ASX 200 to fall, S&P 500 sinks + Everything you need to know about the CPI report
Get up to date on overnight market activity and the big events for the day.
ASX 200 futures are trading 65 points lower, down -0.83% as of 8:30 am AEST.

S&P 500 SESSION CHART

MARKETS
- S&P 500 finished lower but off worst levels of -1.37%
- Risk off on hotter-than-expected inflation data
- Markets now pricing in just two rate cuts this year, below the 75 bp of easing implied by the Fed’s median dot plot in March
- Bond yields sharply higher, with the US 10-year yield pushing above 4.5% for the first time since 14 Nov-23
- US Dollar Index has its best day since Mar-23, hits five-month high
- Goldman Sachs says a 2 standard deviation move in 10-year yields, equivalent to ~60 bps today, over a one-month period is when the headwind really kicks in
- Investors shift to European bonds, betting on ECB rate cuts as US inflation concerns persist (FT)
- Outsized inflow of US$126.5bn pumped into ETFs in March, third strongest monthly figure since 2021 (FT)
ASX TODAY
- ASX 200 set to open sharply lower as hot inflation report ignites equities selloff
- Yield sensitive sectors like Real Estate and Utilities to lead to the downside
- Downer EDI awarded $320m road maintenance contract (DOW)
- Former Sportsbet boss and Foxtel’s CEO named as potential CEO for Tabcorp (The Australian)
- NextDC launches $1.32bn 1-for-6 entitlement offer at $15.40 per share (NXT)
- Vulcan Energy begins maiden lithium chloride production in Germany (VUL)
- WOTSO Property holder BlackWall increases stake to 29.97% from 9.72% (WOT)
INTERNATIONAL STOCKS
- TSMC Q1 sales beat analyst and company's own expectations on solid demand for AI applications (Bloomberg)
- Apple to have assembled US$14bn worth of iPhones in India in FY24 (Bloomberg)
- Microsoft to invest US$2.9bn in Japan data centres for AI foothold (Nikkei)
- US big bank profits to fall in Q1 but investors more focused on net interest margin guidance (Yahoo Finance)
CENTRAL BANKS
- Atlanta Fed President Bostic sees risk of further rate cut delay but may lean more dovish if economy deteriorates (Bloomberg)
- RBNZ leaves rates unchanged, says policy needs to remain restrictive (Bloomberg)
GEOPOLITICS
- Biden calls Israel's conduct of the war a "mistake" and urged quick adoption of a six-to-eight week ceasefire (Politico)
- Hamas says Israel's newest truce proposal does not meet demands but is under review (Reuters)
- US mulls tariffs on Chinese EVs, solar and other renewables (Reuters)
ECONOMY
- US CPI increased more than expected on higher energy and shelter prices (Reuters)
- US core CPI tops forecasts again, likely delaying Fed rate cuts (Bloomberg)

Hot, Very Hot
US inflation data was hotter-than-expected in March.
- Core inflation up 0.4% month-on-month vs. 0.3% consensus
- Core inflation up 3.8% year-on-year vs. 3.7% consensus
- Headline inflation up 0.4% month-on-month vs. 0.3% consensus
- Headline inflation up 3.5% year-on-year vs. 3.4% consensus
The key inflation drivers included:
- Energy index up 1.1% in March after increasing 2.3% in February
- Shelter index up 0.4% in March and the largest driver of core inflation
- Motor vehicle insurance up 2.6% in March after a -0.9% drop in February
- Apparel index up 0.7% over the month
Both analysts and the market pushed back rate cut expectations while bond yields soared to 5 month highs.
- Morgan Stanley – “Upside surprise in core CPI is moving inflation data further away from the convincing evidence the Fed needs to start cutting in June ... print tilts the Fed toward a later start to the cutting cycle than our current forecast for June.”
- Goldman Sachs – “The composition of the report was not as strong ... the jump in car insurance CPI will not flow into the PCE measure. However, the strength in car repair and apparel prices will boost PCE ... We are pushing back our forecast of the first rate cut from June to July. We continue to expect cuts at a quarterly pace after that, which now implies two cuts in 2024 in July and November.”
Below is what the market was expecting at the beginning of the week vs. after the inflation report.


Fed minutes also dropped last night and policymakers largely reiterated the same data-dependent message. Some of the key takeaways include:
- "Participants generally noted their uncertainty about the persistence of high inflation and expressed the view that recent data had not increased their confidence that inflation was moving sustainably down to 2 percent"
- Participants noted concern that financial conditions might not be as restrictive as desired, which could put upward pressure on inflation
- Vast majority of participants judged would be prudent to begin slowing pace of balance sheet runoff "fairly soon"
- Its also worth noting we've heard more than five Fed speaks hose down the idea of imminent rate cuts in recent days
KEY EVENTS
Companies trading ex-dividend:
- Thu 11 April: Cosol (COS) – $0.01, Duxton Water (D20) – $0.036
- Fri 12 April: Kogan (KGN) – $0.075
- Mon 15 April: WAM Active (WAA) – $0.03, Cadence Capital (CDM) – $0.03, SDI (SDI) – $0.015, New Hope (NHC) – $0.17
- Tue 16 April: WAM Global (WGB) – $0.06
- Wed 17 April: Washington H Soul Pattinson (SOL) – $0.40
Other ASX corporate actions today:
- Dividends paid: Downer EDI (DOW) – $0.06, Woolworths (WOW) – $0.47, Suncorp (SUN) – $0.34, Pacific Current Group (PAC) – $0.15, NRW Holdings (NWH) – $0.065, Qube Holdings (QUB) – $0.04, Brambles (BXB) – $0.23, Fonterra (FSF) – $0.11, Orora (ORA) – $0.05, Macmahon (MAH) – $0.004, Regis Healthcare (REG) – $0.06
- Listing: None
Economic calendar (AEST):
- 12:30 pm: China Inflation Rate (Mar)
- 11:15 pm: Eurozone Interest Rate Decision
- 11:30 pm: US Producer Price Index (Mar)
This Morning Wrap was written by Kerry Sun.
Never miss an update
Enjoy this wire? Hit the ‘like’ button to let us know.
Stay up to date with my current content by
following me below and you’ll be notified every time I post a wire
Livewire and Market Index's pre-opening bell news and analysis wrap. Available weekday mornings and written by Kerry Sun.
........
Livewire gives readers access to information and educational content provided by financial services professionals and companies (“Livewire Contributors”). Livewire does not operate under an Australian financial services licence and relies on the exemption available under section 911A(2)(eb) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) in respect of any advice given. Any advice on this site is general in nature and does not take into consideration your objectives, financial situation or needs. Before making a decision please consider these and any relevant Product Disclosure Statement. Livewire has commercial relationships with some Livewire Contributors.
1 contributor mentioned
Comments
Comments
Sign In or Join Free to comment