All eyes are on the Federal Reserve's rate decision due out Wednesday and whether the central bank is ready to pump the brakes.
| TUE, NOV 01, 2022 | | | |
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All eyes are on the Federal Reserve's rate decision due Wednesday and whether the central bank is ready to pump the brakes. But economic data released Tuesday may have shattered those hopes. Despite rallying at the open, stocks turned negative as job openings data for September showed the labor market remains tight and ISM manufacturing data punched above expectations. Earnings season, meanwhile, continued with strong reports from Uber and Pfizer. After multiple rate hikes this year, many investors have come to believe that the Fed has done its job and may slow its pace of tightening in the months ahead. |
But some investors and strategists say hopes for a Fed pivot are premature. "All of this — better business sentiment, more job openings — is of course a good sign of a growing economy," wrote Goldman Sachs' Chris Hussey in a note to clients Tuesday. "But in a world where inflation expectations are expanding, the Fed does not want the economy to grow too fast." Ron Temple, head of U.S. equity at Lazard Asset Management, echoed that sentiment, calling hopes for a dovish shift "misplaced" after Tuesday's jobs data and saying that it's too soon for the central bank to ease. "Markets may be underestimating where the Fed's terminal rate is and should prepare for further financial tightening," he said. |
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