The Week Ahead – Back to School

Written by Brett Dulyea, CFA, CAIA | 8/22/22 6:53 PM

Welcome to “The Week Ahead” where we take a moment to provide our thoughts on what we can expect in markets and the economy during the upcoming week.

Seems like summer vacation gets shorter every year. Both my kids went back to school last week with our older one starting 7th grade and the younger beginning 3rd. Switching the mindset away from summer vacation mode has gone surprisingly smoothly so far. Almost all the classroom covid precautions are winding down, so things are seemingly just about back to normal.

Moving on to markets - the stock market snapped a four-week winning streak on Friday with the S&P 500 falling 1.2%. The tech-heavy NASDAQ took the brunt of the pain as yields on the 10-year Treasury came within a hare’s breath of touching 3%.

The Federal Reserve (Fed) continues to emphasize the price stability portion of its dual-mandate, and as a consequence is clearly willing to risk recession in order to stamp out inflation. Both the labor market and wage growth remain far too strong for the Fed to pivot just yet. However, we are starting to see signs of softening. To wit, a recent survey by PwC showed half of companies are planning layoffs. The survey goes on to show that 80% of employees are afraid of losing their jobs during the next recession. New and used car prices are finally coming down as well. Dealer margins tripled during the covid crisis, so it is good to see this major source of inflation starting to cool.

A lot of financial tightening has happened already. Led by the Federal Reserve, global interest rates increased again last week and have been increasing for 16 months. Money supply growth, which has a very high correlation with inflation, has been slowing for 17 months. The US dollar has been trending higher for 13 months. And mortgage rates surged a whopping 3% over the past 17 months, causing housing to weaken significantly.

To summarize, the Fed will have to slow down from the aggressive 75 basis point rate hikes in our opinion. The global economy is weakening, and is probably entering a recession, with the Eurozone GDP -1%, or worse; the US +1%, and China soft. While we stand by our assertion that we have reached peak inflation, that is definitely not mission accomplished. There is strong evidence demand is slowing, but until supply catches up, the required medicine to get inflation under control is to continue to crush demand – expect financial conditions to continue to tighten.

This week we will see a good deal of key economic data starting with Tuesday’s Manufacturing PMI. We are expecting Manufacturing PMI to drop to 49.0. Any number below 50 indicates contraction. On Wednesday, Durable Goods Orders will come out, which should climb a moderate 0.4%. New home sales probably slipped to a 570,000 pace in July. Mortgage applications and pending home sales releases have been in a slowing trend.

Aug 22 – Aug 26

Date

Indicator

Period

Aug 22

Chicago Fed national activity index

Jul

Aug 23

S&P U.S. manufacturing PMI (flash)

Aug

Aug 23

S&P U.S. services PMI (flash)     

Aug

Aug 23

New home sales (SAAR)

Jul

Aug 24

Durable goods orders   

Jul

Aug 24

Core capital equipment orders 

Jul

Aug 24

Pending home sales index        

Jul

Aug 25

Initial jobless claims     

Aug 20

Aug 25

Continuing jobless claims         

Aug 13

Aug 25

Real gross domestic product. revision (SAAR)    

Q2

Aug 25

Real gross domestic income (SAAR)       

Q2

Aug 25

Real final sales to domestic purchasers, revision (SAAR)

Q2

Aug 26

PCE price index monthly           

Jul

Aug 26

Core PCE price index monthly   

Jul

Aug 26

PCE price index year-over-year 

Jul

Aug 26

Core PCE price index year-over-year     

Jul

Aug 26

Real disposable incomes           

Jul

Aug 26

Real consumer spending          

Jul

Aug 26

Nominal personal incomes       

Jul

Aug 26

Nominal consumer spending    

Jul

Aug 26

Trade in goods, advance           

Jul

Aug 26

UMich consumer sentiment index (final)           

Aug

Aug 26

UMich 5-year inflation expectations (final)

Aug