The Federal Reserve was more hawkish than expected at its June meeting. Investors didn't seem to care.
The central bank last Wednesday paused interest rates and indicated that it could raise rates two more times this year. Investors largely ignored the message, with stocks continuing to rally in the days after.
Then, Fed Governor Christopher Waller and Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said last Friday that the central bank needs to hike interest rates more to tame inflation.
"We're seeing policy rates having some effects on parts of the economy. The labor market is still strong, but core-kind of inflation is just not moving, and that's going to require probably some more tightening to try to get that going down," Waller said during an event held in Oslo.
The tough Fed-speak on Friday shook investors somewhat, sending stocks lower. But all three major indexes still gained for the week.
There are two reasons why the market's rally continued this week despite the Fed's hawkish signals, says Sarah Henry, portfolio manager at Logan Capital Management. First, Wall Street has decided there isn't much of a difference between one or two additional rate hikes.
Whether the Fed raises rates one or two more times will be less relevant than the increases markets have already seen, Henry said. "Predictability [of the Fed's rate decisions] is going to be more important than incrementality at this point."
Moreover, a slate of recent robust economic readings has investors convinced that even if the economy does tip into a recession, it'll be short and shallow, says Henry.
Here's some of that data:
▸ A hot May jobs report. The unemployment rate rose more than expected, to 3.7% from 3.4%. Still, the labor market remains sizzling hot — employers added 339,000 jobs last month, surging past the 190,000 economists expected.
▸ Cooldown in May's Consumer Price Index report. The CPI rose 4% for the year ending in May, which is the slowest annual pace since March 2021. That's a steep drop from April's 4.9% and is slightly below economists' expectations of 4.1%, according to Refinitiv.
▸ Cooldown in May's Producer Price Index report. The PPI showed that annual inflation for producers measured 1.1% for the 12 months ended in May, cooling for the 11th straight month. Prices fell 0.3% on a monthly basis, better than economists' expectations of 0.1%, according to Refinitiv.
▸ Strong sentiment in the University of Michigan's consumer expectations survey. Consumers' inflation expectations for the year ahead fell for the second straight month, sliding to 3.3% in early June from 4.2% last month.
The rally's momentum also stems from positive investor sentiment, especially from secular trends like artificial intelligence that have driven mega-cap stocks to stratospheric heights this year, according to Paul Eitelman, chief investment strategist for North America at Russell Investments.
"It almost seems like all news is good news right now for the last few weeks — we rallied on a hawkish Fed," Eitelman said. "We're seeing market psychology shifting pretty notably."
Still, investors could be getting ahead of themselves. "The message that we're getting from the Federal Reserve should be sending a cautious tone to equity markets," he said.
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