by Franklin J. Parker, CFA
Two big news items last week for investors.
First, inflation came in at the top of the expected range. Investors are now wondering if the Federal Reserve will cut rates as they expected. We have consistently seen investors reprice their rate cut expectations to be higher for longer. It appears the Fed’s actions so far have done little to slow down consumer demand — indeed, today we saw retail sales numbers that were much better than expected.
The second big piece of news were bank earnings. JPMorgan and Wells Fargo both reported earnings, and both disappointed investors. The money they are making from borrowing and lending — the core business for a bank — has stopped growing. That said, earnings reports so far have been mixed: some good and some bad (though only a handful of companies have reported so far).
Overall, the US economy continues to sputter along. Consumer spending is a key variable to watch, as is employment; those would be the last dominoes to fall if a recession is setting in. Earnings are also important, and we are now in the thick of earnings season. I continue to recommend caution, but exactly what that means to you is very dependent on your goals and personal financial situation.
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The US economy has bucked the global trend, consistently posting better-than-expected economic growth. The Eurozone has kept up until recently, where the UK and the EU have fallen into two quarters of contraction (which is my definition of a recession). The question, of course, is whether the US is subject to the same forces driving similar economies downward, or insulated from them.
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