. YG Entertainment says BLACKPINK’s contracts are still under negotiation allkpop
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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First Republic and other US regional banks tumble on fears of deposit flight – Financial Times

  1. First Republic and other US regional banks tumble on fears of deposit flight Financial Times
  2. Latest Stock Market News Today: First Republic, bank stocks sink after Silicon Valley Bank gets emergency funds from Fed, FDIC, Treasury. | March 13, 2023 | Live Updates from Fox Business
  3. First Republic drops 70%, leads decline in bank stocks despite government’s backstop of SVB CNBC
  4. Customers Line Up Outside First Republic Bank Branch After SVB Collapse KPRC 2 Click2Houston
  5. Banking shares slump despite U.S. assurances that deposits are safe WUSF Public Media
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Brazil markets tumble on Lula’s first full day in office

BRASILIA, Jan 2 (Reuters) – Brazilian markets delivered a withering verdict on leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s first full day in office on Monday, after he pledged to prioritize social issues and ordered a budget-busting extension to a fuel tax exemption.

Lula’s decision to extend the fuel tax exemption, which will deprive the Treasury of 52.9 billion reais ($9.9 billion) a year in fiscal income, was a stinging rebuke of his finance minister Fernando Haddad, a Workers Party (PT) loyalist who had said it would not be extended.

Haddad, who is seeking to dispel market fears that he might not maintain fiscal discipline, took office on Monday, pledging to control spending. “We are not here for adventures,” he said.

Markets seemed unconvinced.

The real currency lost 1.5% in value against the dollar in afternoon trading, while the benchmark Sao Paulo stock market index (.BVSP) ended 3.06% down. Shares of state-run oil company Petrobras (PETR4.SA) retreated nearly 6.45%.

In speeches delivered at his inauguration in Brasilia on Sunday, Lula promised that tackling hunger and poverty would be “the hallmark” of his third presidency after two previous stints running the country from 2003 to 2010.

Financial analysts said the start of Lula’s third presidency was in line with his campaign promises, and looked similar to earlier Workers Party policies that led to a deep recession.

Lula narrowly defeated far-right incumbent Jair Bolsonaro in October, swinging South America’s largest nation back on a left-wing track.

On Monday, Lula instructed ministers to revoke steps to privatize state companies taken by the previous administration, including studies to sell Petrobras, the Post Office and state broadcasting company EBC.

On Sunday, he signed a decree extending an exemption for fuels from federal taxes, a measure passed by his predecessor aimed at lowering their cost in the run-up to the election, but which will deprive the Treasury of 52.9 billion reais ($9.9 billion) a year in fiscal income.

The federal tax exemption for fuels will last one year for diesel and biodiesel and two months for gasoline and ethanol, a decree published in the official gazette showed on Monday.

Gabriel Araujo Gracia, analyst at Guide Investimentos, said Lula’s plans to increase social spending, expand the role of state banks and abolish a constitutionally mandated spending ceiling harked back to the worst days of Workers Party rule.

“The policies remind us of Dilma Rousseff’s government rather than Lula’s,” Gracia said, referring to Lula’s handpicked successor, who was impeached while in office. “Her policies led to Brazil’s worst recession since 1929.”

Lula, who lifted millions of Brazilians from poverty during his first two terms, criticized Bolsonaro for allowing hunger to return to Brazil, and wept during his speech to supporters on Sunday as he described how poverty had increased again.

Allies said Lula’s newfound social conscience was the result of his 580 days in prison, Reuters reported on Sunday.

Lula kicks off his third presidential term after persuading Congress to pass a one-year, 170 billion-reais increased social spending package, in line with his campaign promises.

“The package ended up being bigger than expected, with potential repercussions for public debt sustainability,” Banco BTG Pactual said in a research note.

Lula spent his first day in office meeting with more than a dozen heads of state who attended his inauguration.

The meetings started with the king of Spain, and continued with South American presidents, among them the leftist leaders of Argentina, Chile and Bolivia, as well as representatives from Cuba and Venezuela, and Vice President Wang Qishan of China.

On Twitter, Lula said he had received a letter from Chinese leader Xi Jinping expressing a desire to increase cooperation between the two countries.

“China is our biggest trading partner, and we can further expand relations between our countries,” Lula added.

The new president is also set to attend the wake of Brazilian soccer star Pele, who died on Thursday at 82 after battling colon cancer.

Lula will pay his respects and pay tribute to Pele and his family on Tuesday morning, the president’s office said in a statement.

($1 = 5.3633 reais)

Reporting by Anthony Boadle, Marcela Ayres and Gabriel Araujo; Editing by Matthew Lewis and Jonathan Oatis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Treasury yields tumble for a second day, with 10-year rate below 3.6%

Treasury yields fell across the board for a second day Tuesday as traders weigh actions from central banks going forward.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury was down 6 basis points to 3.587%, after having surpassed the 4% mark last week. The yield on the policy-sensitive 2-year Treasury fell 5 basis points to 4.045%.

Yields and prices move in opposite directions and one basis point equals 0.01%.

The moves appeared to be helping the stock market, as futures traded sharply higher Tuesday. Stocks also rallied Monday.

Markets also continued to absorb the unexpected decline of the U.S. Purchasing Managers’ Index data for the manufacturing sector, which measures factory activity.

That comes as the Federal Reserve maintains a hawkish tone about interest rates hikes, with speakers from the central bank emphasizing that lowering persistent inflation is a top priority for them.

Various Fed speakers are due to make remarks on Tuesday, which traders will pay close attention to in light of growing fears of a recession brought on by rate hikes being implemented too quickly.

Tuesday will also bring insights into the labor market as job openings data for August is released.  

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The 20 fastest-cooling real estate markets in the US – crime ravaged West Coast sees prices tumble

Seattle’s housing market is slowing faster than any in the country, a new study has revealed – as cash-strapped buyers increasingly shy away from home purchases. 

The study, from real estate firm Redfin, ranked the nation’s most populous hubs using metrics such as prices, price drops, and supply – and found that the real estate market is cooling fastest primarily along the West Coast.

Property prices along West Coast metropolitan areas are understood to be dipping because of a glut of properties on the market, amid a mass exodus of citizens deterred by rising mortgage rates, crime, and warnings of a looming recession.

Costly Western locales that had seen their prices swell since the pandemic, such as San Diego and San Jose, helped round out the top 20 fastest-cooling cities, based on yearly changes in prices from February to August 2022.

Also present were cities that surfaced as homebuying hotspots during the pandemic, such as Phoenix, Las Vegas and Dallas, whose markets have rapidly cooled as the recently surfaced advent of remote work continues to recede.

Meanwhile, the market as a whole has swelled since going into an unprecedented freefall in recent years, as Americans look to move past the pandemic and return to their everyday lives.

With that said, Redfin’s findings suggest that this recovery has been largely lost on more costly markets such as Seattle and others that straddle the Pacific, where homebuyers are feeling the effects of the rapid rise in home prices.

The study also comes a the Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised its baseline interest rate by 0.75 – the fifth time since March – potentially making homebuying even pricier. 

Seattle’s housing market is slowing faster than any in the country, a new study has revealed – as cash-strapped buyers increasingly shy away from home purchases

The study, from real estate firm Redfin, ranked the nation’s most populous hubs using metrics such as prices, price drops, and supply – and found that the real estate market is cooling fastest primarily along the West Coast.

In Seattle – where the average price of a home is roughly $775,000 – approximately 34 percent fewer homes were sold within two weeks of being posted on the market than the year before, as of August 22, the study found.

This is up from a 23 percent year-over-year increase seen last February, according to the analysis – showing that the number of quick sales is rapidly decreasing, following a year of record gains in the Windy City.

Contributing to the rapid cooldown, Redfin said, for Seattle and other cities that comprised the top 20, is the country’s surging mortgage rates – which rose above a record 6 percent this month. 

According to the company, a monthly mortgage payment on the median-priced home in Seattle is more than $4,400 with today’s 6 percent mortgage rates – up 33 percent from the $3,300 seen earlier this year.

Also up is the city’s supply of for-sale homes – which has ballooned by more than 100 percent since last year.  

Those statistics suggest that Seattle buyers have more purchase options to choose from, and that homes are subsequently taking longer to sell – with prices now rising much slower than they were earlier in the year. 

Costly Western locales that had seen their prices swell since the pandemic, such as San Diego and San Jose, helped round out the top 20 fastest-cooling cities, based on yearly changes in prices from February to August 2022

Tacoma, located about 35 miles south of Seattle, is also among the top 10 markets cooling fastest, the study shows, signaling that the area surrounding the pricey West Coast metro have also been affected by the recent uptick in home prices.

Seattle was followed in the rankings by Las Vegas, which emerged as a prime ‘relocation’ destination during and just before the pandemic, as citizens from the neighboring Golden State fed-up with high taxes, rising home costs, and natural disasters ventured eastward.

In Sin City, the price per square foot (PPSF) fell by a marked 14.5 percentage points year over year as of August. The median sale price in Vegas, meanwhile, as of last month stood at $416,000 – marking a 3 percent drop from last month alone. 

Many cities on the list – including Las Vegas, Phoenix, Sacramento and North Port – served as ‘relocation hotspots’ during the pandemic-era shift toward remote work, with those markets now cooling fast as monetary policy tightens and workers return to the office.

With that said, almost all others listed by the Seattle-based brokerage firm were West Coast markets that have long been expensive, such as those in the tech heavy city of San Jose and scenic San Diego

Three California cities – San Jose, San Diego, and Sacramento – rounded out Redfin’s top five fastest-falling housing markets, coming in third, fourth, and fifth place, respectively.

Other cities in the Golden State to make the top ten included Bay Area hub Oakland and the nearby city of Stockton – as well as the more southern Bakersfield, which just north of Los Angeles.

Nine of the top 10, meanwhile, had the dubious distinction of being located in the western half of the country, including the four within California, as well as Bakersfield, which was ranked 16th.

North Port, Florida, was the only East Coast market near the top of the list – a small coastal city in Central Florida that saw an enormous influx of new inhabitants during he pandemic – mostly city dwellers looking to to reduce their risk of exposure to COVID-19.

Other Florida cities to make the list included Cape Coral, Jacksonville, Tampa, and Orlando – all of which welcomed thousands of new citizens during the initial years of the pandemic.

Also included were pricey Western hubs such as Denver, which tied with Sacramento for the fifth spot. 

In all, the 10 markets cooling fastest were almost all either West Coast markets that have long been considered costly, or places that became significantly less affordable during the pandemic because they attracted relocating homebuyers.

Las Vegas came in second place, followed by San Jose, San Diego, Sacramento, Denver, Phoenix, Oakland, North Port and Tacoma. 

Moreover, Seattle, San Jose, San Diego, Sacramento, Denver, and Oakland are all among the 15 most expensive housing markets in the country, while Vegas, San Diego, Sacramento, Phoenix, and North Port are all on Redfin’s list of 10 most popular migration destinations.

‘These are all places where homebuyers are feeling the sting of rising home prices, higher mortgage rates and inflation very sharply,’ said Redfin Chief Economist Daryl Fairweather of the brokerage firm’s recent study. 

‘They’re slowing down partly because so many people have been priced out and partly because last year’s record-low rates made them unsustainably hot. 

‘The good news is that the slowdown is dampening competition and giving those who can still afford to buy more negotiating power,’ he added.

Prices have fallen amid a recent spike in mortgage rates. A 30-year fixed-rate mortgage currently charges 5.66 percent interest — up nearly three points on the same time last year, according to the federal government’s loan corporation, Freddie Mac.

Earlier this month, the Federal Reserve hiked interest rates for a fourth time this by another 0.75 percentage point, in a bid to quell inflation.

Economists at Goldman Sachs recently warned that home price growth was expected to stall completely across the U.S. next year thanks to waning demand and too many properties up for grabs.

Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Analytics, last month warned that house prices could fall by as much as 20 percent next year if there’s a recession, and that prices in parts of the country were overvalued by as much as 72 percent.

The emerging housing crisis comes after a period of relative affordability seen in 2020 and last year during the pandemic, due to record-low mortgage rates – despite prices also raising during that period to satisfy an also increasing demand.

This year, though, shortly before the fed frist decided to raise interest rates to combat record inflation, banks drastically raised mortgage rates in their own effort to cover prospective losses that may be incurred in a forecasted recission.

In its biggest one-week jump since 1987, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, the most popular home loan package, was raised to 5.78 percent in June, up from 5.23 percent seen at the end of May.

It has since reached an even more pronounced 6 percent as of September.

A year ago, the affordability rate was less than half of what it is today, at 2.9 percent.

The sudden rise has since seen the country’s housing market cool significantly, with sales of previously owned homes sliding in May for the fourth straight month, as prospective buyers deal with increased costs.

The drop in demand is expected to see home-price growth reach a peak by the end of the year – before inevitably plummeting, economists warn.

‘We’re in a housing-affordability crisis right now,’ Robert Dietz, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders, told The Wall Street Journal of the phenomenon, citing how real-estate firms have cut asking prices in recent weeks to compensate for the rapidly shifting real estate market.

Homes in cities that have seen marked price growth in recent years, including Boise, Idaho; Phoenix; and Austin have seen average home prices slashed in recent weeks, according to Redfin.

With high prices and rising rates squeezing young homebuyers -many being millennials aging into their prime homebuying years – the number of sales of existing homes dropped 8.6 percent from last year, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.41 million.  

Meanwhile, another study published by Redfin last month found that a high share of home sellers dropped their asking price in July, particularly in former pandemic boomtowns.

Boise, Idaho, which was a top destination for West Coast remote workers during the pandemic, saw 70 percent of listings slashed in July, up from just a third a year ago.

In Denver, 58 percent of home listings were reduced last month, while 56 percent of listings in Salt Lake City were dropped from the initial asking price.

‘Individual home sellers and builders were both quick to drop their prices early this summer, mostly because they had unrealistic expectations of both price and timelines,’ said Boise Redfin agent Shauna Pendleton.

‘They priced too high because their neighbor’s home sold for an exorbitant price a few months ago, and expected to receive multiple offers the first weekend because they heard stories about that happening,’ she added. 

The 10 cities that saw the biggest share of listing price reductions last month are seen above

A housing development is seen in Boise, where last month 70% of home listings were slashed below their initial asking price as sellers confronted their ‘unreasonable expectations’

‘My advice to sellers is to price their home correctly from the start, accept that the market has slowed and understand that it may take longer than 30 days to sell. If someone is selling a nice home in a desirable neighborhood, they shouldn’t need to drop their price.’

Although industry data shows that home prices remain higher than they were a year ago nationwide and in nearly every market, listing reductions have increased dramatically as sellers’ lofty expectations meet with cold reality. 

Redfin said that the national share of homes for sale with price drops reached a record high in July. 

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Dow Jones Futures: Stocks Dive On Call For Biggest Fed Rate Hike In 40 Years; Apple, Tesla Tumble

Dow Jones futures tilted higher overnight, along with S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures. The stock market rally plunged Tuesday on a hotter-than-expected inflation report, with the major indexes breaking below their 50-day moving averages and wiping out all or almost all of their recent gains.




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The August consumer price index was much worse than expected. Consumer prices rose 0.1%, vs. views for a 0.1% drop, with food prices and rents pushing up costs despite plunging gasoline prices. The core CPI, which excludes food and energy, popped 0.6%, double what was expected. Headline inflation cooled somewhat again, to 8.3%, but Wall Street expected 8%. Core inflation rose more than forecast, to 6.3%.

That spurred one Wall Street firm to predict that the Federal Reserve will increase rates by a full percentage point at the Sept. 20-21 Fed meeting. That would be the most since the early 1980s, when then-Fed chief Paul Volcker waged all-out war on inflation.

Pure Storage (PSTG), Tesla rival Nio (NIO), Devon Energy (DVN), Wolfspeed (WOLF) and Enphase Energy (ENPH) showed relatively healthy action on Tuesday.

Megacaps Apple (AAPL) and Tesla (TSLA), which had flashed buy signals recently, fell hard on Tuesday, back below key levels. Nvidia (NVDA) and Facebook parent Meta Platforms (META), nobody’s idea of current market leaders, plummeted to 2022 lows.

DVN stock is on IBD Leaderboard. PSTG stock is on SwingTrader and was Tuesday’s IBD Stock Of The Day. Tesla stock and Devon Energy are on the IBD 50. Devon and ENPH stock are on the IBD Big Cap 20.


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Dow Jones Futures Today

Dow Jones futures climbed 0.2% vs. fair value. S&P 500 futures rose 0.2%. Nasdaq 100 futures advanced 0.15%.

At 8:30 a.m. ET, the Labor Department will release the August producer price index.

Remember that overnight action in Dow futures and elsewhere doesn’t necessarily translate into actual trading in the next regular stock market session.


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Stock Market Rally

The stock market rally suffered its worst loss of 2022, with the major indexes closing near session lows on the hot inflation report and Fed rate hike fears.

Another factor? The U.S. mulling options for sweeping sanctions vs. China to head off any Taiwan invasion, Reuters reported Tuesday. The European Union is facing pressure to do the same. That would raise the risks of a massive economic decoupling between China and the West.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled 3.9% in Tuesday’s stock market trading. The S&P 500 index plunged 4.3%. The Nasdaq composite dived 5.2%. The small-cap Russell 2000 lost 3.9%.


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Nvidia stock and META stock plunged more than 9%, both undercutting their 2022 lows.

U.S. crude oil prices dipped 0.5% to $87.31 a barrel.

The 10-year Treasury yield rose 6 basis points to 3.42%. The benchmark yield hit 3.45% intraday, just below the 11-year high of 3.48% set on June 14. Short-term yields rose much more.

ETFs

Among the best ETFs, the Innovator IBD 50 ETF (FFTY) retreated 2.9%, while the Innovator IBD Breakout Opportunities ETF (BOUT) lost 2.35%. The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV) sank 4.7%. The VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF (SMH) plunged nearly 6%. NVDA stock is a major SMH holding.

SPDR S&P Metals & Mining ETF (XME) gave up 3.7%. SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF (XHB) dived 5.9%. The Energy Select SPDR ETF (XLE) retreated 2.5% and the Financial Select SPDR ETF (XLF) shed 3.75%. The Health Care Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLV) slumped 3.3%.

Reflecting more-speculative story stocks, ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) dived 6.8% and ARK Genomics ETF (ARKG) 5.6%. TSLA stock is a major holding across Ark Invest’s ETFs.


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Stocks Showing Strength

PSTG stock fell 3.8% to 29.64 on Tuesday, but closed above its 21-day line. Pure Storage stock is working on a cup-with-handle base with a 31.62 buy point. Investors could use a move above Monday’s high of 30.88 as a slightly lower entry.

Nio stock edged up 0.9% to 21.95, touching its 200-day line intraday after skyrocketing 13.5% on Monday. Shares of the China EV startup have soared 28% over the last five sessions, four in heavy volume. Analysts are increasingly bullish on Nio’s lineup. Nio begins deliveries of the ET5 sedan, its third new EV this year, on Sept. 30. Nio stock has a 24.53 bottoming base buy point, but investors could use a decisive move above the 200-day line as an early entry.

DVN stock fell 3% to 69.07, pulling back after breaking the trendline of a handle on Monday. The cup-with-handle buy point is 75.37. Investors could now use Monday’s high of 71.57 as an early entry. A longer pause would let the 50-day moving average catch up somewhat.

WOLF stock fell 2.5% to 113.98 on Tuesday after sinking to 111.26 soon after the open. Evercore ISI initiated the chipmaker with an outperform, saying it’s a great way to play the EV space. Investors could treat the recent action as a handle to a huge consolidation, with a 123.35 buy point. A move above Monday’s high could offer an early entry, but Wolfspeed stock is extended, it has greatly outrun some of its moving averages.

ENPH stock dipped 1.1% to 305.50 after testing its 21-day line. Investors could buy Enphase stock now off the 21-day line, though market conditions raise the risks. A longer ENPH stock pause would let a fast-rising 50-day line make up some ground.

Apple Stock

Apple stock plunged 5.9%, tumbling back below its 50-day and 200-day lines in heavy volume, giving up the gains from the prior two sessions. AAPL stock had broken a downtrend in a handle on Monday, offering an early entry, but that’s off the table now. Shares of the Dow Jones tech titan are working on a 176.25 buy point from that handle.

Apple iPhone 14 preorders appear to be running as strong or stronger than for the iPhone 13 last year. Actual iPhone 14 sales start Friday.


Tesla Vs. BYD: Which EV Giant Is The Better Buy?


Tesla Stock

Tesla stock skidded 4% to 292.13, back slightly below its 200-day line but holding its 21-day and comfortably above its 50-day. Volume was light, but higher than in the five-day rally.

TSLA stock arguably has a short base within a much-larger consolidation, with a 314.74 buy point. A move above Monday’s high of 305.49 could offer an early entry.

Tesla investor relations chief Martin Viecha said at a conference Tuesday that supply-chain constraints and costs are easing for EVs, which should lead to lower prices. Viecha said Tesla would eventually unveil a cheaper EV model, but gave no details on when that might occur. Tesla recently introduced a lower-range Model Y in Europe for a much-cheaper price.

Market Rally Analysis

The recently revived stock market rally ran headlong into the CPI inflation buzz saw on Tuesday. The major indexes and Russell 2000 all tumbled below their 50-day moving averages. The Dow Jones undercut last week’s lows while the S&P 500 nearly did so. The Nasdaq wiped out most of the gains from the prior four sessions.

Leading stocks, many of which had some strong advances in recent days, also suffered Tuesday. Losers trounced winners, following robust market breadth in recent days.

Apple stock showed damaging action Tuesday. Tesla also retreated, following some low-volume gains, but its chart looks a little better.

While Pure Storage and Nio stock still look OK, the odds are that they’ll falter if the market comes under more pressure.

The stock market had rallied over the past several days in no small part on expectations of a tame inflation report. That, in turn, would spur the Fed to start raising rates less aggressively.

But after the hot inflation report, Nomura Securities forecast Fed policymakers will hike rates by 100 basis points on Sept. 21. Late Tuesday, Ed Yardeni of Yardeni Research said a full-percentage point Fed rate hike is “more likely” than 75 basis points.

Markets are fully pricing in at least 75 basis points for a third straight Fed meeting next week. But there’s now a roughly one-third chance of 100 basis points, up from zero before the CPI data. Markets are betting on a higher year-end rate.

The 10-year Treasury yield continued its torrid run over the past several weeks.

A more aggressive Fed, higher Treasury yields and a stronger dollar aren’t a great recipe for stocks. That’s especially so when markets were betting on the opposite.

Now the question is where the market goes from here. Will the major indexes undercut last week’s lows and head toward the June bottom? It’s possible the market will be rangebound as Wall Street waits for actual signs that the Fed will slow rate hikes.


Time The Market With IBD’s ETF Market Strategy


What To Do Now

Investors may have wanted to take profits heading into Tuesday’s CPI inflation report, given the low-volume advance that priced in good news. At this point, you may want to lock in remaining gains in recent buys, or cut losses.

It’s a good idea to keep exposure light. The hot inflation data undermined the short-term bull case of tamer Fed rate hikes, with the market direction now uncertain.

At some point, whether it’s next week, next month or next year, the market will be in a clear uptrend. That’s when the real money will be made.

So work on your watchlists, focusing on relative strength and signs that big institutions are acquiring shares.

Read The Big Picture every day to stay in sync with the market direction and leading stocks and sectors.

Please follow Ed Carson on Twitter at @IBD_ECarson for stock market updates and more.

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The 200-Day Average: The Last Line Of Support?



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Dow: Stocks tumble on fears of another big Fed rate hike

The Dow ended the day with a loss of more than 640 points, or 1.9%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq fell 2.1% and 2.6% respectively.

All 30 Dow stocks were lower, and only 25 of the stocks in the blue chip S&P 500 index traded higher Monday.

Stocks also slumped Friday as the market snapped a four-week winning streak. The markets have rebounded in July and August following a brutal first half of 2022. But the pendulum may be swinging back to pessimism.

Concerns are mounting that the Fed is not done with its super-sized rate increases just yet. The Fed lifted rates by three quarters of a percentage point, or 75 basis points, in both June and July.
But following the most recent data on consumer and producer prices, which showed that the rate of inflation cooled a bit last month, investors had started to hope that the Fed might raise rates by only a half a point in September.
The thought was that inflation was easing and the economy might be slowing. However, the jobs market remains strong and retail sales have held up reasonably well, despite inflation.

That’s led more market watchers to predict that the Fed may remain aggressive with rate hikes for the foreseeable future. The odds of another 75 basis point hike versus a half-point increase are now seen as about 50-50.

“Market expectations for what the Fed will do has a track record of flipping based on economic data,” said Lindsey Bell, chief money and markets strategist for Ally Invest, in a report Monday. “As long as the Fed is in the driver’s seat, volatility is likely to remain elevated and the market will remain reactionary.”

Stocks could be volatile all week as investors wait for Fed chair Jerome Powell to give an eagerly awaited speech at the Kansas City Fed’s annual Jackson Hole symposium on Friday. What’s more, the Fed’s next interest rate decision is not until September 21. So a lot of economic data, including the jobs report and inflation numbers for August, lies ahead.

“This has been more like a bull rally in a bear market,” Oktay Kavrak, director of product strategy at Leverage Shares, said about what’s happened with stocks in the past few weeks. “Recession is still a base case and inflation remains stubbornly high. This could be one of those years where the market remains choppy.”

Investors are clearly fleeing riskier assets as a result. Meme stocks, such as AMC (AMC), Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) and GameStop (GME), were all in the red again Monday following big drops at the end of last week. Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies also fell Monday and have all plummeted in the past week.

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Gas prices tumble below $4 a gallon for first time in months

The national average price for regular gasoline fell to $3.99 a gallon on Thursday, according to AAA.

Gas prices hit a record high of $5.02 in June as drivers filled their tanks for the summer travel season. They were also pushed higher by soaring global oil prices as the West turned its back on Russian crude in the wake of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

But prices at the pump have since tumbled 21% as drivers have pared back spending and fears of a recession threatened to crimp demand. Despite the drop, they remain 25% higher than this time last year.

“The market was panicked at the start of the summer. Inventories were extremely tight,” said Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy. “But the market got overcooked. It was overbought.”

De Haan said the national average could keep falling for the next five to 10 days before stalling out in the $3.70s or $3.80s. However, he noted that oil prices have started to bounce off their recent lows and hurricane season could disrupt energy supplies.

Brian Deese, director of the White House’s National Economic Council, said the drop below $4 is an important development for Americans, translating to $100 less in fuel costs for a typical family with two cars.

“That’s meaningful savings people are going to feel in their lives,” Deese told CNN in a phone interview.

Deese said the White House has been tracking gasoline prices and energy supplies “very closely” and added that prices should continue slipping.

“Pricing in the market today suggests we should see prices at the pump fall a bit more,” he said.

“Despite steadily falling gas prices during the peak of the summer driving season, fewer drivers fueled up last week,” the AAA said in a Monday press release.

“It’s another sign that, for now, Americans are changing their driving habits to cope with higher pump prices.”

Analysts say the unprecedented release of emergency oil by the United States has also helped to drive down oil and gasoline prices. In late March, the White House announced the release of 1 million barrels a day from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve for six months.

US crude oil prices have fallen sharply from a peak above $120 a barrel in June to around $92 a barrel on Thursday, helped by an easing of the global supply crunch.

In a report released Thursday, the International Energy Agency revised up its outlook for global oil supply, partly because Russia has continued to pump more oil than expected.

“While Russia’s exports of crude and oil products to Europe, the US, Japan and Korea have fallen by nearly 2.2 [million barrels per day] since the start of the war, the rerouting of flows to India, China, Türkiye and others, along with seasonally higher Russian domestic demand has mitigated upstream losses,” the Paris-based agency said.

By July, Russian oil production was only 310,000 barrels per day below pre-war levels while total oil exports were down just 580,000 barrels per day, it added.

The release of 180 million barrels of oil from the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve has also helped bump up supply.

Matt Egan contributed reporting.

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US Home Prices Are Set to Tumble As Demand ‘Craters’, Economist Warns

  • US home prices are already falling and are set to tumble in the coming months, an economist said Tuesday.
  • Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macro, told clients “the next few months will be very tough” for the housing market.
  • Property markets boomed in 2020 and 2021 but are rapidly cooling as central banks hike interest rates, pushing up mortgage costs.

US home prices are already falling and are about to drop even more sharply as demand for new houses “craters”, according to an economist at the consultancy Pantheon Macroeconomics.

“Single-family homes are about 15% to 20% overvalued, so the next few months will be very tough,” Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macro, said in a note to clients Tuesday.

Data on US new home sales for June is due out Tuesday. Economists polled by Bloomberg expect sales to have fallen to 659,000, from 696,000 in May.

However, Shepherdson said he is expecting a much bigger drop to 550,000. New home sales topped 1 million in August 2020.

“The trend in new home sales closely follows the mortgage application numbers, which make it clear that demand is cratering,” he said.

The ongoing fall in sales is driving up the availability of housing relative to the number of buyers, meaning prices are likely to fall sharply, Shepherdson said. 

Pantheon Macro estimated that single-family existing home prices dropped by a “hefty” 1.8% in June compared to a month earlier, following a 0.4% fall in May.

“The market is adjusting to a new reality, with much lower sales volumes and far more inventory. Prices, therefore, have to adjust to the downside, likely quite substantially,” Shepherdson said.

The US housing market — like others around the world — boomed in 2020 and 2021 as central banks slashed interest rates and people moved to more spacious properties during the coronavirus pandemic. According to the Case-Shiller index, US home prices soared 40% between February 2020 and April 2022.

However, the Federal Reserve and other central banks are now hiking interest rates as they grapple with red-hot inflation. That’s sent bond yields and mortgage rates soaring, damping demand for mortgages and house purchases.

US mortgage applications tumbled to their lowest level since 2000 in the week to July 15, the latest update of the Mortgage Bankers Association’s market index showed last week.

The average 30-year mortgage rate stood at 5.54% last week, according to mortgage agency Freddie Mac. That’s more than double the rate of 2.76% seen a year earlier.

The slowdown in the US housing market is worrying some economists and analysts.

José Torres, an economist at Interactive Investor, told Insider this week he expects US home prices to drop 25% from peak to trough, in “something very similar to what we saw during the Great Financial Crisis.”

However, many analysts have played down comparisons to 2008, saying banks back then were engaged in much riskier lending practices.

Dario Perkins, an economist at TS Lombard, said the COVID boom is “nothing like the subprime bubble of the early 2000s”, in a note to clients last month.

“​​A genuinely nasty subprime-style crash happens when existing homeowners have overextended themselves and are vulnerable to a sudden hike in their servicing costs – eventually leading to a crisis among lenders,” he said.

“Such a dynamic seems unlikely today, even if the end of the COVID boom prompts a decline in house prices.”

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Oil prices tumble more than $2 ahead of potential large U.S. rate hike

Pump jacks pump oil at an oil field on the shores of the Caspian Sea in Baku, Azerbaijan, October 5, 2017. REUTERS/Grigory Dukor

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LONDON, July 14 (Reuters) – Oil prices fell more than $2 on Thursday as investors focused on the prospect of a large U.S. rate hike later this month that could stem inflation but at the same time hit oil demand.

Brent crude futures for September were down $2.14 to $97.43 a barrel at 1038 GMT after settling below $100 for a second straight session on Wednesday.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude for August delivery was at $93.78 a barrel, down $2.52.

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Oil prices have tumbled in the past two weeks on recession concerns despite a drop in crude and refined products exports from Russia amid Western sanctions and supply disruption in Libya. read more

“Clearly, focus is now on the demand side of the oil equation. Yesterday’s weekly EIA (U.S. Energy Information Administration) report showed sizeable builds in product inventories,” Tamas Varga, analyst at PVM Oil Associates, said.

“Collateral damage of growing fears of inflation is the strong dollar, which is also bearish for oil prices. Interestingly, physical markets are still strong but the change in sentiment of financial investors is currently the dominant driving force.”

The U.S. Federal Reserve is seen ramping up its battle with 40-year high inflation with a supersized 100 basis points rate hike this month after a grim inflation report showed price pressures accelerating. The Fed policy meeting is schedule for July 26-27. read more

The Fed rate hike is expected to follow a similar surprise move by the Bank of Canada on Wednesday.

Investors also flocked to the dollar, often seen as a safe haven asset. The dollar index hit a 20-year high on Wednesday, which makes oil purchases more expensive for non-U.S. buyers.

In Europe, signals were also bearish for demand with the European Commission cutting its economic growth forecast and raising the expected inflation rate to 7.6%. read more

Worries of COVID-19 curbs in multiple Chinese cities to rein in new cases of a highly infectious subvariant have also kept a lid on oil prices.

China’s daily crude oil imports in June sank to their lowest since July 2018, as refiners anticipated lockdown measures to curb demand, customs data showed on Wednesday.

Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration also point to slackening demand, with product supplied slumping to 18.7 million barrels per day, the lowest since June 2021. Crude inventories rose, bolstered by another big release from strategic reserves. read more

U.S. President Joe Biden will on Friday fly to Saudi Arabia, where he will attend a summit of Gulf allies and call for them to pump more oil.

However, spare capacity at the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is running low, with most of the producers pumping at maximum capacity, and it is unclear how much extra Saudi Arabia can bring into the market quickly.

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Reporting by Julia Payne in London Additional reporting by Florence Tan in Singapore; editing by Kirsten Donovan and Jason Neely

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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