Is
this the beginning of a summer selloff?
Last
week was a turbulent one for equity markets. Key indices slid following
Wednesday remarks by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, signaling that the Fed may
scale back monetary stimulus later this year. For the week, the S&P 500
fell 2.11%, the Dow lost 1.8%, and the Nasdaq trimmed 1.94%.[i]
As
expected, news from the Fed dominated markets last week. Equities started the
week with steady gains, suggesting that investors expected mostly reassuring words
from the Fed. However, Wednesday’s official FOMC announcement and subsequent
comments by Ben Bernanke pushed markets to session lows. The Fed chairman
stated that, should economic conditions improve, the central bank could reduce
the pace of bond purchases this year and potentially end the quantitative
easing program entirely by mid-2014. He also said that economic conditions
appear to be improving, suggesting that downside risk to the economy from
tapering off quantitative easing programs may be low.[ii]
Recent
economic data supports Bernanke’s optimism. Home resales reached a 3-1/2 year
high in May and regional factory activity rebounded in June, suggesting that
the economy has some momentum behind it.[iii]
While government spending cuts and higher taxes stoked fears that the recovery
might stumble, it appears that the economy is still chugging along. Weekly
unemployment claims rose 18,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted level of
354,000. The four-week moving average, which is considered to be a less volatile
measure, increased to 348,250 – a level economists usually associate with
stable job gains.[iv]
In
the weeks and months ahead, it is likely that Fed policy will continue to drive
a measure of volatility. Even so, economic trends are showing modest improvement,
and markets don’t rise in a straight line. Volatility is a fact of life, and
short-term declines may present opportunities for value investing. We will
continue to keep our eyes open for both risks and opportunities with the
potential to affect our clients and will keep you informed.
ECONOMIC CALENDAR:
Monday: Dallas Fed Mfg. Survey,
Tuesday: Durable Goods Orders, S&P 500 Case-Shiller
HPI, New Home Sales, Consumer Confidence
Wednesday: GDP, EIA Petroleum Status Report
Thursday: Jobless Claims, Personal Income and
Outlays, Pending Home Sales Index
Friday: Chicago PMI, Consumer Sentiment
HEADLINES:
Oil prices drop on Fed comments. Oil prices fell in the biggest
one-day drop since November 2012 on a combination of poor Chinese manufacturing
data and news that the Fed may begin tapering its quantitative easing programs.[v]
Median home prices surge. The median home price was $208,000 in
May, up 15.4% from a year ago, which is the largest year-over-year increase
since 2005. Prices are also at their highest level since July 2008.[vi]
Treasury prices falter. Treasury prices slid Friday, extending
a massive selloff in the government bond market last week that sent yields
dramatically higher after the Federal Reserve indicated it may scale back its
bond-purchase program later this year.[vii]
‘Change your
expectations for yourself: Expect the best,expect your fortunes to change, and
expect a miracle ! “ Dr. Waye Dyer
.
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