Investors are a bit anxious that the consensus forecast for an increase of 70,000 jobs in January may be overoptimistic, considering the weak jobs readings last week. And there’s trepidation about annual benchmark payrolls revisions to boot, which could downgrade the last twelve months' job growth by a forecast 750,000-900,000 positions.
Fed futures pricing responded sharply to the negative retail surprise, now showing an almost 50% chance of another Fed cut as soon as April, Jerome Powell's last meeting as Chair. A cut by June, when Kevin Warsh is due to take the helm, is now fully priced. Some 60 basis points of easing is priced for the full year.
That might please President Trump - but only a bit. He said on Tuesday that the U.S. should have the lowest interest rates in the world. Taken at face value, that would mean negative interest rates, which he probably isn’t aiming for, though it's safe to assume he meant a lot lower than where a 60 bps cut would leave us.
This fresh dovish take on the Fed outlook contrasts with the views of two hawks on the policymaking council. Cleveland Fed boss Beth Hammack and Dallas Fed’s Lorie Logan said on Tuesday they don’t see rates going anywhere any time soon. For more on that tilt, we probably have to wait for the CPI inflation report this Friday.
The broader market take on the unfolding picture was to push Treasury yields lower across the curve during another big debt auction week. The dollar continued to tumble on Wednesday, especially against the resurgent yen.
The S&P 500 ended in the red yesterday on the retail flub and futures were subdued ahead of today's bell amid the ongoing tech and AI disruption.
On the AI front, there was more good news from global chip giant TSMC as it reported January revenues up almost 40% year-on-year, as well as further capex plans. Elsewhere, TikTok owner ByteDance is reportedly developing a new AI chip with South Korea's Samsung.
But another wave of AI negativity also struck yesterday - and so soon after last week’s Anthropic-linked plunge in software and data analytics stocks. Wealth management startup Altruist launched an AI-enabled tax planning tool that on Tuesday whacked the shares of more established wealth managers such as Charles Schwab, with the ripple effect felt in European financial services stocks on Wednesday.
The market is becoming vicious when trying to sort out the winners and losers from the AI revolution.