ASX 200 to fall, S&P 500 eases + Everything you need to know about the US CPI report

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The Morning Wrap

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ASX 200 futures are trading 34 points lower, down 0.46% as of 8:20 am AEDT.


Source: Market Index
Source: Market Index

S&P 500 SESSION CHART

S&P 500 tumbled at the open but recovered off worst levels (Source: TradingView)
S&P 500 tumbled at the open but recovered off worst levels (Source: TradingView)

MARKETS

  • S&P 500 finished lower, tumbled as much as -0.92% in early trade but closed well off worst levels
  • Bond yields continued to ease despite the hotter-than-expected US inflation print, the US 2-and-10 year hit its least inverted level since early November
  • US earnings season kicks off tonight with bank results. The bar remains low but the bigger issue revolves around expectations of ~12% earnings growth in 2024
  • Investors trim recession expectations amid global economic resilience (Reuters)
  • SEC authorises Bitcoin spot ETFs in landmark move (Reuters)
  • Consumer spending pullback in 2024 may dampen IPO interest (Bloomberg)
  • JP Morgan says fight against inflation could stall over coming months (CNBC)
  • Bitcoin trading volumes surge following launch of ETFs (FT)

STOCKS

  • Google lays off hundreds of staff working on its digital assistant, hardware and engineering teams (Bloomberg)
  • Netflix surpasses 23m monthly active users for ad-supported subscriptions (Variety)
  • Airbus jet order rose 11% in 2023, beating Boeing for a fifth year in a row (Reuters)
  • Tesla to boost pay of US production workers amid ongoing pressure from UAW (Reuters)
  • Microsoft briefly overtakes Apple in early morning trade as the largest publicly listed company (CNBC)
  • Chesapeake Energy agrees to buy Southwestern Energy in US$7.4bn all-share deal (FT)

CENTRAL BANKS

  • Cleveland Fed's Mester says March is probably too early for a rate cut (Bloomberg)
  • BoK holds rates steady amid sticky inflation, signals pivot to easier policy (Reuters)
  • BoE governor Bailey says the UK economy entered the new year in better shape than expected (London Times)

GEOPOLITICS

  • Biden to send high level delegation to Taiwan after Saturday's election (FT)
  • US companies and Chinese experts engaged in diplomacy on AI safety amid concerns about misinformation (FT)

ECONOMY

  • US inflation accelerated in December, fueled by stubborn services (Bloomberg)
  • Shelter and healthcare costs lift US consumer inflation in December (Reuters)


US-listed sector ETFs (Source: Market Index)
US-listed sector ETFs (Source: Market Index)

A Hot CPI Print

The December US inflation print was stronger than expected, driven by strength across categories such as shelter, recreation and services.

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics/Market Index
Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics/Market Index

Here's Bank of America's read on the data:

  • "The report still suggests that inflation is cooling as core inflation on a three-month annualised rate edged down a tenth to 3.3% and the year-on-year rate fell below 4.0%."
  • "Moreover, some drivers of the strength this month, particularly used cars, should fade in coming months."
  • "Shelter remains a source of sticky inflation, as prices rose 0.5% month-on-month owing to a 0.5% increase in owners' equivalent rents and a 0.4% increase in rents."
  • "Inflation for hospital services and professional services was relatively strong. We have seen rapid hiring in the sector, and an aging population could contribute to sustained inflation in this sector."
  • "Overall, the report leaves us comfortable with our expectation for the Fed to cut rates by 25 bp in March."

Shelter is keeping core inflation elevated, with prices running at a ~6% annualised pace. While that's down from 8-10% a year ago, it's still well above pre-pandemic levels of around 3.5%.

The data leaves markets in a tricky place. More hawkish Fedspeak is following through after the CPI print. Notably, Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester's views that March is probably too early for a rate cut as the December data suggests there is more work to do.

While the base case remains six 25 bp cuts by year-end, according to Fed fund futures pricing.


KEY EVENTS

ASX corporate actions occurring today:

  • Trading ex-div: A2B Australia (A2B) – $0.60
  • Dividends paid: None
  • Listing: None

Economic calendar (AEDT):

  • 11:30 am: Australia Home Loans (Nov)
  • 12:30 pm: China Inflation Rate (Dec)
  • 12:30 pm: China Producer Price Index (Dec)
  • 2:00 pm: China Balance of Trade (Dec)
  • 6:00 pm: UK GDP (Nov)
  • 12:30 am: US Producer Price Index (Dec)

This Morning Wrap was written by Kerry Sun. 

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