The US economy continues to roar. December's ISM purchasing managers survey showed that services activity remains strong. The JOLTS data, albeit a bit stale from November, showed job openings jumped. That aligned with the recent rise in measures of business and consumer confidence. So why did stocks turn lower yesterday? The answer lies with the bond market.
The prices-paid index in the ISM non-manufacturing PMI jumped from 58.2 in November to 64.4 in December (chart). That was the highest reading since February 2023.
That sent the 10-year and 30-year Treasury yields to recent highs of 4.69% and 4.92%, respectively.
The Bond Vigilantes aren't buying the Fed's esoteric narrative that the federal funds rate (FFR) needs to be cut because the so-called neutral rate of interest is much lower than the prevailing 4.33%. What matters more to them is that inflation in the core services components of the CPI and the PCED remains sticky well above 2.0%. Long-term yields may continue rising until the Fed acknowledges the economy’s strength and officially hits the FFR pause button (chart).
We view yesterday's economic data as good news. Much of yesterday's stock market losses were concentrated in large tech stocks. Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) fell 6.2% as investors cashed in some of their recent gains in anticipation of CEO Jensen Huang's bullish announcements at yesterday's Consumer Electronics Show (CES).
We found them encouraging for AI broadly. Meta slipped after announcing a new board director in UFC CEO Dana White and changes to its fact-checking program on Facebook (NASDAQ:META) and Instagram. High-beta stocks like Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) and Palantir (NASDAQ:PLTR) also took a hit. But the broader market held up just fine.
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