Daily market snapshot

Published December 3, 2024
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Tuesday 12/3/2024 a.m.

  • Stocks open mixed – The TSX opened higher, while major U.S. equity markets are lower on Tuesday morning, with small- and mid-cap stocks trailing large-cap stocks. Sector performance is mostly lower, as utility, communication services and technology stocks are posting gains. In global markets, Asia was up as South Korea and Taiwan technology stocks rallied on new U.S. restrictions on artificial intelligence (AI) chips and components to China. The U.S. dollar is declining versus major currencies. In the commodity space, WTI oil and gold are trading higher*.
  • Job openings higher than expected – U.S. job openings rose to 7.74 million in October, above estimates of 7.46 million and the prior month's reading of 7.37 million, which was the lowest since early 2021. Job openings have remained higher than total unemployment of about 7.0 million, although the excess has been steadily narrowing**. Total nonfarm payrolls will be released on Friday, with forecasts calling for 207,000 in November, up from just 12,000 that was impacted by weather and labour strikes in October. The unemployment rate is expected to hold steady at 4.1%*. These forecasts, if realized, reflect a resilient labour market that is gradually cooling, which is supportive of continued moderation in inflation and the soft-landing narrative, in our view.
  • Bond yields mixed: The 10-year Government of Canada yield is up at 3.09%, while the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield is down to 4.18%. The broader trend for yields has been higher in recent months, rising about 55 basis points (0.55%) since the recent low in September. Bond markets have reduced expectations for Federal Reserve (Fed) easing to a slower and shallower path as the moderation in inflation has slowed. Markets are currently pricing in three additional Fed interest-rate cuts over the next seven months, which would put the fed funds rate in the 3.75% - 4.0% range. We agree that the Fed will likely continue cutting rates to move toward a more neutral stance, which should support continued economic expansion.

Brian Therien, CFA
Investment Strategy

Source: *FactSet ** U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

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