Jura Capital

Markets & Macro

Markets Deliver a Week Full of Surprises

Last week was billed as a crucial one for the markets – and it certainly lived up to expectations. Below is a rundown of the three major themes that emerged and what they might signal for the weeks ahead.

Tech Earnings Highlight a Growing Divide

The major technology players – Apple, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and Google – all released their quarterly results, but performance varied widely.

AI Leads, Consumer Tech Lags

Businesses tied to artificial intelligence outperformed forecasts, driven by strong demand for cloud computing and data center infrastructure. On the other hand, growth in consumer electronics and digital advertising was more muted, suggesting that households are becoming more cautious with spending.

Key takeaway: AI-related gains continue to be the main driver of market strength, but questions are mounting about how long one growth theme can sustain today’s high valuations.

Consumers Feel Gloomy – But Keep Spending

While consumer confidence readings fell to some of their weakest levels in recent years, actual spending behavior told a different story.

Sentiment vs Reality

Travel, dining, and leisure spending have remained robust. Retail investors are still funneling money into stocks, showing surprising optimism despite poor sentiment surveys.

Key takeaway: There’s a widening gap between how consumers feel and how they act. This contradiction will be critical to monitor as the holiday shopping season ramps up.

The Fed Cuts Rates – Then Signals a Pause

The Federal Reserve reduced interest rates by 0.25% last week, but immediately cooled expectations for additional cuts.

Why the Fed Is Hesitant

Not long ago, markets had priced in a near certainty of another rate reduction in December. Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s comments quickly erased that assumption.

The hesitation stems from a few key points:

1. Inflation is holding steady at 3%, marking five straight months of increases.

2. The Fed reiterated its 2% inflation target, limiting room for further easing.

3. Despite limited national employment data due to the government shutdown, state-level job numbers show no significant weakness.

In short: The Fed doesn’t yet see enough weakness to justify rapid rate cuts. Investors may need to adjust expectations if inflation continues to linger above target.

What’s on Tap This Week

Now that a major week of earnings and policy news has passed, markets turn their attention to a fresh set of data and catalysts.

Inflation Takes the Spotlight

New inflation figures are due, and they’ll play a central role in shaping the Fed’s next decision.

Watch whether the five-month streak of rising core inflation finally breaks. Pay attention to shelter and service costs, which have been the most stubborn components.

Market impact: Stocks have tended to rally ahead of inflation data lately, but a hotter-than-expected report could reverse that trend and push back expectations for early-2025 rate cuts.

Holiday Spending Season Kicks Off

This week marks the start of the crucial retail season.

Key metrics include:

– Monthly retail sales reports
– Early holiday shopping patterns
– Performance of consumer discretionary stocks

Why it matters: Even as surveys show pessimism, consumer spending has stayed strong. Any sign of slowdown now could raise concerns about the broader economy heading into 2025.

Global Market Watch

While U.S. data will dominate headlines, several key global developments could shape broader investor sentiment this week.

Central Bank Signals Abroad

The Bank of England and European Central Bank are holding steady but facing pressure to address slowing growth with inflation still above target. In Asia, the Bank of Japan continues its gradual exit from yield control policies, while China’s central bank may provide further liquidity support to bolster domestic demand.

Why it matters: Diverging policy paths between the U.S. and other major economies could spark renewed volatility in currency and bond markets.

China’s Economic Pulse

Upcoming data on industrial production, retail sales, and credit growth will offer clues on whether stimulus measures are helping stabilize the Chinese economy.

Investors will be watching for signs that domestic demand is improving as export growth remains soft.

Why it matters: As the world’s second-largest economy, China’s recovery trajectory remains critical for global trade and commodity demand.

European Energy and Growth Outlook

Europe continues to grapple with high energy costs and weak industrial output.
Key data from Germany and France will shed light on how much the slowdown in manufacturing is spilling into broader economic activity.

Why it matters: Persistent stagnation in Europe could weigh on global growth expectations and influence multinational earnings forecasts.

Emerging Market Momentum

Several emerging economies, including Brazil, Mexico, and India, will release inflation and trade data. Many are balancing between supporting growth and defending currencies as the U.S. dollar remains strong.

Why it matters: Shifts in capital flows and currency stability in emerging markets can ripple through global equity and bond performance.

Global Takeaway

The coming week won’t just test U.S. inflation and consumer strength – it will also reveal how synchronized (or fragmented) global growth has become. Investors will be watching whether resilience in Asia and the U.S. can offset Europe’s softness and ongoing geopolitical risks.

Similar Articles

Scroll to Top