Rate-change expectations shifted hawkishly today, after drifting dovishly for the last week, on the heels of the Manufacturing PMI's report which showed the rate of inflation quickened to the sharpest pace in five months and FedSpeak which confirmed Powell's "higher for longer" messaging.
Source: Bloomberg
In the US, S&P Global noted
“Less encouraging was the news on the inflation outlook, as producers’ costs rose at the fastest rate for five months, largely on the back of higher oil prices. These increased costs are already feeding through to higher prices to customers, which will inevitably result in some renewed upward pressure on inflation.”
Globally, JPMorgan warned that there were further signs of price pressures building in September.
Input costs and output charges both rose for the second consecutive months, with rates of inflation accelerating for both measures.
Fed Gov Michelle Bowman again said that multiple interest-rate hikes may be required to get inflation down:
“I continue to expect that further rate increases will likely be needed to return inflation to 2% in a timely way,” Bowman said in remarks prepared for delivery to bankers in Banff, Canada.
“I see a continued risk that high energy prices could reverse some of the progress we have seen on inflation in recent months.”
Fed Vice Chair Michael Barr said the US central bank is “likely at or very near” a level of interest rates that is sufficiently restrictive:
“I think it is likely that we’ll need to keep rates up for some time in order to get inflation down to 2%. I’m confident that we’ll get there.”
Traders were buying protection against a less-hawkish Fed. Bloomberg notes significant SOFR flows on the day have been skewed toward dovish protection into year-end, standing to benefit from no more additional rate hikes from the Fed.
The hawkish shift sent the dollar higher, rallying back up to perfectly tag the stops from Wednesday highs...
Source: Bloomberg
The stronger dollar weighed on crude oil prices, with WTI sliding back below $89, as Citi's Ed Morse muttered something about Oil "going back to the $70s" as “demand looks constrained as the pandemic recovery factors continue to ease off and peak transport fuel demand looms, while supply is growing in non-OPEC+ suppliers”
And gold was dumped to fresh cycle lows, selling off for the 6th day in a row (9th drop in the last 10 days)...
Source: Bloomberg
Spot Platinum prices plunged to their lowest since Oct 2022...
Source: Bloomberg
Treasuries were sold across the board with the belly (5s-10s) suffering the most...
Source: Bloomberg
Which steepened the yield curve (2s10s) to its least-inverted since the peak of the SVB crisis...
Source: Bloomberg
Bitcoin continued to drift higher, spiking above $28,500 intraday
Source: Bloomberg
Stocks were very mixed on the day with Small Caps clubbed like a baby seal while Mega-Cap tech outperformed leave The Dow and S&P trying to get back above water...
Value stocks puked relative to Growth, erasing their recent gains...
Source: Bloomberg
'Most shorted' stocks were hammered for the second day in a row with no squeeze attempts...
Source: Bloomberg
Utes were the biggest losers today (NEE's plunge did not help) and Tech stocks were the only sector to end green...
Source: Bloomberg
That's quite a puke in Utes...
Source: Bloomberg
Goldman's data could hint at capitulative flows: CTAs as short $17.8bn of global equities (31st %tile), while In the US, CTAs are short $17.5bn of equities after selling -$59bn over the last two weeks, representing the largest two week selling since Covid!
After a massive $59BN in selling in past 2 weeks (as noted two weeks ago), systematics have fully liquidated. CTAs are all uphill from here.
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) October 2, 2023
Also dealer gamma almost back to positive after hitting record negative last week.
Bounce imminent. https://t.co/NqhdUPxLHA pic.twitter.com/akhbQO9Wu4
And finally, financial conditions continue to tighten, suggesting stocks may have more room to run to the downside...
Source: Bloomberg
Is that the 'deflation' that Powell is looking for?