What I’m Watching This Week – 9 September 2024

The Markets (as of market close September 6, 2024)

September has clearly gotten off to a rough start for Wall Street. Stocks plunged lower on fears of an economic decline and a waning labor market. Investors feared that the Federal Reserve, which is now more likely to drop interest rates by at least 50.0 basis points when it meets in a few weeks, may be responding too late. Tech stocks took a big hit with the NASDAQ falling nearly 6.0% last week and nearly 12.0% since July 10. Consumer staples, real estate, and utilities were the only market sectors to gain last week. Information technology declined 7.0%, posting the largest loss among the remaining sectors. Crude oil prices have fallen to levels not seen since 2023. Ten-year Treasuries saw their biggest weekly drop in five weeks, having fallen four straight days and seven of the last 10 days.

The day after Labor Day saw stocks close markedly lower, driven by a notable selloff in technology shares. A major AI company, which had been surging for much of the year, saw its stock decline. The NASDAQ fell 3.3%, the Russell 2000 declined 3.1%, the S&P 500 lost 2.1%, the Dow dropped 1.6%, and the Global Dow dipped 1.2%. Ten-year Treasury yields closed at 3.84%, a decline of 6.7 basis points. Crude oil prices settled at $70.34 per barrel. The dollar inched up 0.1%, while gold prices dipped 0.2%.

Stocks continued their tailspin last Wednesday. Investors concerned that the economy may be weakening were not encouraged by data that showed a decline in job openings in July (see below). Energy shares led the decline, while tech stocks also underperformed. Of the benchmark indexes listed here, only the Dow ticked up 0.1%. The remaining indexes fell, led by the Global Dow (-0.4%), followed by the NASDAQ (-0.3%). The Russell 2000 and the S&P 500 each lost 0.2%. As investors moved away from stocks, bond prices rose, dragging yields lower. The 10-year Treasury yield fell 7.6 basis points to 3.76%. Crude oil prices fell below $70.00 per barrel after settling at $68.84 per barrel. The dollar lost 0.5%, while gold prices were unchanged from the previous day.

Tech stocks rebounded somewhat last Thursday, but the remaining sectors continued to swoon. The NASDAQ gained 0.3% to lead the benchmark indexes listed here. The Russell 2000 fell 0.6%, the Dow declined 0.5%, the S&P 500 dipped 0.3%, and the Global Dow slid 0.2%. Ten-year Treasury yields lost 3.7 basis points, settling at 3.73%. Crude oil prices dipped 0.1% to $69.13 per barrel. The dollar fell 0.3%, while gold prices rose 0.8%.

Stocks fell on Friday, dragged lower by worries over a slowdown in the labor market and a tech selloff. The NASDAQ lost 2.6%, the Russell 2000 fell 1.9%, the S&P 500 dropped 1.7%, the Global Dow declined 1.2%, and the Dow sank 1.0%. Ten-year Treasury yields lost 2.1 basis points. Crude oil prices decreased 1.5%. The dollar inched up 0.1%. Gold prices fell 0.7%.

Stock Market Indexes

Market/Index2023 ClosePrior WeekAs of 9/6Weekly ChangeYTD Change
DJIA37,689.5441,563.0840,345.41-2.93%7.05%
NASDAQ15,011.3517,713.6316,690.83-5.77%11.19%
S&P 5004,769.835,648.405,408.42-4.25%13.39%
Russell 20002,027.072,217.632,091.41-5.69%3.17%
Global Dow4,355.284,934.574,782.56-3.08%9.81%
fed. funds target rate5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%0 bps0 bps
10-year Treasuries3.86%3.90%3.71%-19 bps-15 bps
US Dollar-DXY101.39101.68101.18-0.49%-0.21%
Crude Oil-CL=F$71.30$73.61$68.14-7.43%-4.43%
Gold-GC=F$2,072.50$2,535.30$2,524.00-0.45%21.79%

Chart reflects price changes, not total return. Because it does not include dividends or splits, it should not be used to benchmark performance of specific investments.

Last Week’s Economic News

  • Employment increased by 142,000 in August, in line with recent average monthly job growth, but well below the 12-month average of 202,000. Employment growth was revised down in June (-61,000) and July (-25,000), which rendered a combined decrease of 86,000. In August, the unemployment rate ticked down 0.1 percentage point to 4.2%, while both the labor force participation rate (62.7%) and the employment-population ratio (60.0%) were unchanged from the previous month. The total number of unemployed, at 7.1 million, was essentially unchanged from July. Long-term unemployed (+27 weeks) was little changed at 1.5 million. In August, average hourly earnings increased by $0.14, or 0.4%, to $35.21. Over the past 12 months, average hourly earnings have increased by 3.8%. The average workweek edged up by 0.1 hour to 34.3 hours in August.
  • According to the S&P Global US Manufacturing PMI®, manufacturing production decreased for the first time in seven months in August as sales continued to fall due to increasing reports of demand weakness. Slower sales also led to a reduction in employment. The S&P Global US Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index™ posted 47.9 in August, down from 49.6 in July. A reading under the 50.0 mark indicates retraction in manufacturing. The reduction in new orders was the most since June 2023.
  • Unlike the manufacturing sector, services expanded in August, with business activity expanding at the fastest pace in nearly two-and-a-half years. The S&P Global US Services PMI® Business Activity Index rose to 55.7 last month, up from 55.0 in July. New orders increased as did input costs, which may have contributed to a decrease in employment.
  • The latest data on the international trade in goods and services was released on September 4 and is for July. According to that report, the goods and services trade deficit was $78.8 billion, $5.8 billion, or 7.9%, above the June figure. July exports were $266.6 billion, $1.3 billion, or 0.5%, more than June exports. July imports were $345.4 billion, $7.1 billion, or 2.1%, more than June imports. Year to date, the goods and services deficit increased $36.2 billion, or 7.7%, from the same period in 2023. Exports increased $65.9 billion, or 3.7%. Imports increased $102.1 billion, or 4.5%.
  • According to the latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Summary, on the last business day of July, the number of job openings, at 7.7 million, was about 300,000 below the June figure and was down by 1.1 million over the year. This is the fewest job openings since January 2021. The number of hires in July increased by 273,000 to 5.5 million. The number of total separations rose by 336,000 to 5.4 million. In July, the number of quits was essentially unchanged at 3.3 million but was down by 338,000 over the year.
  • The national average retail price for regular gasoline was $3.289 per gallon on September 2, $0.024 per gallon under the prior week’s price and $0.518 per gallon less than a year ago. Also, as of September 2, the East Coast price fell $0.021 to $3.233 per gallon; the Midwest price decreased $0.037 to $3.171 per gallon; the Gulf Coast price dipped $0.050 to $2.844 per gallon; the Rocky Mountain price increased $0.044 to $3.401 per gallon; and the West Coast price rose $0.051 to $4.101 per gallon.
  • For the week ended August 31, there were 227,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, a decrease of 5,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised up by 1,000. According to the Department of Labor, the advance rate for insured unemployment claims for the week ended August 24 was 1.2%, unchanged from the previous week’s rate. The advance number of those receiving unemployment insurance benefits during the week ended August 24 was 1,838,000, a decrease of 22,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised down by 8,000. States and territories with the highest insured unemployment rates for the week ended August 17 were New Jersey (2.8%), Rhode Island (2.5%), Puerto Rico (2.3%), California (2.1%), Minnesota (2.0%), Connecticut (1.8%), New York (1.8%), Pennsylvania (1.8%), Massachusetts (1.7%), and Washington (1.7%). The largest increases in initial claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended August 24 were in New York (+2,604), Michigan (+1,322), Georgia (+1,166), North Dakota (+992), and Massachusetts (+748), while the largest decreases were in Texas (-1,515), Florida (-1,313), California (-965), Washington (-522), and Virginia (-517).

Eye on the Week Ahead

The latest inflation data is out this week with the releases of the Consumer Price Index and the Producer Price Index. The CPI increased 2.9% over the 12 months ended in June, while the PPI rose 2.2% over the same period.

What I’m Watching This Week – 3 September 2024

The Markets (as of market close August 30, 2024)

Despite moments of trepidation, the stock market extended its winning streak to three straight weeks. And even with its rough start, August marked the fourth month in a row of positive returns. Several encouraging reports suggested that the economy is holding up and inflation is moderating, keeping alive hopes of a soft landing and a September rate cut by the Federal Reserve. The Dow posted the largest gain to close out the week at an all-time high, and the Global Dow also soared. The large caps of the S&P 500 posted a modest gain, the small caps of the Russell 2000 treaded water, and the tech-heavy NASDAQ ended the week in the red. Financials, energy, and materials were the top performing sectors, while information technology and communication services lagged. Bond prices fell, pushing up 10-year Treasury yields. Regardless of heightened geopolitical tensions, crude oil prices slipped due to expectations of weaker global demand. Gold prices fell and the dollar rose.

Stocks couldn’t maintain their momentum last Monday, though the Dow (0.2%) and the Global Dow (0.1%) pulled off slight gains. Declining tech stocks dragged down the NASDAQ (-0.9%), while the Russell 2000 (-0.4%) and the S&P 500 (-0.3%) also posted losses. The 10-year Treasury yield fell to 3.82%. Crude oil spiked more than 2.9% on the news that Libya would halt exports. Gold prices and the dollar also rose.

The Global Dow (0.4%), the NASDAQ (0.2%), and the S&P 500 (0.2%) all closed higher on Tuesday, while the Russell 2000 declined 0.7%. The Dow ended the day where it began, sitting at an all-time high. The 10-year Treasury yield rose slightly to 3.82%. Crude oil prices dropped 2.2% to about $75 per barrel. Gold prices advanced and the dollar retreated.

Last Wednesday, all of the benchmark stock indexes listed here ended up in the red. The NASDAQ fell 1.1%, followed by the Russell 2000 (-0.7%), the S&P 500 (-0.6%), the Dow (-0.4%), and the Global Dow (-0.3%). The 10-year Treasury yield ticked up again to 3.84%. Crude oil prices fell more than 1.5%. Gold lost value and the dollar advanced.

Stock market returns were mostly positive on Thursday, with one major exception. Shares of a high-profile chipmaker sold off due to a disappointing forecast, even though it reported second-quarter earnings that beat expectations. Those losses weighed on the NASDAQ, which fell 0.2%. The S&P 500 and the Global Dow both ended the day flat. The small caps of the Russell 2000 posted a 0.7% gain, followed closely by the Dow, which climbed 0.6% to reach another record high. The yield on 10-year Treasuries inched up for the third-straight day to close at 3.86%. Crude oil prices rose nearly 2.0%, settling just under $76.00 per barrel. Gold prices and the dollar also advanced.

Investors kicked off the holiday weekend in good spirits on Friday, after the Fed’s preferred gauge pointed to tamer inflation.(See below.) All of the major stock indexes listed here closed higher. The NASDAQ gained 1.1% and the S&P 500 rose 1.0%, followed by the Russell 2000, which climbed 0.7%. The Global Dow and the Dow returned 0.6%.. The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield added 4.4 basis points and settled at 3.91%. Crude oil prices dropped 3.0% and Gold prices fell 1.0%, while the dollar edged up slightly.

Stock Market Indexes

Market/Index2023 ClosePrior WeekAs of 8/30Weekly ChangeYTD Change
DJIA37,689.5440,712.7841,563.082.09%10.28%
NASDAQ15,011.3517,877.7917,713.63-0.92%18.00%
S&P 5004,769.835,634.615,648.400.24%18.42%
Russell 20002,027.072,218.702,217.63-0.05%9.40%
Global Dow4,355.284,847.194,934.571.80%13.30%
fed. funds target rate5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%0 bps0 bps
10-year Treasuries3.86%3.80%3.90%10 bps4 bps
US Dollar-DXY101.39100.70101.680.97%0.29%
Crude Oil-CL=F$71.30$74.90$73.61-1.72%3.24%
Gold-GC=F$2,072.50$2,546.50$2,535.30-0.44%22.33%

Chart reflects price changes, not total return. Because it does not include dividends or splits, it should not be used to benchmark performance of specific investments.

Last Week’s Economic News

  • The economy grew at an annualized rate of 3.0% in the second quarter according to the second estimate of gross domestic product. GDP accelerated at a rate of 1.4% in the first quarter. The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index increased 2.5%. Excluding food and energy prices, the PCE price index increased 2.8%. Consumer spending, as measured by the personal consumption expenditures index, rose 2.9%. Spending on goods increased 3.0%, while spending on services climbed 2.9%. Residential fixed investment declined 2.0%, while nonresidential (business) fixed investment increased 4.6%. Exports rose 1.6% and imports, which are a negative in the calculation of GDP, jumped 7.0%.
  • Prices consumers paid for goods and services, as measured by the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, rose 0.2% in July following a 0.1% increase in June. Excluding food and energy, prices increased 0.2%. Over the 12 months ended in July, the PCE price index rose 2.5%, the same as the 12-month estimate for the period ended in June. Prices for goods decreased by less than 0.1%, and prices for services increased 3.7%. The July 12-month increase in prices excluding food and energy was 2.6%, unchanged from the 12 months ended in June. Also in July, personal income increased 0.3%, while disposable personal income advanced 0.3%. Consumer spending, as measured by the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index, increased 0.5% in July, up from the June estimate of 0.3%.
  • Durable goods orders shot up 9.9% in July after dropping 6.9% in June. Excluding transportation, new orders decreased 0.2%. Excluding defense, new orders increased 10.4%. The 34.8% jump in new orders for transportation equipment (mainly aircraft) drove the overall increase in July. New orders for nondefense capital goods in July increased 41.9%.
  • According to the advance report on international trade in goods (excluding services), the deficit for July widened by $6.1 billion, or 6.3%, from June. Exports were virtually unchanged, while imports decreased $6.1 billion, or 2.3%. Since July 2023, exports have risen 4.4% and imports have surged 8.2%.
  • The national average retail price for regular gasoline was $3.313 per gallon on August 26, $0.069 per gallon under the prior week’s price and $0.500 per gallon less than a year ago. Also, as of August 26, the East Coast price fell $0.045 to $3.254 per gallon; the Midwest price decreased $0.114 to $3.208 per gallon; the Gulf Coast price dipped $0.102 to $2.894 per gallon; the Rocky Mountain price increased $0.114 to $3.357 per gallon; and the West Coast price decreased $0.008 to $4.050 per gallon.
  • For the week ended August 24, there were 231,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, a decrease of 2,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised up by 1,000. According to the Department of Labor, the advance rate for insured unemployment claims for the week ended August 17 was 1.2%, unchanged from the previous week’s rate. The advance number of those receiving unemployment insurance benefits during the week ended August 17 was 1,868,000, an increase of 13,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised down by 8,000. States and territories with the highest insured unemployment rates for the week ended August 10 were New Jersey (2.8%), Rhode Island (2.5%), California (2.2%), Puerto Rico (2.1%), Minnesota (2.0%), Connecticut (1.8%), Massachusetts (1.8%), Pennsylvania (1.8%), Nevada (1.7%), New York (1.7%), and Washington (1.7%). The largest increases in initial claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended August 17 were in Florida (+2,153), California (+979), Indiana (+854), South Carolina (+645), and Virginia (+408), while the largest decreases were in Michigan (-2,847), Texas (-1,952), New Jersey (-1,010), Georgia (-979), and Puerto Rico (-779).

Eye on the Week Ahead

Results from the August purchasing managers’ indexes (PMI) for manufacturing and services will be released this week. Two important employment reports for August are also coming out. Labor market data is highly anticipated at this critical juncture for the economy, especially after last month’s disappointing jobs report raised expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates substantially in September.

Monthly Market Review – August 2024

The Markets (as of market close August 30, 2024)

Stocks closed mostly higher in August, buoyed by a strong close to the month. Favorable inflation data and economic reports helped drive stocks higher toward the end of the month as investors took heed of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s statement that it is approaching time to lower interest rates. The Global Dow led the benchmark indexes, with the S&P 500, the Dow, and the NASDAQ all ending the month higher. The Russell 2000 wasn’t able to keep pace as it closed the month lower. Despite the strong finish, stocks rode a bumpy ride, falling lower mid-month as investors worried that the economy was slowing, and the Fed didn’t react in time to stem the negative tide. However, as more favorable economic reports emerged and the Fed seemed ready to ease its restrictive monetary policy, investors were ready to jump back into the market. Among the market sectors, only consumer discretionary and energy declined, while real estate and consumer staples advanced the most.

Inflationary data showed price pressures continued to stabilize in July. The 12-month interest rates for the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index each came in at 2.9%, as they inched closer to the Federal Reserve’s 2.0% target range. Since 2018, the annual inflation rate has dropped notably from a high of 6.2% in October 2021. Prices for commodities that are prevalent for most households, such as food at home, gasoline, new and used motor vehicles, and apparel, changed very little over the year. Shelter costs were up 0.4% in July and up 5.1% compared to July 2023. Shelter costs are decelerating only slowly and still a significant contributor to upward price pressure on services.

Growth of the U.S. economy continued at a modest pace, despite the Fed’s restrictive monetary policy. The gross domestic product (GDP) met expectations after increasing 3.0% in the second quarter following a 1.4% increase in the first quarter (see below). Consumer spending, the largest contributor in the calculation of GDP, rose 2.9%, with spending rising in durable goods, nondurable goods, and services. Gross domestic income, another indicator of the health of the economy, rose 1.3% in the second quarter. Moderate economic growth should be another plus as the Fed weighs its current monetary policy.

Job growth continued to slow in July, falling short of expectations. Downward revisions to estimates for June and May clearly show that average monthly gains in the second quarter of the year (177,000) are well below the average gains in the first quarter (267,000). Wage growth declined 0.3 percentage point over the past 12 months. New weekly unemployment claims decreased from a year ago, while total claims paid increased (see below).

Nearing the end of Q2 corporate earnings season, S&P 500 companies are reporting mixed results. About 91% of the S&P 500 companies have reported results. Of those companies, 78% reported earnings per share (EPS) above estimates, which is in line with the five-year average of 77% and higher than the 10-year average of 74%. Overall, as of August 12, the index reported an aggregate earnings growth rate of 3.5%, which is below the 5-year average of 8.6% and below the 10-year average of 6.8%. In general, the market has rewarded companies that reported positive earnings surprises with price increases, while companies that fell short of earnings expectations have generally seen their stock values dip.

Sales of both existing homes and new homes rose in July (see below). While home sales remain a bit sluggish, buyers are seeing more choices partly due to more inventory and slightly lower mortgage rates. Higher mortgage rates have slowed sales, with inventory expanding and the sales process lengthening. According to Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.49% as of August 15, up from 6.47% one week ago, but down from 7.09% from one year ago.

Industrial production retracted in July from June, which saw a 0.3 percentage point revision lower. Manufacturing output decreased in July and was 0.1% above its year-earlier level. Within manufacturing, durables manufacturing declined 0.9% but nondurables rose 0.4%. In July, the manufacturing sector retracted in for the first time in seven months, while the services sector saw a notable expansion of business activity.

Bond yields fell as bond prices increased in August. Ten-year Treasury yields generally closed the month lower. The two-year Treasury yield dropped 3.7 basis points to about 3.93% on the last trading day of August. The dollar weakened against a basket of world currencies, driven lower by the anticipated interest rate cuts later in the year. Gold prices hit a record high of $2,535.30 to close out August. Crude oil prices declined, as investors anticipated a supply increase by OPEC+ in October and decreased demand in China. Gasoline prices hit an eight-month low, as the retail price of regular gasoline was $3.313 per gallon on August 26, $0.158 below the price a month earlier and $0.500 less than the price a year ago.

Stock Market Indexes

Market/Index2023 ClosePrior MonthAs of August 30Monthly ChangeYTD Change
DJIA37,689.5440,842.7941,563.081.76%10.28%
NASDAQ15,011.3517,599.4017,713.630.65%18.00%
S&P 5004,769.835,522.305,648.402.28%18.42%
Russell 20002,027.072,254.482,217.63-1.63%9.40%
Global Dow4,355.284,811.504,934.572.56%13.30%
fed. funds target rate5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%0 bps0 bps
10-year Treasuries3.86%4.10%3.90%-20 bps4 bps
US Dollar-DXY101.39104.09101.68-2.32%0.29%
Crude Oil-CL=F$71.30$78.53$73.61-6.27%3.24%
Gold-GC=F$2,072.50$2,494.20$2,535.301.65%22.33%

Chart reflects price changes, not total return. Because it does not include dividends or splits, it should not be used to benchmark the performance of specific investments.

Latest Economic Reports

  • Employment: Total employment increased by 114,000 in July, well below the consensus of 180,000 and lower than the 12-month average gain of 215,000. The July increase followed downward revisions in both May and June, which totaled 29,000. In July, job gains occurred in health care, transportation and warehousing, and construction. In July, the unemployment rate increased 0.2 percentage point to 4.3% and was 0.8 percentage point above the rate from a year earlier (3.5%). The number of unemployed persons increased by 352,000 to 7.2 million. In July, the number of long-term unemployed (those jobless for 27 weeks or more) was relatively unchanged at 1.5 million and accounted for 21.6% of all unemployed people. The labor force participation rate, at 62.7%, was 0.1 percentage point above the prior month’s estimate, while the employment-population ratio, at 60.0%, ticked down 0.1 percentage point from the previous month. In July, average hourly earnings increased by $0.08, or 0.2%, to $35.07. Since July 2023, average hourly earnings rose by 3.6%, which is down from the June figure of 3.9%. The average workweek edged down 0.1 hour to 34.2 hours.
  • There were 231,000 initial claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended August 24, 2024. During the same period, the total number of workers receiving unemployment insurance was 1,868,000. A year ago, there were 234,000 initial claims, while the total number of workers receiving unemployment insurance was 1,859,000.
  • FOMC/interest rates: The Federal Open Market Committee did not meet in August. However, it is highly anticipated that the Committee will lower the target rate by at least 25.0 basis points following its meeting in September.
  • GDP/budget: According to the second estimate from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the economy, as measured by gross domestic product, accelerated at an annualized rate of 3.0% in the second quarter of 2024, up from the first estimate of 2.8%. GDP increased 1.4% in the first quarter. Personal consumption expenditures rose 2.9% in the second quarter compared to a 1.5% increase in the previous quarter. Consumer spending on goods increased 3.0%, while spending on services rose 2.9%. Personal consumption expenditures (1.95%) contributed the most to overall economic growth. Gross domestic investment advanced 7.5% in the second quarter, well above the 4.4% increase in the first quarter. Nonresidential (business) fixed investment advanced 4.6% in the second quarter (4.4% in the first quarter), while residential fixed investment rose 2.0% compared to a 16.0% increase in the first quarter. Exports climbed 1.6%, while imports, which are a negative in the calculation of GDP, increased 7.0%. Consumer prices, as measured by the personal consumption expenditures price index, increased 2.6%, compared with an increase of 3.4% in the first quarter. Excluding food and energy prices, the PCE price index increased 2.9%, compared with an increase of 3.7% in the prior quarter.
  • The federal budget deficit in July was $244.0 billion following June’s deficit of $71.0 billion. In July, government receipts totaled $330.0 billion, while government outlays were $574.0 billion. Through the first 10 months of fiscal year 2024, the total deficit sits at $1,517.0 trillion, which is roughly $357.0 billion lower than the deficit through the first 10 months of the previous fiscal year.
  • Inflation/consumer spending: The PCE price index increased 0.2% in July, right at expectations, after increasing 0.1% in June. The 12-month PCE price index for July, at 2.5%, was unchanged from the June figure. Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index increased 0.2% for July and 2.6% for the year ended in July. Both estimates were unchanged from June. Both personal income and disposable personal income (less taxes) advanced 0.3% in July. Personal spending, as measured by personal consumption expenditures, rose 0.5% in July (0.3% in June).
  • The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.2% in July after declining 0.1% in June. Over the 12 months ended in July, the CPI rose 2.9%, down 0.1 percentage point from the 12-month period ended in June. This was the smallest 12-month increase since March 2021. Excluding food and energy, the CPI rose 0.2% in July, (0.1% in June), and 3.2% from July 2023, which is the smallest 12-month increase since April 2021. In July, nearly 90.0% of the monthly increase was attributable to a 0.4% rise in prices for shelter. Energy prices were unchanged from June, while prices for food rose 0.2% in July (2.2% for the year).
  • The Producer Price Index rose 0.1% in July following a 0.2% increase in June. The increase was attributable to a 0.6% increase in prices for goods. Prices for services, which had been stubbornly higher, declined 0.2% in July. For the 12 months ended in July, producer prices advanced 2.2%, 0.4 percentage point below the rate for the 12-months ended in June. Prices for services rose 2.6% for the year ended in July, the lowest rate since early this year.
  • Housing: Sales of existing homes rose 1.3% in July, but declined 2.5% over the last 12 months. According to the National Association of Realtors® (NAR), the market for existing homes remained sluggish, although an increase in choices and slowly declining mortgage interest rates helped increase sales. Unsold inventory of existing homes in July represented a 4.0-month supply at the current sales pace, down slightly from the June estimate. The median existing-home price was $422,600 in July, down from the June estimate of $426,900, but 4.2% above the July 2023 price of $405,600. Sales of existing single-family homes increased 1.4% in July but were 1.4% under the July 2023 rate. The median existing single-family home price was $428,500 in July, down from $432,900 in June and well above the July 2023 estimate of $411,200.
  • New single-family home sales also increased in July, climbing 10.6% above the June estimate and 5.6% higher than the July 2023 rate. The median sales price of new single-family houses sold in July was $429,800 ($416,700 in June). The July average sales price was $514,800 ($501,700 in June). The inventory of new single-family homes for sale in July represented a supply of 7.5 months at the current sales pace, down from 8.4 months in June.
  • Manufacturing: Industrial production decreased 0.6% in July following a 0.3% advance in June. Early July shutdowns concentrated in the petrochemical and related industries due to Hurricane Beryl held down the growth of industrial production by an estimated 0.3 percentage point. Manufacturing output dipped 0.3% in July as manufacturing of motor vehicles and parts fell nearly 8.0%. Manufacturing excluding motor vehicles and parts rose 0.3%. Mining output was unchanged in July, while utilities declined 3.7%. For the 12 months ended in July, total industrial production was 0.2% below its year-earlier level. Over the same period, manufacturing increased 0.1%, mining decreased 1.5%, while utilities fell 0.1%.
  • New orders for durable goods jumped 9.9% in July, following June’s 6.9% decrease. Excluding transportation, new orders decreased 0.2%. Excluding defense, new orders increased 10.4%. Transportation equipment, up two of the last three months, drove the increase after climbing 34.8%. New orders for nondefense capital goods advanced 41.9% in July, while new orders for defense capital goods increased 1.2%.
  • Imports and exports: U.S. import prices ticked up 0.1% in July after being unchanged in June. Prices for import fuel increased 0.5% in July after declining 1.7% the previous month. Import prices advanced 1.6% over the last 12 months, the largest 12-month increase since December 2022. Export prices increased 0.7% in July after declining 0.3% the previous month. Higher nonagricultural prices in July more than offset lower prices for agricultural exports. Export prices increased 1.4% over the past year, the largest 12-month advance since January 2023.
  • The international trade in goods deficit was $102.7 billion in July, up $6.1 billion, or 6.3%, from June. Exports of goods were $172.9 billion in July, virtually unchanged from June exports. Imports of goods were $275.6 billion in July, $6.1 billion, or 2.3%, above the June estimate. Since July 2023, exports increased 4.4%, while imports increased 8.2%.
  • The latest information on international trade in goods and services, released August 6, is for June and revealed that the goods and services trade deficit was $73.1 billion, down $1.9 billion, or 2.5%, from the May deficit. June exports were $265.9 billion, 1.5% more than May exports. June imports were $339.0 billion, 0.6% above May’s estimate. Year to date, the goods and services deficit increased $22.7 billion, or 5.6%, from the same period in 2023. Exports increased $58.0 billion, or 3.8%. Imports increased $80.7 billion, or 4.2%.
  • International markets: Global inflation continued to trend lower. Eurozone inflation hit a three-year low when the annual rate fell to 2.2% in August. The Euro fell to a two-week low after trading at $1.108 at the end of August as falling consumer prices reinforced expectations for an August rate cut by the European Central Bank. Declining inflation also impacted bond yields. The 10-year German bond yield fell to 2.25% as investors anticipated rate cuts. In China, manufacturing PMI retracted to 49,08, while the GDP slipped from 5.3% to 4.7%. For August, the STOXX Europe 600 Index rose 5.5%; the United Kingdom’s FTSE gained 2.5%; Japan’s Nikkei 225 Index rose 7.6%; and China’s Shanghai Composite Index declined 2.2%.
  • Consumer confidence: Consumer confidence rose in August to 103.3, from an upwardly revised 101.9 in July, according to the Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index®. The Present Situation Index, based on consumers’ assessment of current business and labor market conditions, improved to 134.4 in August, up from 133.1 in the previous month. The Expectations Index, based on consumers’ short-term outlook for income, business, and labor market conditions, increased to 82.5 in August, up from 81.1 in July.

Eye on the Month Ahead

The Federal Reserve meets this month. Presuming relevant data shows that inflationary pressures have moderated, it is expected that the Fed will opt to decrease the federal funds rate by at least 25.0 basis points.

What I’m Watching This Week – 26 August 2024

The Markets (as of market close August 23, 2024)

Investors finally heard what they had been waiting for after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell gave clear indications that the central bank will lower interest rates in September. Powell noted that the labor market has cooled and inflation is slowing. In an up and down week for stocks, each of the benchmark indexes listed here ended up closing higher, led by the RUSSELL 2000. Crude oil prices rallied at the end of the week, but not enough to avoid closing in the red. Typically, falling interest rates stimulate economic growth, which includes rising demand for oil. However, worldwide energy demand, particularly in China, has waned, keeping oil prices somewhat muted. Ten of the 11 market sectors closed higher, led by materials, consumer discretionary, and financials. Energy ticked lower.

Last Monday saw stocks continue to build off of the prior week’s gains. The S&P 500 (1.4%) and the NASDAQ (1.0%) moved higher for the eighth straight session, the longest streak of the year. The small caps of the RUSSELL 2000 gained 1.2%, the GLOBAL DOW advanced 1.0%, and the DOW added 0.6%. The dollar fell 0.6% to a seven-month low, as signs of waning inflation furthered expectations of an interest rate cut next month. Ten-year Treasury yields dipped to 3.86%. Crude oil prices fell nearly 3.0% to $74.52 per barrel on weak Chinese demand. Gold prices rose 0.2%.

The winning streak for the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ ended at eight days following last Tuesday’s downturn. The RUSSELL 2000 declined 1.2%, the Nasdaq fell 0.3%, the S&P 500 dipped 0.2%, the Dow and the Global Dow slipped 0.1%. Investors pulled back from stocks ahead of the upcoming Jackson Hole symposium, highlighted by a speech from Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Among the market sectors, health care and consumer staples performed the best, while energy and materials were among the worst performers. Yields on 10-year Treasuries continued to decline, settling at 3.81%. Crude oil prices dropped to $73.82 per barrel. The dollar fell 0.5% against a basket of currencies. Gold prices rose 0.5%.

Stocks rallied modestly last Wednesday as minutes from the July Federal Reserve meeting indicated that policymakers would consider easing the restrictive economic policy in place (i.e., lower interest rates) in September. The RUSSELL 2000 recouped most of the prior day’s losses after gaining 1.3%. The NASDAQ rose 0.6%, while the S&P 500 and the GLOBAL DOW gained 0.4%. The DOW inched up 0.1%. Crude oil prices closed in the red, settling at $71.94 per barrel. Ten-year Treasury yields dipped to 3.77%. The dollar declined 0.3%, while gold prices were relatively unchanged.

Volatile continued to best describe the stock market last week. After moving higher last Monday, equities declined on Tuesday, rebounded on Wednesday, and fell on Thursday. Investors awaited Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s Jackson Hole speech with apprehension. While the minutes from the July meeting seemed to support an interest rate decrease, investors may be looking for a more definitive indication from Powell. A drop in tech shares pulled the NASDAQ down 1.7%. The RUSSELL 2000 fell 1.0%, the S&P 500 lost 0.9%, the DOW declined 0.4%, and the GLOBAL DOW dipped 0.3%. Ten-year Treasury yields rose to 3.86%. Crude oil prices climbed 1.4% to $72.94 per barrel. The dollar gained 0.5%, while gold prices edged lower.

Stocks posted solid gains following Fed Chair Powell’s speech. The RUSSELL 2000 gained 3.2% and the NASDAQ rose 1.5%. The S&P 500 and the GLOBAL DOW added 1.2%, while the DOW advanced 1.1%. Ten-year Treasury yields closed at 3.80%, as they approached their lowest level in 14 months. Crude oil prices rose 2.6%, the dollar fell 0.8%, and gold prices rose 1.2%.

Stock Market Indexes

Market/Index2023 ClosePrior WeekAs of 8/23Weekly ChangeYTD Change
DJIA37,689.5440,659.7640,712.780.13%8.02%
NASDAQ15,011.3517,631.7217,877.791.40%19.10%
S&P 5004,769.835,554.255,634.611.45%18.13%
RUSSELL 20002,027.072,141.922,218.703.58%9.45%
GLOBAL DOW4,355.284,806.794,847.190.84%11.29%
fed. funds target rate5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%0 bps0 bps
10-year Treasuries3.86%3.89%3.80%-9 bps-6 bps
US Dollar-DXY101.39102.44100.70-1.70%-0.68%
Crude Oil-CL=F$71.30$76.77$74.90-2.44%5.05%
Gold-GC=F$2,072.50$2,547.20$2,546.50-0.03%22.87%

Chart reflects price changes, not total return. Because it does not include dividends or splits, it should not be used to benchmark performance of specific investments.

Last Week’s Economic News

  • Sales of existing homes increased in July for the first time since February. Existing home sales rose 1.3% in July. Year over year, sales were down 2.5%. Total inventory sat at a 4.0-month supply. The median existing home price was $422,600 in July, down from June’s $426,900 but above the July 2023 price of $405,600. Sales of single-family homes advanced 1.4% in July but declined 1.4% from a year ago. The median existing single-family home price was $428,500 last month, down from the June estimate of $432,900 but above the July 2023 price of $411,200. As of August 15, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.49%, according to Freddie Mac, which was up from 6.47% one week ago, but down from 7.09% from a year ago.
  • Sales of new single-family homes also picked up steam in July, climbing 10.6% for the month and 5.6% above the total from the previous year. The median sales price of new houses sold in July was $429,800. The average sales price was $514,800. The inventory of new single-family homes available for sale represented a 7.5-month supply at the current sales rate.
  • The national average retail price for regular gasoline was $3.382 per gallon on August 19, $0.032 per gallon under the prior week’s price and $0.486 per gallon less than a year ago. Also, as of August 19, the East Coast price fell $0.027 to $3.299 per gallon; the Midwest price decreased $0.072 to $3.322 per gallon; the Gulf Coast price dipped $0.003 to $2.996 per gallon; the Rocky Mountain price increased $0.057 to $3.471 per gallon; and the West Coast price decreased $0.014 to $4.058 per gallon.
  • For the week ended August 17, there were 232,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, an increase of 4,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised up by 1,000. According to the Department of Labor, the advance rate for insured unemployment claims for the week ended August 10 was 1.2%, unchanged from the previous week’s rate. The advance number of those receiving unemployment insurance benefits during the week ended August 10 was 1,863,000, an increase of 4,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised down by 5,000. This is the highest level for insured unemployment since November 27, 2021, when it was 1,878,000. States and territories with the highest insured unemployment rates for the week ended August 3 were New Jersey (2.8%), Puerto Rico (2.6%), Rhode Island (2.6%), California (2.2%), Minnesota (2.0%), Pennsylvania (1.9%), Connecticut (1.8%), Massachusetts (1.7%), Nevada (1.7%), New York (1.7%), and Washington (1.7%). The largest increases in initial claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended August 10 were in Georgia (+693), Michigan (+584), Virginia (+357), New Jersey (+339), and Kansas (+233), while the largest decreases were in California (-2,585), Texas (-1,438), Massachusetts (-972), Pennsylvania (-604), and Iowa (-508).

Eye on the Week Ahead

The second release of gross domestic product for quarter two is out this week. The initial estimate showed the economy expanded at an annualized rate of 2.8%. Also out this week is the report on personal income and outlays for July, which is also a potential market mover. One of the most important parts of the report is the personal consumption expenditures price index, a measure of inflation favored by the Federal Reserve. In June, consumer prices ticked up 0.1% and rose 2.5% for the year ended in June.

What I’m Watching This Week – 19 August 2024

The Markets (as of market close August 16, 2024)

Wall Street rebounded after a rough start to the month, to close out its best week of the year. Investors saw alot of economic data that did little to change the expectations of an interest rate reduction in September. Last week’s gains ended four straight weeks of losses, fueled by concerns that the Federal Reserve hadn’t lowered interest rates soon enough to prevent a major economic slowdown. However, favorable inflation data, robust retail sales, and fewer unemployment claims reassured investors’ confidence, leading to a market rally. Each of the benchmark indexes listed here closed the week higher. All 11 of the S&P 500 market sectors gained ground, with information technology climbing more than 8.0%. Ten-year Treasury yields dipped lower as bond values advanced. Crude oil prices inched lower. The dollar declined, while gold prices increased.

Last Monday stocks closed generally lower as investors awaited upcoming inflation data later in the week. The Nasdaq edged up 0.2% and the S&P 500 closed flat. The remaining benchmark indexes listed here closed in the red, led by the Russell 2000, which lost 0.9%, followed by the Dow (-0.4%) and the Global Dow (-0.1%). Information technology, energy, and utilities posted gains, while real estate and communication services fell the furthest. Ten-year Treasury yields opened the week at 3.90%. Crude oil prices rose 3.6% to settle at $79.62 per barrel. The dollar was muted, while gold prices rose 1.6%.

Wall Street closed higher last Tuesday as investors assessed a lower-than-expected Producer Price Index (see below). Tech shares led the market uptick, helping to drive the Nasdaq (2.4%) higher. The remaining benchmarks listed here also posted solid gains. The S&P 500 rose 1.7%, followed by the Russell 2000 (1.6%), the Global Dow (1.3%), and the Dow (1.0%). Ten-year Treasury yields dipped 5.7 basis points to 3.85%. Crude oil prices ended a mini rally, falling to $78.49 per barrel. The dollar fell 0.5%, while gold prices ticked up 0.1%.

Investors were encouraged by the latest Consumer Price Index (see below), which matched expectations for July, but unexpectedly declined to 2.9% for the 12 months ended in July, the lowest 12-month rate since March 2021. The favorable inflation data helped push stocks generally higher last Wednesday. The Global Dow and the Dow led the benchmarks, each gaining 0.6%, followed by the S&P 500, which climbed 0.4%. The Nasdaq eked out a minimal gain of less than 0.1%, while the Russell 2000 fell 0.5%. Crude oil prices continued to trend lower, ending the sessionn at $77.09 per barrel after OPEC+ cut its 2024 demand forecast. Yields on 10-year Treasuries fell to 3.82%. The dollar edged up 0.1%, while gold prices fell 0.9%.

Last Thursday saw the release of another round of favorable economic data. Retail sales advanced (see below), while unemployment claims declined, bolstering investor confidence in the economy. Each of the benchmark indexes listed here posted solid gains, led by the Russell 2000, which advanced 2.5%. The Nasdaq rose 2.3%, followed by the S&P 500 (1.6%), the Dow (1.4%), and the Global Dow (0.9%). Bond prices fell as stock values rose. Ten-year Treasury yields climbed over 10.0 basis points, settling at 3.92%. Crude oil prices rose 1.3% to $77.96 per barrel. The dollar gained 0.4% and gold prices rose 0.5%.

Stocks pushed higher last Friday, with each index listed here posting gains. The Global Dow advanced 1.0% and the Russell 2000 rose 0.3%, while the Dow, the S&P 500, and the Nasdaq each gained about 0.2%. Ten-year Treasury yields slipped to 3.89%. The dollar and crude oil prices declined 0.5% and 1.8%, respectively. Gold prices rose 2.2%.

Stock Market Indexes

Market/Index2023 ClosePrior WeekAs of 8/16Weekly ChangeYTD Change
DJIA37,689.5439,497.5440,659.762.94%7.88%
Nasdaq15,011.3516,745.3017,631.725.29%17.46%
S&P 5004,769.835,344.165,554.253.93%16.45%
Russell 20002,027.072,080.922,141.922.93%5.67%
Global Dow4,355.284,629.294,806.793.83%10.37%
fed. funds target rate5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%0 bps0 bps
10-year Treasuries3.86%3.94%3.89%-5 bps3 bps
US Dollar-DXY101.39103.15102.44-0.69%1.04%
Crude Oil-CL=F$71.30$76.97$76.77-0.26%7.67%
Gold-GC=F$2,072.50$2,469.50$2,547.203.15%22.90%

Chart reflects price changes, not total return. Because it does not include dividends or splits, it should not be used to benchmark performance of specific investments.

Last Week’s Economic News

  • The Consumer Price Index rose 0.2% in July, in line with expectations. The CPI rose 2.9% for the year ended in July, down 0.1 percentage point from the 12 months ended in June. Nearly 90.0% of the July increase was attributable to a 0.4% advance in shelter prices. Energy prices were unchanged, while food prices increased 0.2%. Prices less food and energy also increased 0.2% in July and 3.2% over the last 12 months.
  • Producer prices edged up 0.1% in July after increasing 0.2% in June. Over the last 12 months, producer prices rose 2.2%, which is the lowest 12-month increase since May. Producer prices excluding foods, energy, and trade services increased 0.2% in July and 3.3% for the year ended in July. The increase in producer prices last month is largely attributable to a 0.6% increase in prices for goods, the largest increase since February. Prices for services decreased 0.2%, which marked the first monthly decline since December 2023.
  • Retail sales rose 1.0% in July after declining 0.2% in June. Retail sales advanced 2.7% for the 12 months ended in July. Retail trade sales were up 1.1% last month and 2.6% from last year. Sales, excluding motor vehicles and parts, rose 0.4% in July. Sales at motor vehicle and parts dealers climbed 3.6% in July. Nonstore (on line) sales ticked up 0.2% last month, while food services and drinking places sales edged up 0.3%.
  • Prices for imports ticked up 0.1% in July, after being unchanged the previous month. Prices for imports rose 1.6% for the year ended in July, the largest 12 month increase since the index advanced 3.2% for the 12 months ended in December 2022. Export prices increased 0.7% in July following a 0.3% decline in June. Higher nonagricultural prices in July more than offset lower prices for agricultural exports. The prices index for exports increased 1.4% over the past year, the largest 12-month advance since prices rose 2.0% for the 12 months ended in January 2023.
  • Industrial production fell 0.6% in July after increasing 0.3% in June. Early July shutdowns in petrochemical and related industries due to Hurricane Beryl held down the growth of industrial production by an estimated 0.3 percentage point. Manufacturing output stepped down 0.3% as the index for motor vehicles and parts fell nearly 8.0%. Manufacturing excluding motor vehicles and parts rose 0.3%. The index for mining was unchanged, while the index for utilities decreased 3.7%. Total industrial production in July was 0.2% below its year-earlier level.
  • The Treasury budget deficit for July was $243.7 billion, well above the June deficit of 71.0 billion. July receipts were $236.0 billion, while total outlays wee $574.1 billion. For the current fiscal year, the total deficit is $1,517.0 trillion. The deficit over the same period in the last fiscal year was $1,613.8 trillion.
  • In July, the number of issued building permits for residential construction decreased 4.0% from the June estimate, and 7.0% below the July 2023 rate. The number of building permits for single-family houses dipped 0.1% in July. Housing starts declined 6.8% in July and 16.0% below the rate from a year earlier. Single-family housing starts in July were 14.1% under the June figure. Housing completions decreased 9.8% in July, but were 13.8% above the July 2023 rate. Single-family housing completions in July were 0.5% above the June estimate.
  • The national average retail price for regular gasoline was $3.414 per gallon on August 12, $0.034 per gallon under the prior week’s price and $0.436 per gallon less than a year ago. Also, as of August 12, the East Coast price fell $0.049 to $3.326 per gallon; the Midwest price decreased $0.034 to $3.394 per gallon; the Gulf Coast price dipped $0.011 to $2.999 per gallon; the Rocky Mountain price declined $0.021 to $3.414 per gallon; and the West Coast price decreased $0.008 to $4.072 per gallon.
  • For the week ended August 10, there were 227,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, a decrease of 7,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised up by 1,000. According to the Department of Labor, the advance rate for insured unemployment claims for the week ended August 3 was 1.2%, unchanged from the previous week’s rate. The advance number of those receiving unemployment insurance benefits during the week ended August 3 was 1,864,000, a decrease of 7,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised down by 4,000. States and territories with the highest insured unemployment rates for the week ended July 27 were New Jersey (2.8%), Rhode Island (2.6%), Puerto Rico (2.5%), California (2.3%), Minnesota (2.0%), Connecticut (1.9%), Pennsylvania (1.9%), Massachusetts (1.8%), Illinois (1.7%), Nevada (1.7%), New York (1.7%), and Washington (1.7%). The largest increases in initial claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended August 3 were in New Jersey (+1,080), California (+694), Wisconsin (+672), New York (+607), and Illinois (+579), while the largest decreases were in Michigan (-7,430), Texas (-5,180), Missouri (-3,716), Virginia (-745), and Georgia (-493).

Eye on the Week Ahead

The real estate sector dominates the economic data released this week. Sales of both existing and new homes will look to rebound from a period of declining sales.

What I’m Watching This Week – 12 August 2024

The Markets (as of market close August 9, 2024)

Market volatility continued last week as stocks tumbled Monday and Wednesday, only to rebound at the end of last week, but not enough to avoid closing in the red for the second week in a row. Each of the benchmark indexes listed here lost value, with the small caps of the Russell 2000 falling the furthest. Despite the recent downturn, the indexes remain ahead year to date. Among the market sectors, only industrials and communication services closed higher, while materials and utilities shed the most value. Crude oil prices ended a losing streak, gaining nearly 4.0% last week. The dollar was flat, while gold prices slipped lower. Bond prices fluctuated throughout the week, ultimately settling lower, which drove yields higher.

The stock sell-off continued last Monday on increasing worries over a U.S. economic slowdown. Markets worldwide took a hit as investors feared that weak economic data and mediocre corporate earnings could be signs of a recession. The S&P 500 (-3.0%) and the Dow (-2.6%) had their worst day in over two years. The Nasdaq (-3.4%) endured its worst start to a month since 2008. The Global Dow (-3.4%) and the Russell 2000 (-3.3%) also slid lower. Ten-year Treasury yields headed to their lowest levels in a year after settling at 3.78%. Crude oil prices closed at $72.94 per barrel. The dollar slid 0.4%, while gold prices fell 0.8%.

The markets moved higher last Tuesday as investors took advantage of equities that had fallen in value. The Russell 2000 led the benchmark indexes, gaining 1.2%, followed by the Global Dow (1.1%), the Nasdaq (1.0%), and the Dow (0.8%). Bond prices fell, driving yields higher, with 10-year Treasuries gaining 10.3 basis points to close at 3.88%. Crude oil prices settled at $73.09 per barrel. The dollar edged higher, while gold prices fell 0.6%.

Tuesday’s market rebound proved to be short-lived as stocks trended lower by the close of trading last Wednesday. The Russell 2000 lost about 1.4% and the Nasdaq fell 1.1%. The S&P 500 declined 0.8% and the Dow dipped 0.6%. The Global Dow rose 0.5%. Ten-year Treasury yields marched toward 4.00%, ending the session just short at 3.96%. Crude oil prices advanced nearly 3.0% to $75.37 per barrel. The dollar gained 0.2%, while gold prices fell 0.2%.

In what turned into a roller coaster of a week, stocks jumped higher last Thursday, led by a 2.9% increase by the Nasdaq. The Russell 2000 advanced 2.4%, the S&P 500 gained 2.3%, the Dow rose 1.8%, and the Global Dow increased 1.0%. Weekly jobless claims unexpectedly fell 17,000 (see below), which brightened the mood of investors. Yields on 10-year Treasuries settled at 3.99% after gaining 0.3 basis points. Crude oil prices rose 1.1% to $76.04 per barrel. The dollar was unchanged. Gold prices gained 1.3%.

Large caps and tech shares rose higher, while small caps lagged to close out last week. There was no economic data released last Friday, so investors could focus on inflation data set to be released this week. The Global Dow led the indexes, gaining 0.6%, followed by the Nasdaq and the S&P 500, which both advanced 0.5%. The Dow inched up 0.1%, while the Russell 2000 fell 0.2%. The market sectors mostly advanced, with only industrials and materials falling lower. Ten-year Treasury yields fell to 3.94% as bond prices climbed higher. Crude oil prices advanced 1.0% to $76.97 per barrel. Gold prices edged up 0.3%, while the dollar inched lower.

Stock Market Indexes

Market/Index2023 ClosePrior WeekAs of 8/9Weekly ChangeYTD Change
DJIA37,689.5439,737.2639,497.54-0.60%4.80%
Nasdaq15,011.3516,776.1616,745.30-0.18%11.55%
S&P 5004,769.835,346.565,344.16-0.04%12.04%
Russell 20002,027.072,109.312,080.92-1.35%2.66%
Global Dow4,355.284,639.084,629.29-0.21%6.29%
fed. funds target rate5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%0 bps0 bps
10-year Treasuries3.86%3.79%3.94%15 bps8 bps
US Dollar-DXY101.39103.22103.15-0.07%1.74%
Crude Oil-CL=F$71.30$74.11$76.973.86%7.95%
Gold-GC=F$2,072.50$2,480.00$2,469.50-0.42%19.16%

Chart reflects price changes, not total return. Because it does not include dividends or splits, it should not be used to benchmark performance of specific investments.

Last Week’s Economic News

  • While the manufacturing sector may have slowed in July, the services sector saw an expansion of business activity last month. A rise in new orders has encouraged companies to take on extra staff. Input cost inflation accelerated, but the increased costs were passed on to consumers. The S&P Global US Services PMI® business Activity Index posted a reading of 55.0, signaling monthly expansion in services activity, which has continued for 18 months.
  • The goods and services trade deficit was $73.1 billion in June (the most recent data available), down $1.9 billion, or 2.5%, from the previous month. Exports, at $265.9 billion, increased by 1.5%, while imports, at $339.0 billion, advanced 0.6%. The June decrease in the goods and services deficit reflected a decrease in the goods deficit of $2.5 billion to $97.4 billion and a decrease in the services surplus of $0.6 billion to $24.2 billion. Year to date, the goods and services deficit increased $22.7 billion, or 5.6%, from the same period in 2023. Exports increased $58.0 billion, or 3.8%. Imports increased $80.7 billion, or 4.2%.
  • The national average retail price for regular gasoline was $3.448 per gallon on August 5, $0.036 per gallon under the prior week’s price and $0.380 per gallon less than a year ago. Also, as of August 5, the East Coast price fell $0.020 to $3.375 per gallon; the Midwest price decreased $0.048 to $3.428 per gallon; the Gulf Coast price dipped $0.084 to $3.010 per gallon; the Rocky Mountain price advanced $0.040 to $3.435 per gallon; and the West Coast price decreased $0.026 to $4.080 per gallon.
  • For the week ended August 3, there were 233,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, a decrease of 17,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised up by 1,000. According to the Department of Labor, the advance rate for insured unemployment claims for the week ended July 27 was 1.2%, unchanged from the previous week’s rate. The advance number of those receiving unemployment insurance benefits during the week ended July 27 was 1,875,000, an increase of 6,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised down by 8,000. This is the highest level for insured unemployment since November 27, 2021, when it was 1,878,000. States and territories with the highest insured unemployment rates for the week ended July 20 were New Jersey (2.8%), Rhode Island (2.6%), Puerto Rico (2.4%), California (2.3%), Minnesota (2.0%), Pennsylvania (1.9%), Connecticut (1.8%), Illinois (1.7%), Massachusetts (1.7%), New York (1.7%), and Washington (1.7%). The largest increases in initial claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended July 27 were in Michigan (+4,027), Missouri (+3,410), Massachusetts (+2,127), Virginia (+637), and Minnesota (+487), while the largest decreases were in Texas (-6,607), New York (-2,396), Ohio (-2,377), Florida (-1,587), and Tennessee (-1,488).

Eye on the Week Ahead

Inflation data for July is released this week. The Consumer Price Index dipped 0.1% in June, and investors will be looking for similar results in July. Prices producers paid, on the other hand, rose 0.2% in June.

What I’m Watching This Week – 5 August 2024


The Markets (as of market close August 2, 2024)

Wall Street experienced a notable downturn last week, with each of the benchmark indexes closing sharply in the red. A weaker-than-expected jobs report, rising unemployment claims, disappointing corporate earnings from major tech firms, and falling manufacturing data prompted the major sell-off last week. Evidence of a slowing economy may prompt the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates in September, but many analysts and investors believe the Fed is behind the curve in cutting rates, especially when other central banks have already done so. There was a huge swing in the market sectors last week, where utilities (4.5%) and real estate (3.9%) turned sharply higher, while information technology (-4.1%), consumer discretionary (-3.8%), and energy (-3.4%) turned sharply lower. Bond prices jumped higher as demand increased, pulling yields lower. Ten-year Treasury yields fell to their lowest level since December 2023. Crude oil prices dropped by more than 3.5%, while gold prices climbed higher.

The week kicked off with the Nasdaq, the S&P 500, and the Global Dow ticking up minimally, while the Dow dipped 0.1% and the Russell 2000 fell 1.1%. Investors awaited the release of quarterly earnings from several tech companies, the outcome of the Federal Reserve’s latest meeting, and labor data for July. Bond prices held steady, with yields on 10-year Treasuries slipping to 4.17%. Crude oil prices continued to fade, down 1.7% to $75.83 per barrel. The dollar gained 0.2%, while gold prices were essentially unchanged.

Last Tuesday saw investors flee stocks, particularly tech shares, and move to bonds after an acceleration of the unrest in the Middle East and ahead of the Fed’s meeting on Wednesday. The tech-heavy Nasdaq lost 1.3%, while the S&P 500 fell 0.5% behind weakness in technology, consumer discretionary, and consumer staples. However, the Dow (0.5%), the Russell 2000 (0.4%), and the Global Dow (0.2%) moved higher. Demand for bonds drove prices up and pulled yields lower. Ten-year Treasury yields fell to 4.14%. Crude oil prices declined to $75.08 per barrel. The dollar was unchanged, while gold prices gained 1.2%.

Stocks closed up last Wednesday as investors were encouraged that interest rates may be reduced in September following statements from the Federal Open Market Committee and its chair, Jerome Powell. Each of the benchmark indexes listed here climbed higher, led by the Nasdaq (2.6%), followed by the S&P 500 (1.6%), the Global Dow (1.2%), the Russell 2000 (0.5%), and the Dow (0.2%). Tech stocks, which had been trending lower, reversed course, helping to drive the indexes higher. Ten-year Treasury yields dipped to 4.10%. The dollar fell nearly 0.5%, while gold prices rose 1.7%. Crude oil prices, which had been sinking, jumped 5.1% to $78.53 per barrel.

A sharp sell-off in chip stocks sent the markets reeling last Thursday. Each of the benchmark indexes ended the session firmly in the red, led by the Russell 2000 (-3.0%) and the Nasdaq (-2.3%). The remaining benchmarks fell between 1.2% and 1.6%. Ten-year Treasury yields declined 3.2%, or 13.3 basis points, settling at 3.97%, moving below the 4.00% level for the first time since February. Crude oil prices dropped to $76.90 per barrel. The dollar and gold prices gained 0.3% and 0.6%, respectively. Investors reacted to contraction in the manufacturing sector (see below) and jobless claims rising to an 11-month high.

Stocks plunged lower last Friday as investors saw unemployment claims rise and job gains fall. The interest-sensitive Russell 2000 lost 3.5%, followed by the Nasdaq (-2.4%), Global Dow (-2.1%), the S&P 500 (-1.8%), and the Dow (-1.5%). Ten-year Treasury yields dropped over 18.0 basis points, crude oil prices fell 2.9%, the dollar slipped 1.1%, while gold prices were unchanged.

Stock Market Indexes

Market/Index2023 ClosePrior WeekAs of 8/2Weekly ChangeYTD Change
DJIA37,689.5440,589.3439,737.26-2.10%5.43%
Nasdaq15,011.3517,357.8816,776.16-3.35%11.76%
S&P 5004,769.835,459.105,346.56-2.06%12.09%
Russell 20002,027.072,260.072,109.31-6.67%4.06%
Global Dow4,355.284,753.884,639.08-2.41%6.52%
fed. funds target rate5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%0 bps0 bps
10-year Treasuries3.86%4.20%3.79%-41 bps-7 bps
US Dollar-DXY101.39104.31103.22-1.04%1.80%
Crude Oil-CL=F$71.30$76.81$74.11-3.52%3.94%
Gold-GC=F$2,072.50$2,385.40$2,480.003.97%19.66%

Chart reflects price changes, not total return. Because it does not include dividends or splits, it should not be used to benchmark performance of specific investments.

Last Week’s Economic News

  • The Federal Open Market Committee met last week and decided to keep the target range at its current 5.25%-5.50%. However, it appears that if inflation continues to stabilize, the FOMC may lend more consideration to reducing interest rates when it next meets in September.
  • Employment slowed in July, according to the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Employment rose by only 114,000 last month, well below the 12-month average of 215,000. In July, employment continued to trend up in health care, in construction, and in transportation and warehousing, while information lost jobs. The number of unemployed, at 7.2 million, increased by 352,000 over June’s estimate. The unemployment rate increased for the second straight month in July, ticking up 0.2 percentage point to 4.3%. Both the number of unemployed and the unemployment rate are above the July 2023 estimates, at 5.9 million and 3.5%, respectively. The number of long-term unemployed (those jobless for 27 weeks or more) changed little at 1.5 million in July. This measure is up from 1.2 million a year earlier. The long-term unemployed accounted for 21.6% of all unemployed people in July. The labor force participation rate increased 0.1 percentage point to 62.7%, while the employment-population ratio dipped 0.1 percentage point to 60.0%. The May estimate was revised down by 2,000, from 218,000 to 216,000, and the change for June was revised down by 27,000, from 206,000 to 179,000. With these revisions, employment in May and June combined was 29,000 lower than previously reported. In July, average hourly earnings increased by $0.08, or 0.2%, to $35.07. Over the past 12 months, average hourly earnings have increased by 3.6%. The average workweek edged down by 0.1 hour to 34.2 hours in July.
  • According to the latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Summary, the number of job openings, at 8.2 million, was unchanged in June from May but was 941,000 less than the estimate from a year earlier. The number of hires (5.3 million) fell by 314,000, and 554,000 over the year. The number of total separations (5.1 million) declined by 302,000 and 544,000 from a year earlier.
  • Manufacturing regressed in July as new orders declined for the first time in three months. The S&P Global US Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index™ fell to 49.6 in July from 51.6 in June. A reading below 50.0 indicates contraction, which occurred for the first time in seven months. New orders decreased at the fastest pace in 2024. Some costs to manufacturers increased markedly in July as survey respondents noted increases in costs for energy, freight, labor, and raw materials. Nevertheless, the rate of overall cost inflation eased to a four-month low.
  • The national average retail price for regular gasoline was $3.484 per gallon on July 29, $0.013 per gallon over the prior week’s price but $0.273 per gallon less than a year ago. Also, as of July 29, the East Coast price fell $0.014 to $3.395 per gallon; the Midwest price increased $0.050 to $3.476 per gallon; the Gulf Coast price rose $0.047 to $3.094 per gallon; the Rocky Mountain price advanced $0.072 to $3.395 per gallon; and the West Coast price decreased $0.031 to $4.106 per gallon.
  • For the week ended July 27, there were 249,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, an increase of 14,000 from the previous week’s level. According to the Department of Labor, the advance rate for insured unemployment claims for the week ended July 20 was 1.2%, unchanged from the previous week’s rate. The advance number of those receiving unemployment insurance benefits during the week ended July 20 was 1,877,000, an increase of 33,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised down by 7,000. This is the highest level for insured unemployment since November 27, 2021, when it was 1,878,000. States and territories with the highest insured unemployment rates for the week ended July 13 were New Jersey (2.7%), Rhode Island (2.6%), Puerto Rico (2.4%), California (2.2%), Minnesota (2.0%), Connecticut (1.8%), Massachusetts (1.8%), Pennsylvania (1.8%), Illinois (1.7%), Nevada (1.7%), New York (1.7%), and Washington (1.7%). The largest increases in initial claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended July 20 were in Texas (+5,962), Tennessee (+769), Delaware (+259), and the Virgin Islands (+7), while the largest decreases were in New York (-8,091), Michigan (-6,941), California (-5,326), Missouri (-3,610), and Kentucky (-3,301).

Eye on the Week Ahead

There isn’t much in terms of economic reports available this week. Of some interest is the S&P Global’s survey of service providers for July. The services sector has shown marked resilience during the period of restrictive economic policy and has steadily expanded.

Monthly Market review – July 2024

The Markets (as of market close July 31, 2024)

Stocks closed mostly higher in July. Tech shares, including AI stocks, which had been a bellwether for much of the year, retreated in July, dragging the Nasdaq to its worst July performance since 2014. The remaining indexes fared better, with the Russell 2000 enjoying its best month since December 2023 and its best July since 2022. The Dow also had its best month of the year. Most of the market sectors advanced in July, with the notable exceptions of communication services (-4.5%) and information technology (-2.4%). Real estate (7.5%), financials (6.0%), and utilities (5.9%) outpaced the remaining sectors.

Inflationary data showed price pressures stabilized in June. The 12-month interest rates of the Consumer Price Index and the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index declined. Prices for commodities that are prevalent for most households, such as food at home, gasoline, new and used motor vehicles, and apparel, changed very little over the year. The PCE price index, the preferred barometer of the Federal Reserve, slowed to 2.5% for the year ended in June (see below) as it inches closer to the Fed’s 2.0% target inflation rate.

Growth of the U.S. economy continued at a modest pace, despite the Fed’s restrictive monetary policy. The gross domestic product (GDP) exceeded expectations after increasing 2.8% in the second quarter, following a 1.4% increase in the first quarter (see below). Consumer spending, the largest contributor in the calculation of GDP, rose 2.8%, with spending rising in durable goods, nondurable goods, and services. Private investments, another key component of GDP, also increased. Consumer confidence (see below) grew in July after trending lower in May.

Job growth notably slowed over the past several months. Although job gains exceeded expectations in June (see below), downward revisions to estimates for April and May clearly show that average monthly gains in the second quarter of the year (177,000) are well below the average gains in the first quarter (267,000). Wage growth has changed little throughout the year. The 12-month rate for the period ended in June (3.9%) was only 0.2 percentage points lower than the rate for the period ended in May. New weekly unemployment claims decreased from a year ago, while total claims paid increased (see below).

Nearing the midpoint of Q2 corporate earnings season, S&P 500 companies are reporting mixed results. About 41% of the S&P 500 companies have reported results. Of those companies, 78% reported earnings per share (EPS) above estimates, which is in line with the five-year average of 77% and higher than the 10-year average of 74%. Overall, as of July 26, the index reported an earnings growth rate of 9.8%, which is above the 8.9% growth rate for the three months ended in June. Eight of the 11 sectors are reporting year-over-year growth, with four of these eight sectors reporting double-digit growth: communication services, information technology, financials, and health care. On the other hand, three sectors are reporting a year-over-year decline in earnings, led by the Materials sector.

Sales of both existing homes and new homes declined in July (see below). Higher mortgage rates have slowed sales, with inventory expanding and the sales process lengthening. According to Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.77% as of July 18. That’s down from 6.89% one week ago and 6.78% one year ago.

Industrial production expanded in June for the second straight month (see below). Manufacturing output increased in June and was 1.1% above its year-earlier level. Within manufacturing, durable manufacturing was unchanged in June, while nondurable manufacturing increased 0.8%. According to the latest survey from the S&P Global US Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index™, the manufacturing sector perked up in June, while the services sector saw business accelerate at a quicker pace than in May.

Bond yields gained as bond prices declined in July. Ten-year Treasury yields generally closed the month lower. The two-year Treasury yield fell nearly 50 basis points to about 4.26% on the last day of July. The dollar slipped lower against a basket of world currencies. Gold prices climbed higher. Crude oil prices declined, influenced by ongoing unrest in the Middle East and waning Chinese demand. The retail price of regular gasoline was $3.484 per gallon on July 29, $0.046 above the price a month earlier but $0.273 less than the price a year ago.

Stock Market Indexes

Market/Index2023 ClosePrior MonthAs of July 31Monthly ChangeYTD Change
DJIA37,689.5439,118.8640,842.794.41%8.37%
Nasdaq15,011.3517,732.6017,599.40-0.75%17.24%
S&P 5004,769.835,460.485,522.301.13%15.78%
Russell 20002,027.072,047.692,254.4810.10%11.22%
Global Dow4,355.284,677.144,811.502.87%10.48%
fed. funds target rate5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%0 bps0 bps
10-year Treasuries3.86%4.34%4.10%-24 bps24 bps
US Dollar-DXY101.39105.88104.09-1.69%2.66%
Crude Oil-CL=F$71.30$81.51$78.53-3.66%10.14%
Gold-GC=F$2,072.50$2,335.00$2,494.206.82%20.35%

Chart reflects price changes, not total return. Because it does not include dividends or splits, it should not be used to benchmark the performance of specific investments.

Latest Economic Reports

  • Employment: June jobs data came in above expectations. Total employment increased by 206,000 in June, similar to the average monthly gain of 220,000 over the prior 12 months. The June increase followed downward revisions in both April and May, which totaled 111,000. In June, job gains occurred in government, health care, social assistance, and construction. In June, the unemployment rate increased 0.1 percentage point to 4.0% and was 0.3 percentage point above the rate from a year earlier (3.7%). The number of unemployed persons was relatively unchanged at 6.6 million. In June, the number of long-term unemployed (those jobless for 27 weeks or more), at 1.5 million, rose by 166,000 and accounted for 22.2% of all unemployed people. The labor force participation rate, at 62.6%, was 0.1 percentage point above the prior month’s estimate, while the employment-population ratio, at 60.1%, was unchanged from the previous month. In June, average hourly earnings increased by $0.10, or 0.3%, to $35.00. Since June 2023, average hourly earnings rose by 3.9%, which is down from the May figure of 4.1%. The average workweek was unchanged at 34.3 hours in June for the third straight month.
  • There were 235,000 initial claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended July 20, 2024. During the same period, the total number of workers receiving unemployment insurance was 1,851,000. A year ago, there were 231,000 initial claims, while the total number of workers receiving unemployment insurance was 1,765,000.
  • FOMC/interest rates: The Federal Open Market Committee met at the end of July. Following that meeting, the Committee kept interest rates at their current levels. However, the meeting statement indicated that, although economic activity continued to expand at a solid pace, job gains had moderated, and the unemployment rate had moved up but remained low. In addition, inflation had eased but remained somewhat elevated. The FOMC noted that while some further progress had been made toward achieving the Committee’s 2.0% target, they are still looking for further evidence that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2.0%. Nevertheless, it appears that, unless inflationary pressures spike, the Committee is likely to consider reducing interest rates following its September meeting.
  • GDP/budget: The economy, as measured by gross domestic product, accelerated at an annualized rate of 2.8% in the second quarter of 2024, according to the initial estimate from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. GDP increased 1.4% in the first quarter. While the second-quarter estimate is based on incomplete data, it, nevertheless, rose by more than expected. Personal consumption expenditures rose 2.3% in the second quarter compared to a 1.5% increase in the previous quarter. Consumer spending on goods increased 2.5%, while spending on services rose 2.2%. Gross domestic investment advanced 8.4% in the second quarter, well above the 4.4% increase in the first quarter. Nonresidential (business) fixed investment advanced 5.2% in the second quarter (4.4% in the first quarter), while residential fixed investment decreased 1.4% compared to a 16.0% increase in the first quarter. Exports climbed 2.0%, while imports, which are a negative in the calculation of GDP, increased 6.9%. Consumer prices rose 2.6% in the second quarter, compared with an increase of 3.4% in the previous quarter. Excluding food and energy prices, the PCE price index increased 2.9% compared with an increase of 3.7% in the first quarter.
  • The federal budget deficit in June was $66.0 billion following May’s surplus of $347.0 billion. In June, government receipts totaled $466.0 billion, while government outlays were $532.0 billion. Through the first nine months of fiscal year 2024, the total deficit sits at $1,268.0 trillion, which is roughly $125.0 billion lower than the deficit through the first nine months of the previous fiscal year.
  • Inflation/consumer spending: Personal income increased 0.2% in June (0.4% in May). Disposable personal income (less taxes) also rose 0.2% (0.4% in May). Personal spending, as measured by personal consumption expenditures, rose 0.3% in June (0.4% in May). The PCE price index, a measure of inflation, increased 0.1% in June after registering no gain in May. Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index increased 0.2% (0.1% in May). From a year ago, the PCE price index rose 2.5% (0.1% less than the May estimate) and 2.6% when excluding food and energy.
  • The Consumer Price Index (CPI) declined 0.1% in June after being unchanged in May. Over the 12 months ended in June, the CPI rose 3.0%, down 0.3 percentage point from the 12-month period ended in May. Excluding food and energy, the CPI rose 0.1% in June, (0.2% in May), and 3.3% from June 2023, which is the smallest 12-month increase since April 2021. In June, prices for food rose 0.2% (2.2% for the year), while prices for shelter increased 0.2% (the smallest monthly increase since August 2021) and 5.2% over the past 12 months, which is the lowest year-over-year increase since the period ended in April 2022. Energy prices declined 2.0% in June, while gasoline prices decreased 3.8%. The Fed should pay particular attention to the decline in shelter costs, which compose about one-third of the CPI basket of goods and services.
  • While prices paid by consumers may have moderated in June, prices that producers received for goods and services increased 0.2% in June after being unchanged in May. The June increase was attributable to a 0.6% jump in prices for services. Prices for goods fell 0.5% in June after declining 0.8% in May. Nearly all of the June increase in prices for services was attributable to a 1.9% increase in margins for trade services, which measure changes in margins received by wholesalers and retailers. Prices for gasoline declined 5.8% in June. Over the last 12 months, producer prices have increased 2.6%, up from 2.4% for the 12 months ended in May. Excluding food and energy, producer prices increased 3.0% for the year ended in June, which is the highest 12-month increase since April 2023.
  • Housing: Sales of existing homes fell 5.4% in June and 5.4% over the last 12 months. According to the National Association of Realtors® (NAR), the market for existing homes is slowly shifting from a seller’s market to a buyer’s market. The pace of sales is waning slightly and sellers are receiving fewer offers. Inventory is rising on a national basis. Unsold inventory of existing homes in June represented a 4.1-month supply at the current sales pace, up from 3.7 months in May. The median existing-home price was at an all-time high of $426,900 in June, up from the May estimate of $417,200, and 4.1% above the June 2023 price of $410,100. Sales of existing single-family homes decreased 5.1% in June and 4.3% from the prior year. The median existing single-family home price was $432,700 in June, up from $422,400 in May and well above the June 2023 estimate of $415,700.
  • New single-family home sales also declined in June, falling 0.6% below the May estimate and 7.4% under the June 2023 rate. The median sales price of new single-family houses sold in June was $417,300 ($407,100 in May). The June average sales price was $487,200 ($504,500 in May). The inventory of new single-family homes for sale in June represented a supply of 9.3 months at the current sales pace, up from 9.1 months in May.
  • Manufacturing: Industrial production rose 0.6% in June, following a 0.9% advance in May. Manufacturing output increased 0.4% in June after climbing 1.0% in May. Mining increased 0.3% in June, while utilities advanced 2.8%. For the 12 months ended in June, total industrial production advanced 1.6% from its year-earlier level. Over the same period, manufacturing increased 1.1%, mining decreased 0.6%, while utilities increased 7.9%.
  • New orders for durable goods declined 6.6% in June, following four consecutive monthly increases. Excluding transportation, new orders increased 0.5% in June. Excluding defense, new orders fell 7.0%. Transportation equipment, down 20.5%, drove the overall decrease in new orders. Cancellations of new orders for private aircraft largely contributed to the drop in transportation equipment. In fact, new orders for nondefense aircraft and parts fell 127.2% in June.
  • Imports and exports: U.S. import prices were unchanged in June after decreasing 0.2% in May. Lower import fuel prices (-1.0%) in June offset higher nonfuel prices (0.2%). Import prices advanced 1.6% over the last 12 months, the largest 12-month increase since December 2022. Export prices decreased 0.5% in June after declining 0.7% the previous month. The June and May drops were the first one-month decreases since December 2023. Lower prices for nonagricultural exports in both months more than offset higher agricultural prices. Despite the recent declines, prices for exports advanced 0.7% over the past 12 months.
  • The international trade in goods deficit was $96.8 billion in June, down $2.5 billion, or 2.5%, from May. Exports of goods were $172.3 billion in June, $4.3 billion, or 2.5%, more than in May. Imports of goods were $269.2 billion in June, $1.7 billion, or 0.7%, above the May estimate. Since June 2023, exports increased 5.7%, while imports increased 6.9%.
  • The latest information on international trade in goods and services, released July 3, is for May and revealed that the goods and services trade deficit was $75.1 billion, up $0.6 billion, or 0.8%, from the April deficit. May exports were $261.7 billion, 0.7% less than April exports. May imports were $336.7 billion, 0.3% below April’s estimate. Year to date, the goods and services deficit increased $14.4 billion, or 4.2%, from the same period in 2023. Exports increased $42.8 billion, or 3.4%. Imports increased $57.2 billion, or 3.6%.
  • International markets: Global inflation seems to be trending lower and some central banks are beginning to ease interest rate restrictions in response. The national banks of China and Canada cut interest rates in July, while there’s an increasing likelihood that the Bank of England will follow suit in early August. On the other hand, the Bank of Japan raised its benchmark interest rate, but not in response to growing inflationary concerns. Instead, the decision to hike rates was due to concerns over the historically weak yen. Japanese officials are hopeful that raising interest rates could push up the yen and spur economic growth. For July, the STOXX Europe 600 Index rose 0.72%; the United Kingdom’s FTSE gained 2.3%; Japan’s Nikkei 225 Index fell 3.6%; and China’s Shanghai Composite Index declined 1.5%.
  • Consumer confidence: Consumer confidence rose in July to 100.3, from a downwardly revised 97.8 in June, according to the Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index®. The Present Situation Index, based on consumers’ assessment of current business and labor market conditions, decreased to 133.6 in June, down from 135.3 in the previous month. The Expectations Index, based on consumers’ short-term outlook for income, business, and labor market conditions, increased to 78.2 in July, up from 72.8 in June. The Expectations Index has been below 80 (the threshold which usually signals a recession ahead) for six consecutive months.

Eye on the Month Ahead

All eyes will be on the inflation data released in August for July. Inflationary pressures resumed a downward trend, and if it continues, the Fed, which does not meet in August, may be more inclined to lower interest rates when it meets next in September.

What I’m Watching This Week – 29 July 2024

The Markets (as of market close July 26, 2024)

Stocks were mixed last week, with the Dow and the Russell 2000 adding value, while the Nasdaq, the S&P 500, and the Global Dow ended the week in the red. Tech shares took a hit as investors prepared for this week’s earnings data from four megacap giants. For the week, communication services, information technology, and energy closed lower among the market sectors. Health care and utilities posted the largest gains. The June personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, was somewhat encouraging (see below). While the data is not favorable enough for the Fed to lower interest rates next week, it is trending in the right direction to lead to a possible interest rate cut in September. Crude oil prices declined on rising expectations of a cease-fire in Gaza and growing concerns on waning demand in China.

Tech shares rebounded from last week’s sell-off last Monday as traders assessed the political landscape after President Joe Biden ended his bid for re-election. The small caps of the Russell 2000 (1.7%) and the Nasdaq (1.6%) led the benchmark indexes listed here, while the S&P 500 advanced 1.1%. The Global Dow climbed 0.5%, and the Dow added 0.3%. Yields on 10-year Treasuries ticked up 2.1 basis points to 4.26%. Crude oil prices dipped to $79.95 per barrel. The dollar and gold prices moved marginally.

Last Tuesday saw stocks edge lower as investors awaited earnings data from major tech companies. Of the benchmark indexes listed here, only the Russell 2000 added value after gaining 1.0%. The remaining indexes dipped 0.2% or less. Ten-year Treasury yields slid to 4.23%. Crude oil prices continued to fall, dropping $1.13 to close at $77.27 per barrel. The dollar inched up 0.1%, while gold prices rose 0.6%.

Stocks fell last Wednesday after underwhelming megacap earnings led to a tech sell-off. The Nasdaq (-3.6%) suffered its worst single trading day since October 2022, while the S&P 500 (-2.3%) had its worst day since December 2022. The Russell 2000 fell 2.1%, the Dow dropped 1.3%, and the Global Dow lost 0.9%. Ten-year Treasury yields rose 4.7 basis points to 4.28%. Crude oil prices ended several days of declines, rising to $77.54 per barrel. The dollar dipped 0.1%, and gold prices fell 0.3%.

The Nasdaq (-0.9%) continued its tailspin last Thursday, while the small caps of the Russell 2000 gained 1.3%. The Dow ended the session up 0.2%. The Global Dow (-0.7%) and the S&P 500 (-0.5%) declined. Bond prices rose, pulling yields lower, with the 10-year note falling 3.0 basis points to 4.25%. Crude oil prices increased for the second straight day, settling at $78.12 per barrel. The dollar was flat, while gold prices slid 2.3%.

Stocks enjoyed a solid day last Friday, with each of the benchmark indexes posting gains. The Russell 2000 advanced 1.7%, followed by the Dow (1.6%), the S&P 500 (1.1%), the Nasdaq (1.0%), and the Global Dow (0.9%). Ten-year Treasury yields slipped to 4.20%. Crude oil prices fell to $76.81 per barrel. The dollar was flat, while gold prices rose 1.4%.

Stock Market Indexes

Market/Index2023 ClosePrior WeekAs of 7/26Weekly ChangeYTD Change
DJIA37,689.5440,287.5340,589.340.75%7.69%
Nasdaq15,011.3517,726.9417,357.88-2.08%15.63%
S&P 5004,769.835,505.005,459.10-0.83%14.45%
Russell 20002,027.072,184.352,260.073.47%11.49%
Global Dow4,355.284,760.354,753.88-0.14%9.15%
fed. funds target rate5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%0 bps0 bps
10-year Treasuries3.86%4.23%4.20%-3 bps34 bps
US Dollar-DXY101.39104.38104.31-0.07%2.88%
Crude Oil-CL=F$71.30$80.26$76.81-4.30%7.73%
Gold-GC=F$2,072.50$2,401.10$2,385.40-0.65%15.10%

Chart reflects price changes, not total return. Because it does not include dividends or splits, it should not be used to benchmark performance of specific investments.

Last Week’s Economic News

  • According to the first, or advanced, estimate gross domestic product increased 2.8% in the second quarter. GDP rose 1.4% in the first quarter. The increase in GDP primarily reflected increases in consumer spending (2.3%), private inventory investment (8.4%), and nonresidential fixed investment (5.2%). Imports (6.9%), which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, increased. The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, a measure of inflation, increased 2.6%, compared with an increase of 3.4% in the first quarter. Excluding food and energy prices, the PCE price index increased 2.9%, compared with an increase of 3.7% in the previous quarter.
  • The PCE price index inched up 0.1% in June and 2.5% over the last 12 months. In May, the PCE price index was unchanged, and the 12-month rate was 2.6%. Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index rose 0.2% in June and 2.6% for the year. Last month, both personal income and disposable (after-tax) personal income rose 0.2%. Personal consumption expenditures, a measure of consumer spending, advanced 0.3% in June.
  • New orders for manufactured durable goods decreased 6.6% in June following four consecutive monthly increases. Excluding transportation, new orders increased 0.5%. Excluding defense, new orders decreased 7.0%. Transportation equipment, down two of the last three months, drove the overall decrease, falling 20.5%. New orders for nondefense capital goods fell 22.4% last month, while new orders for defense capital goods increased 6.1%.
  • The international trade in goods deficit decreased 2.5% in June. Exports of goods in June rose 2.5%. Imports of goods in June inched up 0.7%.
  • Existing-home sales slumped in June, falling 5.4% below the May rate and 5.4% below the estimate from a year earlier. According to the National Association of Realtors®, homes are sitting on the market a bit longer, and sellers are receiving fewer offers. Total housing inventory was at a 4.1-month supply in June, up from 3.7 months in May. The last time unsold inventory posted a four-month supply was May 2020. The median existing-home sales price in June, at $426,900, reached a new record high, rising from $417,200 in May and well above the June 2023 price of $410,100. According to Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.77% as of July 18. That’s down from 6.89% one week ago and 6.78% one year ago. Sales of existing single-family homes declined 5.1% from a month earlier and dropped 4.3% from June 2023.
  • Sales of new single-family homes fell 0.6% in June from a month earlier and were 7.4% below the June 2023 estimate. The median sales price of new houses sold in June 2024 was $417,300. The average sales price was $487,200. Inventory represented a supply of 9.3 months at the current sales rate. The median existing single-family home price in June was $432,700, up from May’s estimate of $422,400 and above the June 2023 price of $415,700.
  • The national average retail price for regular gasoline was $3.471 per gallon on July 22, $0.025 per gallon under the prior week’s price, and $0.125 per gallon less than a year ago. Also, as of July 22, the East Coast price fell $0.057 to $3.409 per gallon; the Midwest price increased $0.057 to $3.426 per gallon; the Gulf Coast price decreased $0.063 to $3.047 per gallon; the Rocky Mountain price declined $0.063 to $3.323 per gallon; and the West Coast price decreased $0.054 to $4.137 per gallon.
  • For the week ended July 20, there were 235,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, a decrease of 10,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised up by 2,000. According to the Department of Labor, the advance rate for insured unemployment claims for the week ended July 13 was 1.2%, unchanged from the previous week’s rate. The advance number of those receiving unemployment insurance benefits during the week ended July 13 was 1,851,000, a decrease of 9,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised down by 7,000. States and territories with the highest insured unemployment rates for the week ended July 6 were New Jersey (2.8%), Rhode Island (2.7%), Puerto Rico (2.4%), California (2.3%), Minnesota (2.2%), Massachusetts (1.9%), Pennsylvania (1.9%), Connecticut (1.8%), Washington (1.8%), Illinois (1.7%), Nevada (1.7%), and New York (1.7%). The largest increases in initial claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended July 13 were in Texas (+11,927), California (+6,284), Georgia (+3,101), Missouri (+2,999), and South Carolina (+2,413), while the largest decreases were in New Jersey (-1,532), Massachusetts (-1,531), Indiana (-1,407), Tennessee (-937), and Iowa (-853).

Eye on the Week Ahead

The Federal Open Market Committee meets this week, and while it is highly unlikely that the Fed will adjust interest rates at this time, the Committee might provide a more concrete indication as to when rates may be lowered. The employment data for July is also out this week. The labor sector has been steady during the period as the Fed tries to harness inflation.

What I’m Watching This Week – 22 July 2024

The Markets (as of market close July 19, 2024)

The market saw stocks come in with mixed returns. The Dow and the Russell 2000 advanced, while the Nasdaq, the S&P 500, and the Global Dow lost value. The Dow reached three new records during the week, while the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 posted their worst week since April. AI stocks led a downturn in tech shares as investors moved to small caps. The CrowdStrike outage impacted flights, banks, telecoms, and media companies worldwide. The market sectors ran the gambit of highs and lows, with energy (1.7%), financials (1.3%), and real estate (1.3%) climbing, while information technology (-4.6%) and communication services (-2.8%) declined. Ten-year Treasury yields rose 5.0 basis points. Crude oil prices declined on demand worries centered on China. The dollar inched up, while gold prices dipped lower.

Wall Street began last week on a high note, with each of the benchmark indexes listed here closing higher. The Dow reached a record high after climbing 0.5%. The Nasdaq gained 0.4%, the S&P 500 added 0.3%, while the big gainer was the Russell 2000, which advanced 1.8%. The Global Dow ticked down 0.2%. Ten-year Treasury yields rose 4.0 basis points to reach 4.81%. Crude oil prices fell $0.31 to settle at $81.90 per barrel. The dollar and gold prices rose 0.1% and 0.2%, respectively.

Stocks pushed higher for the second straight day last Tuesday. The small caps of the Russell 2000 gained 3.5%, followed by the Dow, which added 1.9% to record a new record. The S&P 500 rose 0.6%, the Global Dow advanced 0.5%, and the Nasdaq ticked up 0.2%. Industrial stocks made notable gains, while several companies reported better-than-expected second-quarter earnings. Yields on 10-year Treasuries slid to 4.16%. Crude oil prices fell again, closing at about $80.87 per barrel on weaker economic data from China. The dollar was unchanged, while gold prices rose 1.8%.

Last Wednesday saw the Dow (0.6%) continue its record streak, and the Global Dow ticked up 0.2%. The remaining benchmark indexes listed here declined, with the Nasdaq falling 2.8%, marking the worst day for that index since 2022. The S&P 500 dropped 1.4%, and the Russell 2000 lost 1.1%. Ten-year Treasury yields slid to 4.14%. Crude oil prices reversed a run of losses after gaining $2.14 to settle at $82.90 per barrel. The dollar fell 0.5%, and gold prices lost 0.3%.

Wednesday’s tech rout continued last Thursday. The small caps of the Russell 2000 lost 1.9%, while the Dow, which had a run of record highs, fell 1.3%. The S&P 500 lost 0.8%, while the Nasdaq and the Global Dow declined 0.7%. Investors took profits from tech shares in response to the potential negative impact export restrictions to China may have on the semiconductor market. Yields on 10-year Treasuries climbed to 4.18%. Crude oil prices slid to $82.29 per barrel. the dollar gained 0.42%, while gold prices fell 0.7%.

Last Friday saw stocks close mostly lower, likely impacted by the CrowdStrike IT outage, which caused major disruptions worldwide. The Global Dow fell 1.0%, while the Dow fell 0.9%. The Nasdaq (-0.8%) and the S&P 500 (-0.7%) lost value for the third straight day. The Russell 2000 dropped 0.6%. Ten-year Treasury yields added 5.0 basis points to close at 4.23%. Crude oil prices dipped $2.56 to settle at $80.26 per barrel. The dollar inched up 0.2%, while gold prices fell 2.3%.

Stock Market Indexes

Market/Index2023 ClosePrior WeekAs of 7/19Weekly ChangeYTD Change
DJIA37,689.5440,000.9040,287.530.72%6.89%
Nasdaq15,011.3518,398.4517,726.94-3.65%18.09%
S&P 5004,769.835,615.355,505.00-1.97%15.41%
Russell 20002,027.072,148.272,184.351.68%7.76%
Global Dow4,355.284,820.884,760.35-1.26%9.30%
fed. funds target rate5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%5.25%-5.50%0 bps0 bps
10-year Treasuries3.86%4.18%4.23%5 bps37 bps
US Dollar-DXY101.39104.09104.380.28%2.95%
Crude Oil-CL=F$71.30$82.25$80.26-2.42%12.57%
Gold-GC=F$2,072.50$2,416.40$2,401.10-0.63%15.86%

Chart reflects price changes, not total return. Because it does not include dividends or splits, it should not be used to benchmark performance of specific investments.

Last Week’s Economic News

  • Retail sales in June were virtually unchanged from the previous month but were up 2.3% from a year earlier. Retail sales less motor vehicle and parts and gasoline stations rose 0.8% in June. Retail trade sales dipped 0.1% in June but rose 2.0% from June 2023. Nonstore retail sales rose 1.9% in June and 8.9% over the last 12 months.
  • Import prices were unchanged in June after falling 0.2% in May. Lower import fuel prices in June offset higher nonfuel prices. Import fuel prices decreased 1.0% in June. Import prices advanced 1.6% for the year ended in June, the largest 12-month increase since December 2022. Export prices decreased 0.5% last month following a 0.7% drop in May. The May and June declines were the first one-month decreases since December 2023. Export prices advanced 0.7% over the past 12 months.
  • The number of residential building permits issued in June rose 3.4% from the May rate but were 3.1% below the June 2023 estimate. Building permits for single-family homes declined 2.3% last month. Housing starts increased 3.0% in June, while falling 4.4% over the last 12 months. Single-family housing starts slid 2.2% below the May figure. Housing completions in June were 10.1% above the May estimate and 15.5% over the June 2023 rate. Single-family housing completions in June were 1.8% above the prior month’s estimate.
  • Industrial production rose 0.6% in June after advancing 0.9% in May. For the second quarter, industrial production increased 4.3%. Manufacturing output advanced 0.4% last month and 1.1% for the year. In June, mining rose 0.3%, and utilities increased 2.8%. Since June 2023, mining dipped 0.6%, while utilities advanced 7.9%. Total industrial production in June was 1.6% above its year-earlier level.
  • The national average retail price for regular gasoline was $3.496 per gallon on July 15, $0.007 per gallon above the prior week’s price but $0.063 per gallon less than a year ago. Also, as of July 15, the East Coast price rose $0.016 to $3.466 per gallon; the Midwest price increased $0.002 to $3.369 per gallon; the Gulf Coast price advanced $0.052 to $3.110 per gallon; the Rocky Mountain price decreased $0.045 to $3.486 per gallon; and the West Coast price declined $0.035 to $4.191 per gallon.
  • For the week ended July 13, there were 243,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, an increase of 20,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised up by 1,000. According to the Department of Labor, the advance rate for insured unemployment claims for the week ended July 6 was 1.2%, unchanged from the previous week’s rate. The advance number of those receiving unemployment insurance benefits during the week ended July 6 was 1,867,000, an increase of 20,000 from the previous week’s level, which was revised down by 5,000. This is the highest level for insured unemployment since November 27, 2021, when it was 1,878,000. States and territories with the highest insured unemployment rates for the week ended June 29 were New Jersey (2.6%), Rhode Island (2.2%), California (2.1%), Minnesota (2.0%), Puerto Rico (2.0%), Pennsylvania (1.8%), Connecticut (1.7%), Massachusetts (1.7%), Washington (1.7%), Illinois (1.6%), Nevada (1.6%), and New York (1.6%). The largest increases in initial claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended July 6 were in Michigan (+10,578), New York (+5,247), Indiana (+2,835), Ohio (+1,604), and Tennessee (+1,166), while the largest decreases were in California (-5,672), New Jersey (-5,517), Georgia (-1,900), Texas (-1,809), and Minnesota (-1,078).

Eye on the Week Ahead

There’s plenty of market-moving economic data out this week. June reports on sales of both new and existing homes are available. May saw sales of new homes rise, while existing home sales declined. The initial report for second quarter gross domestic product follows a 1.4% advance in the first quarter. The report on personal income and expenditures is also available this week. The personal consumption expenditures price index, a measure of inflation preferred by the Federal Reserve, was flat in May.