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26/08/2024

Flash boursier

Key data

 USD/CHFEUR/CHFSMIEURO STOXX 50DAX 30CAC 40FTSE 100S&P 500NASDAQNIKKEIMSCI Emerging Markets
Latest0.850.9512'347.464'909.2018'633.107'577.048'327.785'634.6117'877.7938'364.271'100.68
Trend
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
YTD0.74%2.14%10.86%8.58%11.23%0.45%7.69%18.13%19.10%14.64%7.52%

(values from the Friday preceding publication)

 

Rate cut locked in for September

Equity markets continued recovering last week on receding fears of an economic slowdown and the growing prospect of an imminent loosening cycle in the US.

In his long-awaited customary address at the Jackson Hole Symposium, Fed chair Jerome Powell reiterated that US interest rates would be cut in September. But he also pointed to the threat of a deterioration in the US labour market. In connection with that, the number of jobs created for the period April 2023 to March 2024 was drastically revised downwards by central government.

Staying with the US, economic activity continues to suffer the negative fallout from persistently high interest rates. Initial jobless claims in the week ending 17 August rose again, this time to 232,000 versus 228,000 the previous week.

The initial rate cut is now widely anticipated but how big it will be is not yet entirely certain. Consumer spending is still holding up relatively well and this is underpinning US economic growth.

Against this backdrop, the yield on the US 10-year Treasury last week held steady at around 3.80%. The return on its German counterpart, the Bund, was stable at 2.25%.

In Europe, growth in the private sector was unexpectedly robust in August. Services once again underpinned the positive trend but manufacturing did not slow to the degree expected.

The trouble is that the upswing in business activity took place against a backdrop of higher-than-expected producer prices. Even so, we do not see this influencing the ECB’s next rate move, especially since factory managers have lost hope again, leading to the swiftest cut in the number of employees since last November. Tellingly, the manufacturing employment index fell from 47.0 to 46.6.

All in all, the S&P 500 ended the week up by 1.45%, Nasdaq by 1.40%, while the Stoxx Europe 600 rose by 1.31%. Gold rose to a new all-time high of USD 2512 an ounce.

This week will see the release of August inflation estimates in Germany. In the US, in addition to macroeconomic data (durable goods orders and PCE inflation), Nvidia – the darling of the AI industry – will be reporting on Wednesday.

 

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