Market Snapshot
Stock market's wild gyrations put earnings in focus as inflation crushes Fed 'pivot' hopes
By Vivien Lou Chen
'I don't think any strategist or analyst who follows the market closely really anticipates that earnings are going to hold up into 2023,' said Dan Eye of Fort Pitt Capital Group.
Unrelenting inflation has dashed hopes for a quick pivot away from aggressive interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve, which in turn is undermining the U.S. corporate earnings outlook for 2023 and fueling debate about whether the next major financial crisis might be on the way.September's hotter-than-expected consumer-price index report, which included the seventh consecutive 8%-plus annual headline inflation rate, left little doubt that persistent price pressures are here to stay through at least year-end. Economists and traders are now putting a 5% fed-funds rate target on the map for next year, a level seen as having negative ramifications for corporate earnings and the stock market. It might also raise concerns over a possible meltdown in markets and the economy on the scale of the 2007-2009 Great Financial Crisis and recession. As the third-quarter earnings season kicked off on Friday -- with announcements by JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPM,
The September CPI report "confirms fears that inflation is much stickier and much more embedded in the economy than perhaps we thought beforehand and that the process to lower inflation is going to be much longer than initially expected," Cincotta said via phone. "That means the Federal Reserve will need to hike rates more aggressively for longer, which is going to be bad news for economic growth and means a recession is more likely."Equities are trading at levels that imply "a more aggressive Fed and higher interest rates for a longer period of time." With stock prices still 17.8 times per-share earnings by her estimates, though, Cincotta sees a "good chance" of another 10% drop in equities over the next few months as earnings on consumer-discretionary companies get hit especially hard. She said the S&P would need to get back above 3,800 for her to change her mind.
"It does feel like worst-case scenarios are being brought forward and that we are just in this downward spiral right now," she said. Read: 5 trends to track and five action points to take as earnings kick off. And yes, inflation will loom largeGranted, corporate earnings generally managed to hold up better than expected during the second quarter, with companies like
For John Silvia, founder and chief executive of Dynamic Economic Strategy in Captiva Island, Fla., a 5% fed-funds rate would translate into "a pretty high discount factor in terms of equity markets, and adds another 75 to 100 basis points on mortgage rates.""The cost of financing is going to be difficult and there will be a lot less options," Silvia, the former chief economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC, said via phone. And it's not just publicly traded markets like stocks that will feel the hit, he said. So will hidden, secondary markets like the one for collateralized loan obligations, which "were developed in the last couple of years and were never priced to a fed-funds rate at 5%." Next week's U.S. economic calendar has a dearth of major market-moving releases. Monday brings the release of the Empire State manufacturing index for October. That's set to be followed on Tuesday by industrial-production and capacity-utilization data, along with the NAHB home builders' index. On Wednesday, September data on building permits and housing starts is scheduled to be released, along with the Fed's Beige Book report. Thursday brings weekly jobless claims, existing home sales, the Philadelphia Fed manufacturing index, and leading economic indicators. On Friday, a third-quarter index of common inflation expectations will be released.
-Vivien Lou Chen
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 15, 2022 15:22 ET (19:22 GMT)
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