Daily market snapshot

Published November 22, 2024
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Friday, 11/22/2024 a.m.

  • Stocks open higher following domestic retail sales report: Canadian and U.S. stock markets are opening higher on Friday morning. It's been a strong week for equity markets, with the TSX on pace for a weekly gain of over 2% while the S&P 500 is tracking for a gain of over 1%.* On the economic front, domestic retail sales for September matched expectations for a 0.4% gain.* This month's reading brought the three-month annualized change in retail sales up to 7.2%, the best since January 2023.* Additionally, the Statistics Canada advance retail indicator suggests retail sales rose by a healthy 0.7% in October, indicating continued momentum in consumer spending. Overseas, European markets are trading higher while Asian markets were mixed overnight, with Japan's Nikkei finishing higher but China stocks sharply lower.* Bond yields are little changed, with the 10-year GoC yield ticking up to around 3.46% while the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield is hovering around the 4.4% mark.*
  • Focus shifts back to U.S. inflation: U.S. inflation, and its implication on future monetary policy, will be back in focus next week with the release of personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation on Wednesday. Market expectations are calling for headline PCE to rise by 2.3% year-over-year, up from the prior months gain of 2.1%.* Core PCE is expected to tick higher as well, with expectations for a 2.8% annual gain, up from 2.7% in the prior month.* U.S. consumer price index (CPI) inflation, which was released earlier this month, suggested the path to the Fed's 2% target could be bumpy. Core CPI rose by 3.3% annually, while the three-month annualized rate of core CPI rose to 3.6%.* Current market expectations are calling for a 60% chance of another 0.25% Fed rate cut at its December 18 meeting.** We'd align with markets that another quarter-point cut at the December meeting is a probable outcome. However, with inflation proving persistent in recent months, the U.S. economy on strong footing, and the potential for inflationary fiscal policy over the coming year, we believe the Fed could take a more cautious approach to rate cuts in 2025.
  • PMI data point to weak activity abroad: Preliminary estimates for the November S&P Global Purchasing Manager Index (PMI) point to continued weakness in economic activity abroad. The eurozone composite PMI felt to 48.1 (a reading below 50 signals contraction), the lowest reading since January.* A large driver behind eurozone weakness has been sluggish activity from the region's largest economy, Germany. The German composite PMI fell to 47.3 in today's reading and has been in contraction since June.* Weak manufacturing activity has been a drag on Germany and the broader eurozone. In fact, both the German and eurozone manufacturing PMIs has been in contraction since June 2022.* Eurozone producer price inflation surged in 2022 due to the war between Russia and Ukraine, weighing on profitability for manufacturers. While prices have since started to moderate, headline eurozone PPI is over 30% higher today than at the start of 2021.* Looking around the horn, activity didn't fare much better in the U.K., with the composite PMI falling to 49.9, the first contraction since October 2023, while Japan's manufacturing PMI fell to 49, the fifth consecutive month of contraction.* Contrarily, the U.S. composite PMI rose to 55.3, a 31-month high driven by strength in the services sector.* We continue to favour the relative economic momentum of the U.S. relative to overseas regions. As part of our opportunistic asset-allocation guidance, we recommend investors consider underweighting overseas developed stocks and reallocate toward U.S. stocks.

Brock Weimer, CFA 
Associate Analyst 

Source: *FactSet **CME FedWatch Tool

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