Wall Street Could Head Higher As Traders Look Forward To Retail Sales Data Ahead Of Fed Decision, Tech Stocks On The Mend: Strategist Flags This As Best-Case Scenario For Market This Week

The August retail sales data could be on traders’ radar on Tuesday. Fund manager Louis Navellier said a disappointing report could tilt the scales toward a bigger cut on Wednesday. Wharton professor and Wisdom Tree Senior Economist Jeremy Siegel said he would like the Fed to move quickly. But so far, the market is comfortable with the Fed funds rate reaching the three handle by the middle of next year, he added.

FuturesPerformance (+/-)
Nasdaq 100+0.61%
S&P 500+0.38%
Dow+0.29%
R2K+0.36%

In premarket trading on Tuesday, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE: SPY added 0.38% to $564.99 and the Invesco QQQ ETF (NASDAQ: QQQ) gained 0.58% to $476, according to Benzinga Pro data.

Cues From Last Session:

The S&P 500 Index is now a step closer to its all-time closing high of 5,667.20 reached on July 16.

Energy, financials, material and utility stocks gained ground, while IT stocks came under significant selling pressure.

Insights From Analysts:

Despite market expectation for a 50 basis-point cut, Morgan Stanley analyst Seth Carpenter said he expects a more modest 0.25% reduction. The economist expects the FOMC statement to acknowledge further progress on inflation and risks to the labor market. The dot-plot chart, which is part of the Summary of Economic Projections, will show that the number of cuts this year will be three instead of the previously suggested one.

Chairman Jerome Powell may not commit to a cadence for cuts but suggest future rate moves will be data-dependent, the economist said. In all, Carpenter anticipates three 25 basis-point reductions this year.

Morgan Stanley’s Chief U.S. Equity Strategist Mike Wilson believes that the labor/growth data will be more important to how stocks ultimately trade over the next three to six months. If the labor/growth data strengthen from here, a series of 25 basis-point rate cuts into the middle of next year can further support valuations in a “late cycle” context, he said.

But he warned that the market can trade with a risk-off tone if the labor data weakens from here, regardless of whether the Fed’s first move is 25 or 50 basis points.

The best-case scenario for equities this week is a 50 basis-point cut without triggering either growth concerns or any remnants of the yen carry trade unwind, the strategist said, adding that defensives and large-caps tend to outperform cyclicals and small-caps, respectively, both before and after the first cut.

See Also: How To Trade Futures

Upcoming Economic Data:

Stocks In Focus:

Commodities, Bonds And Global Equity Markets:

Crude oil and gold futures pulled back after Monday’s strong gains, with the latter holding above the $2,600 mark despite the modest decline, and the benchmark 10-year Treasury note edged down slightly 3.619% ahead of Wednesday’s Fed decision. Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) climbed past the $59K mark.

The global markets turned higher in anticipation of a Fed rate cut, with most major markets in Asia ending higher for the day. The Japanese market, which reopened after Monday’s public holiday, retreated amid the yen’s strength, and the New Zealand market extended its post-central bank meeting losses. The Chinese and South Korean markets remained closed for public holidays.

European stocks were solidly higher in early trading.

Photo via Shutterstock

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