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Market Watch – Sept. 28, 2018

Sep 28, 2018 | 1:46 PM

 

Fed Raises Rates as Expected; Loonie Weakens Over NAFTA Uncertainty 

As expected, the U.S. Federal Reserve hiked interest rates Wednesday afternoon and signaled one more increase for December. U.S. stocks hit session highs on the heels of the decision but then sold off later Wednesday during the subsequent press conference as investors began to parse the Fed’s statement more closely. However, U.S. stocks regained ground Thursday in a broad rally lifted by the tech sector.

Meanwhile, U.S. Treasury prices extended gains Wednesday following the Fed’s announcement, although some analysts expressed concerns that further increases could negatively impact interest-rate sensitive areas of the economy, like housing and the auto sector. The torrid pace of U.S. economic growth cooled somewhat in Q3 after a robust second quarter, economists say. One factor accounting for slower Q3 growth could be trade, as numbers for August showed the U.S. trade gap widened for the third consecutive month.

In Canada, the loonie weakened to its lowest level in more than a week against the greenback on Thursday, as investors worried that Canada would be left out of a trade deal with its NAFTA counterparts.

Finally, global oil prices surged to their highest close in nearly four years on Monday after OPEC left production steady over the past weekend, reviving concerns that U.S. sanctions against Iran will lead to supply shortages. While prices fell Wednesday following reports that U.S. crude inventories were larger than expected, Thursday saw oil climb back above the $72 mark. 
 
Markets 
 
TSX Off Slightly, Nasdaq Notches Modest Gains

For the four days covered in this report, the Dow tumbled 304 points to close at 26,439, the S&P 500 shed 16 points to settle at 2,914, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq climbed 54 points to close at 8,041. In Canada, the TSX declined 20 points to end at 16,204.

Equities/Strategy 
 
Strategy

With bond yields poised to move higher, our equity overweight recommendation remains intact, with a particular emphasis on U.S. stocks. We recognize Canadian, international, and emerging market equities have underperformed their U.S. counterparts year-to-date (YTD). While a mean-reversion opportunity appears to be materializing for short-term oriented investors, we advocate a more conservative approach and recommend tilting allocations toward U.S. equities given their higher earnings quality and growth profile. Equity investors have no shortage of worries, including the age of the current bull market, monetary policy tightening, global trade tensions, and pending U.S. midterm elections. However, our constructive equity outlook remains intact, supported by reasonable valuations, relatively low inflation by historical standards, low near-term recession risks, and robust EPS growth.

 

(Big Picture – Bill Curry)

 

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