Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Key points:
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The Saxo Quick Take is a short, distilled opinion on financial markets with references to key news and events.
Disclaimer: Past performance does not indicate future performance.
In the news:
Macro:
Macro events: FOMC Policy Decision, UK CPI (Aug), EZ HICP Final (Aug), US Building Permits/Housing Starts (Aug), New Zealand GDP (Q2)
Earnings: General Mills, Steelcase, Sangoma
Equities: U.S. stocks saw minimal changes on Tuesday amid growing uncertainty over the expected rate cut size. The S&P 500 and Dow Jones closed flat after rallying to all-time highs, while the Nasdaq rose by 0.2%. The FOMC's two-day meeting starts today, and traders anticipate the Fed's first interest rate cut since 2020. However, opinions vary on the cut's magnitude, with over 60% considering a significant 50bps reduction likely. Among mega-cap stocks, Nvidia dropped 1.1%, while Microsoft gained 0.9% after raising its quarterly dividend. Intel surged 2.6% following a new business partnership with Amazon, taking their 2-day gains to 9%. Additionally, U.S. retail sales unexpectedly rose by 0.1% in August, beating expectations of a 0.2% decline and following an upwardly revised 1.1% increase in July.
Fixed income: Treasury yields closed the session near their highest levels of the day after early gains in the long end were reversed ahead of the 20-year bond auction, which lagged the WI by about 2 basis points. A rebound in oil prices added to the downward pressure on Treasuries, although overall price movements remained stable ahead of Wednesday’s Federal Reserve rate decision. Treasury yields had increased by 2 to 3.5 basis points across the curve, with the front end experiencing the most significant losses, flattening the 2s10s curve by 1.5 basis points compared to Monday's close. The US 10-year yield ended at approximately 3.64%, up around 2 basis points. Fed-dated OIS remained steady ahead of Wednesday’s FOMC meeting, indicating about 39 basis points of expected rate cuts for the meeting and a total of 116 basis points of cuts over the remaining three meetings this year. Balances at the Federal Reserve’s overnight reverse repurchase facility increased on Tuesday as Treasury-bill paydowns and incoming cash from government-sponsored enterprises helped ease funding market pressures.
Commodities: Gold prices declined ahead of tomorrow's Federal Reserve rate decision, following an all-time high the previous day. Gold dropped 0.50% to settle at $2,569.50, largely due to profit-taking and positioning in anticipation of the Fed's decision, with concerns that the Fed might only cut rates by 25 basis points. WTI crude futures remained stable overnight but saw early gains as Core Retail Sales met expectations. Despite concerns about the Fed's potential aggressiveness and ongoing demand issues, crude prices rose into the early afternoon before profit-taking reduced some gains. October futures rose 1.57% at $71.19, while Brent crude increased 1.31% to $73.70.
FX: The US dollar saw modest gains in the overnight session as US exceptionalism was highlighted by retail sales remaining supported while economic data from Germany and Canada signaled recession concerns. Markets are still split on 25 or 50bps of rate cuts from the Fed today, with odds of a bigger cut sitting at 65% and US dollar is trading back lower in the Asian morning. The Japanese yen was the underperformer among the major currencies amid rising US yields and focus is on the Fed decision today. British pound and Kiwi dollar also plunged lower, and both have key data to watch for in the day ahead. UK’s inflation print is on the wires today and stickiness of the services inflation will be key input for the pace of easing from the Bank of England, and New Zealand’s Q4 GDP risks sending recession signals. Australian dollar closed in small gains despite the strength of the greenback.
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