As markets blew the froth off this year’s extraordinary rally in Big Tech stocks on Thursday, the dollar clocked its best day – and likely its best week – for more than two months.
After the first real edgy day on financial markets in weeks, returning calm on Friday suggests that sudden burst of activity – a stock and bond market recoil and loud dollar pop higher – was more a re-set than a rethink.
Many put the moves down to traders jockeying for position ahead of next week’s Federal Reserve meeting – which may well deliver the last interest rate hike of the cycle. Another unexpectedly tight weekly reading from the U.S. labour market sowed some lingering doubts that we’re on the cusp of ‘peak Fed‘ just yet.
Grouch-like disappointment at forecast-beating profits at Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) and Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) saw the supercharged FANG-plus index of the 10 leading tech and digital mega cap stocks record its worst day of an otherwise spectacular year so far – losing more than 4% as Netflix and Tesla shares were almost decimated.
And yet, that index remains up 76% for the year to date.
The tech wobble saw the Nasdaq recoil 2% in its biggest drop since March. But the S&P500 lost a more modest 0.6% and the Dow Jones industrials ploughed on regardless to notch its ninth straight daily gain, aided by upbeat Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ).
What’s more, Nasdaq and S&P500 futures are up again ahead of the bell on Friday. A quieter earnings schedule is topped by American Express (NYSE:AXP) – but nearly all the other banks have been impressive over the past week.
The optimists suggest a combination of ongoing jobs market strength and some rotation of sectoral stock holdings underlines ‘soft landing’ hopes and marks a healthy broadening of what has been a very narrow-led market gain so far this year.
Pessimists think the Fed is not done tightening yet and any further rate hikes after next week will just hasten a downturn in 2024. That has sobered up the Treasury market a touch after a couple of weeks of disinflation relief.
Futures are fully priced for a quarter-point rate rise next week, but indicated less than a 50-50 chance of another hike by November and 75 basis points of cuts from the peak by this time next year. Two-year Treasury yields nudged 12 bps higher to 4.88% on Thursday, but have settled back to 4.85% since.
The backup in yields saw the dollar put in its best showing since early May – helped additionally by growing doubts about the willingness of other major central banks to keep tightening their policy rates once the Fed stops.
The Bank of Japan is leaning toward keeping its yield control policy unchanged at its policy meeting next week, according to Reuters sources, as policymakers prefer to scrutinise more data to ensure wages and inflation keep rising.
With inflation having exceeded the BOJ’s target for more than a year, markets had been simmering with speculation the BOJ could tweak yield curve control as early as this month.
Dollar/yen surged above 141 on Friday for the first time in 10 days.
China’s markets remained in a funk, meantime, with anxiety growing over the lack of a major fresh stimulus for the struggling economic recovery as geopolitical tensions bite.
Authorities on Friday announced measures to boost consumption of auto and electronic items as part of a broader drive to shore up the country’s faltering economy.
But all eyes are now on the annual Politburo meeting, which is expected to take place before the end of July and where China’s leaders chart a policy course for the rest of the year.