Stocks struggled for direction after a rally driven by the artificial-intelligence hype drove the market to the highest since August. Treasury yields fell on hopes the US Congress will pass a debt deal to head off a default.
(Bloomberg) — Stocks struggled for direction after a rally driven by the artificial-intelligence hype drove the market to the highest since August. Treasury yields fell on hopes the US Congress will pass a debt deal to head off a default.
The S&P 500 fluctuated near 4,200. Energy companies weighed on the index as oil sank below $70 a barrel. The Nasdaq 100 outperformed, with Nvidia Corp. hovering near $1 trillion in value after announcing several AI-related products. A gauge of megacaps like Apple Inc. and Tesla Inc. climbed 2%.
“Yes, AI does have great potential and it does appear to be the ‘next big thing’,” wrote Tom Essaye, a former Merrill Lynch trader who founded The Sevens Report newsletter. “But I don’t see how that promise can offset the reality of higher interest rates and more pressure on the economy, at least not for a sustainable period.”
T-Bills
Treasury bills maturing in the first half of June rallied as trading resumed following a US holiday after a deal to lift the debt ceiling.
Yields on securities payable in early June — seen as most at-risk because Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has said the government will exhaust its cash as soon as June 5 — resumed their drop on Tuesday, and others due in the first half of the month followed suit. Bills due June 6 yielded 5.2%, down from about 7% at one point last week.
Stocks and bonds are sending opposite signals about whether US inflation will abate on its own, according to billionaire Cliff Asness, who called the divergence his “biggest concern.”
Unlike stocks, the bond market is telegraphing that the Federal Reserve will make aggressive interest-rate cuts over the next year or two, the co-founder of AQR Capital Management, said on an episode of “Bloomberg Wealth with David Rubenstein.”
‘Scary Place’
“If inflation stays sticky or it comes down because we enter a nontrivial recession — it’s equities that I think are a scary place,” Asness said.
Traders also kept an eye on the latest economic reports, with US consumer confidence dropping to a six-month low as views about the labor market and the outlook for business conditions slipped ahead of a deal to raise the debt ceiling.
To Gina Bolvin, president of Bolvin Wealth Management Group, lower consumer confidence can be a bullish contrarian indicator.
“With over $5 trillion in cash on the sidelines, strong stock market momentum and debt ceiling drama closer to resolving, we think there is a good reason for stocks to perform well this year,” Bolvin said. “However, it may not be without volatility. The next market moving catalyst is this week’s jobs reports, which will influence the Fed.”
Key events this week:
- China manufacturing PMI, non-manufacturing PMI, Wednesday.
- US job openings, Wednesday.
- Federal Reserve’s Beige Book, Wednesday.
- Fed’s Patrick Harker, Susan Collins and Michelle Bowman speak at events, Wednesday.
- China Caixin manufacturing PMI, Thursday.
- Eurozone HCOB Eurozone Manufacturing PMI, CPI, unemployment, Thursday.
- US construction spending, initial jobless claims, ISM Manufacturing, Thursday.
- ECB President Christine Lagarde speaks at conference, Thursday.
- Fed’s Patrick Harker speaks at webinar, Thursday.
- US unemployment, nonfarm payrolls, Friday.
Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
- The S&P 500 was little changed as of 12:31 p.m. New York time
- The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.5%
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.4%
- The MSCI World index fell 0.2%
Currencies
- The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed
- The euro rose 0.2% to $1.0726
- The British pound rose 0.4% to $1.2405
- The Japanese yen rose 0.4% to 139.84 per dollar
Cryptocurrencies
- Bitcoin was little changed at $27,697.34
- Ether rose 0.4% to $1,901.51
Bonds
- The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined 10 basis points to 3.70%
- Germany’s 10-year yield declined nine basis points to 2.34%
- Britain’s 10-year yield declined nine basis points to 4.25%
Commodities
- West Texas Intermediate crude fell 4% to $69.76 a barrel
- Gold futures rose 0.9% to $1,980.50 an ounce
This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
–With assistance from Vildana Hajric, Carly Wanna, Isabelle Lee and John McCorry.
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