Christmas came early this year for investors. Colloquially known as a “Santa Claus rally,” the market experienced an upward bounce in the latter half of November. On the equities side, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq saw their
best monthly gains (8.9% and 10.7%) since July 2020. Over on the bonds side, U.S. Treasury yields continued to drop and the bond market had its
best monthly gain in nearly 40 years.
Markets continued to rise last week, bolstered by the good news that inflation is slowing. The
personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index rose a mere 0.2% in October, for a year-over-year increase of 3.5%. Sure, it’s still above the Fed’s 2% target — but it’s the lowest the PCE has gotten in 2½ years. And the latest data showed core PCE was even lower, running at 2.5% over the past six months.
The PCE numbers mean Americans aren’t spending as much as they previously were. (Except on Black Friday. We were shopping in full force, shelling out billions of dollars between Black Friday and Cyber Monday.) The combo of waning income growth, high interest rates, increasing prices and resumption of student loan payments has eaten into folks’ savings, and people are having to cut back. It’s a departure from earlier in the year; third-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) was
revised upward to 5.2% after a second reading last week.
Is a soft landing still possible?
All signs are pointing to the Federal Reserve keeping interest rates where they are at their last meeting of 2023 next week. Comments from several Fed officials last week seemed to confirm they’re done raising rates.
Board member Christopher Waller said, “I’m increasingly confident that policy is currently well positioned to slow the economy and get inflation back to 2%.”
Waller even opened the door just a crack to possible rate hikes in early 2024. He said that if inflation continued to moderate over the next three to five months, “we could start lowering the policy rate just because inflation is lower.” And in his comments, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that interest rates were now “
well into restrictive territory.” But just to hedge his bets, Powell also said the Fed would raise rates again if dictated by data. His comments helped push the 10-year U.S. Treasury note yield down to 4.21% in intraday trading on Friday,
nearly a three-month low.
Is the Fed actually going to be able to pull off a soft landing with the economy? It’s looking more and more promising. Personal spending rose 0.2% in September, and
personal incomes kept pace.
Housing permits came in above expectations for the month of October.
Weekly jobless claims ticked down; however,
continuing claims jumped to 1.93 million, their highest level in two years.
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