Daily market snapshot

Published September 3, 2024
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Tuesday, 9/3/2024 p.m.

  • Stocks start September on a sour note: After closing out August with a monthly gain, Canadian and U.S. equity markets kicked off September in the red, with the TSX down more than 1%, the S&P 500 falling 2%, and the Dow shedding more than 600 points on Tuesday. The weakness was led by technology stocks (the Nasdaq was down more than 3%), while the energy sector was also among the worst performers, as oil prices declined sharply on signs of weaker demand from China alongside the prospects for increased output from OPEC+. There was a clear "risk off" tone to the day's move, with lower-risk assets like bonds and defensive areas like consumer staples and utilities stocks posting gains, while growth and cyclical investments were under the most pressure. The gain in bonds sent 10-year Government of Canada bond yields back below 3.1%. While we'd chalk a portion of Tuesday's decline up to more of a routine rebalancing across markets, as well as some likely profit-taking given the rally the stock market has seen in the last few weeks, weakness was also tied to a tepid U.S. manufacturing report that stoked renewed recession worries. Just as we noted after the early-August sell-off that was sparked by recession chatter, although we do see the economy slowing ahead, we think calls for an imminent recession are misplaced. We're not surprised by a renewed bout of volatility, nor would we be surprised to see markets endure some temporary weakness, but we do not see this as a sign of a more sustained change of direction. It should not be lost that stocks entered the week near all-time highs.*
     
  • Post-summer performance check: Days like Tuesday have a way of clouding the broader view of market performance. With the U.S. Labor Day holiday in the rearview mirror, the unofficial end of summer means the 2024 finish line is on the horizon, but a glance back can provide some useful perspective. It's been a strong year so far, with the TSX rising 11% and the S&P 500 returning 18% through August. A large portion of that had been regained in the last few weeks, with equities logging an impressive rally after the summer pullback that was capped by the early-August sell-off on fears of an approaching recession. Since August 5, Canadian stocks had added 5% and U.S. large-cap stocks had risen 9% before Tuesday's decline. Small-caps had delivered a similar gain, while overseas developed-market equities returned 11% during that stretch. Meanwhile, bonds have also delivered solid gains, as interest rates have fallen amid an outlook for lower inflation, slower economic growth, and central bank rate cuts. Even with Tuesday's weakness, technology and communication services stocks are still leading the way this year, but the bull market has shown signs of broadening, as the financial services, utility consumer staples, health care and industrials sectors are all now up solidly year-to-date. September is traditionally one of the weaker months of the year for stocks, and we suspect election headlines and uncertainties could add to short-term market swings. But the fundamental backdrop for the markets remains reasonably favourable, providing a good foundation upon which to build as we head into 2025.*
     
  • A full week of data will help refine the outlook: This week features a long list of important economic data from which the market will take its cues. Tuesday's U.S. ISM Manufacturing reports sparked some indigestion, as it signaled some fading economic momentum. There was a decline in new orders along with a tick higher in prices paid, a disappointing combination. That said, we'd stop short of extrapolating this into a sign of significant weakness in the economy. After all, manufacturing was in contraction for an extended period in 2022 and 2023 without producing a recession. There is a host of additional economic readings due out this week that will add some fresh color to the investment picture. The latest quarterly read on U.S. labour-force productivity will be out on Thursday, a particularly notable data point given that the upswing in this measure has been a key driver of strong GDP growth in the last two years. A sustained productivity boom, something we last saw in the 1990s, could, in our view, be a powerful force that could give legs to this expansion. Factors like AI and automation will be key drivers. Those are all appetizers to this week's main course for investors: the August jobs reports released on Friday. With markets rallying back from the early-August sell-off, inspired by solid economic data and increased confidence of a Fed rate cut this month, this employment report will play a key role in shaping the "soft landing" narrative, which appeared to take a dent based on Tuesday's market reaction. Consensus expectations are for around 25,000 new domestic jobs (after a decline in the previous month) and 160,000 new U.S. payrolls (up from the prior month's 114,000) and a slight downtick in the unemployment rate in August. We think the labour market is softening, but not crumbling, which supports our view that the economy will continue on a path of modest growth. We think markets will react to Friday's data, evaluating it through the lens of consumer health and Fed policy. A particularly weak report would likely add to worries of an economic slowdown and probably raise expectations for a larger (0.50%) rate cut this month. A stronger employment report shouldn't take a 0.25% September Fed rate cut off the table, nor do we think it would deter the Bank of Canada from maintaining its rate-cutting campaign.

Craig Fehr, CFA
Investment Strategy

Source: *FactSet. Large-caps represented by the S&P 500 index, Small-caps represented by the Russell 2000 index and International represented by the MSCI EAFE index.

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