Will The FED Stoke Inflation And Drive An Even Greater Wedge Between Rich And Poor?

This is our weekly market update, where we start in the US, cross to Europe and Asia and end in Australia, whilst covering commodities and crypto on the way. I do this to keep track of what is going on in today’s complex markets, so expect lots of data not superficial waffle. You have been warned. If that’s not for you, then look elsewhere for more cute cats!

We are, it seems, at the pointy end of the FED’s decision to cut rates when they meet next week as US shares rallied on renewed expectations that they could opt for a half percentage point cut. Futures have it as 50/50 for a half or quarter point cut, but everyone is now expecting the first of several ahead.

While the renewed hopes for a bigger cut were boosting large cap indexes on Friday the optimism seemed most evident in the Russell 2000 small cap index (RUT), which rose 2.5% on the day and 4.4% for the week. Smaller companies are more sensitive to rate changes as they depend more on borrowed money and floating rate loans.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.72%, to 41,393.78, the S&P 500 gained 0.54%, to 5,626.02 and is just 1% shy of its July record while the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.65%, to 17,681.55. The potential for a large rate cut helped drive utilities, materials and industrials higher. Twenty-four of the Dow’s 30 components were higher; Techs mostly lagged.

All three major U.S. benchmark indexes ended close to roughly two-week highs and logged solid weekly gains. For the week the S&P 500 rose 4.02% and the Nasdaq climbed 5.95%, with both marking their biggest weekly percentage gains since early November. The Dow added 2.60% for the week.

European stocks rounded off the week on a positive note, supported by technology, real estate and mining shares, while investors shifted their focus to the U.S. Federal Reserve ahead of a long-awaited monetary easing at its meeting next week. Technology and real estate gave the market its biggest boost, followed by miners that advanced 1.3%, as copper prices hit a two-week high on buying ahead of a Chinese holiday and amid stimulus hopes.

Australian shares extended gains on Friday, but stopped short of a closing high as a drag in banks offset a strong push in mining stocks as commodity prices rose. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 ended up 0.3 per cent to 8099.9, bringing weekly gains to 1.1 per cent.

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Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

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