Futures markets suspect only one more quarter-point rise next month is left in the tank – rather than the two hikes Fed policymakers stitched into their outlooks last week.
But even though headline U.S. inflation fell to 4% in May for the first time in more than two years, there are some more signs the underlying economy is picking up steam.
U.S. single-family housing starts surged in May by the most in more than three decades while permits for future construction also climbed, according to data released on Tuesday. The numbers tallied with the jump in the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market index in June to its highest since July last year.
U.S. Treasuries held steady, however, with two-year yields hovering about 4.7% into Powell’s set piece. Two-year ‘breakeven’ inflation expectations embedded in the bond market are back just above 2%.
U.S. stock futures also held the line, after a two-day consolidation of June’s 5% surge in the S&P500 still on course for its biggest monthly gain since January and the longest streak of monthly gains since the summer of 2021.
The dollar was also steady against most major currencies – with a drop in China’s yuan to its lowest level of the year an exception as China’s monetary policymakers swim against the hawkish central bank tide elsewhere with this week’s rate cuts.
But even as U.S. investors welcome the domestic disinflation picture more generally, overseas anxieties persist – most obviously in Britain.
UK inflation defied expectations of a slowdown and held at 8.7% in May, while ‘core’ inflation jumped above 7% for the first time since 1992. The numbers heap pressure on the Bank of England a day before it is predicted to raise interest rates for the 13th time in a row.
Money markets now see a 50-50 chance the BoE hikes rates by as much as 50 basis points to 5% and pencil in a peak rate of 6% by next March.
Amid all the UK bad news – include data showing a rise in public sector net debt above 100% of national output for the first time since 1961 – the higher inflation and rate trajectory failed to lift the pound. Sterling recoiled sharply from recent highs against both the dollar and euro.
In corporate news, FedEx shares dropped almost 3% overnight after a profit warning. The shipping firm, which is slashing costs to protect profits as demand wanes, said ongoing “demand challenges” prompted its plans to ground 29 more aircraft in the fiscal year that started on June 1.
Electric vehicle makers were supercharged, however.
Rivals Rivian Automotive and Tesla rose more than 5% on Tuesday each after Rivian announced it had agreed to adopt Tesla’s charging standard.
Meantime, China unveiled a $72 billion tax break for EVs, while European Union data showed EV sales jumped 71% in May.