COMING SOON: Bespoke’s 2024 Annual Outlook

Coming Soon!  Bespoke’s 2024 Annual Outlook piece is currently set for publication on Friday, December 22nd.  If you’re already a member, take a look at some of our prior annual reports to get an idea of what’s in store!

As the financial landscape evolves, staying ahead requires insight, foresight, and the right guide. Bespoke’s Annual Outlook for 2024 offers just that! Building on the success of our 2023 edition, this report is your compass in the ever-changing world of investing. Our 2024 Outlook promises to be more insightful than ever, delving into key areas that shaped the past year and will influence the next:

– Market Cycles & Economic Trends: Discover the rhythms of the market. Our detailed analysis of market and economic cycles will provide you with a clearer understanding of what to expect in the year ahead.

– Federal Policies & Global Impact: Navigate through the complexities of monetary policies and their global repercussions. Understand how the Fed’s decisions could affect your investments in 2024.

– Sector-Specific Insights & Thematic Opportunities: We break down sector performances and emerging themes, giving you a granular view of where potential opportunities and risks lie.

– Expert Analysis on Critical Indicators: From the yield curve to investor sentiment, our report covers a wide range of indicators, offering you a comprehensive view of the market.

💡 Why Bespoke’s 2024 Outlook?

  • Data-Driven Insights: Leverage our big data approach to make informed decisions.
  • Comprehensive Coverage: From macroeconomic trends to sector-specific analysis, we’ve got it all covered.
  • Experienced Perspectives: Benefit from the expertise of our seasoned analysts.

🚀 Ready for a Prosperous 2024? Don’t miss out on this essential guide to a profitable year ahead. Get your copy and stay a step ahead in the dynamic world of investing!

How can I read Bespoke’s 2024 Outlook?

To gain access to our upcoming 2024 Annual Outlook piece, simply start a one-month trial to Bespoke Premium for $1.  If you sign up now, you’ll immediately have access to all of Bespoke’s premium research, and you’ll receive our 2024 Annual Outlook piece when it’s published next week.

Fixed Income Weekly — 12/13/23

Searching for ways to better understand the fixed income space or looking for actionable ideas in this asset class?  Bespoke’s Fixed Income Weekly provides an update on rates and credit each week.  We start off with a fresh piece of analysis driven by what’s in the headlines or driving the market in a given week.  We then provide charts of how US Treasury futures and rates are trading, before moving on to a summary of recent fixed-income ETF performance, short-term interest rates including money market funds, and a trade idea.  We summarize changes and recent developments for a variety of yield curves (UST, bund, Eurodollar, US breakeven inflation, and Bespoke’s Global Yield Curve) before finishing with a review of recent UST yield curve changes, spread changes for major credit products and international bonds, and 1-year return profiles for a cross-section of the fixed income world.

Our Fixed Income Weekly helps investors stay on top of fixed-income markets and gain new perspectives on the developments in interest rates.  You can sign up for a Bespoke research trial below to see this week’s report and everything else Bespoke publishes for the next two weeks!

Click here and start a 14-day free trial to Bespoke Institutional to see our newest Fixed Income Weekly now!

Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 12/13/23 – Mastermind

See what’s driving market performance around the world in today’s Morning Lineup.  Bespoke’s Morning Lineup is the best way to start your trading day.  Read it now by starting a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium.  CLICK HERE to learn more and start your trial.

“Just because you make a good plan, doesn’t mean that’s what’s gonna happen.” – Taylor Swift

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup.  Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

After a cruel summer sell-off that kicked off in August and all but erased the enchanted rally that spanned the months of May, June, and July, the market found itself in a delicate position in late October as the uptrend from the bear market lows in 2022 that we all remembered all too well were being tested.  Right around Halloween, all bulls could think was, is it over now?

With the start of November, the market found some daylight, and despite the death by a thousand cuts of a strong dollar, higher oil prices, and rising rates in the prior weeks, bulls were able to shake it off in dramatic style and make it out of the woods from the red on hopes that the great war between the Fed and inflation was nearing a truce.  It’s far from a love story, but as long as neither side acts up again, the bad blood between them has been set aside.  Based on where futures are trading this morning, the S&P 500 Total Return Index will open at an all-time high, and if the rally keeps up, Fed Chair Powell will make the full transition from an anti-hero to mastermind in the eyes of the public.  Never in most investors’ wildest dreams would they have thought we would be back to December feeling safe and sound and not far from all-time highs with nothing but blank space above.  Were you ready for it?

This morning, it’s a subdued tone on the futures market as the market awaits the FOMC decision at 2 PM.  PPI for November was just released and the results were generally weaker across the board. On a year/year basis, headline PPI dropped back down to 2.0%. The reaction from futures has been modestly positive, but how we finish will all depend on the Fed at 2 PM and Powell’s press conference at 2:30.

It hasn’t been the best-performing sector since the S&P 500 late-October low, but the 14.2% gain in the Industrials sector since the 10/27 close puts it modestly ahead of the S&P 500’s gain of 12.8%.  As shown in the chart below, the rally puts the sector not only within 1% of its 52-week high but also its all-time high from August 1st.

Along with the steep rally, the Industrials sector is also on the verge of a golden cross formation where its 50-day moving average (DMA) crosses above the 200-DMA as both are rising.  Technicians consider these patterns to be positive, but as we have pointed out in the past, returns for other indices and sectors following their own golden crosses have been mixed.

Sign up for a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to continue reading more of today’s macro analysis.

The Closer – Low Volatility, Fed Ahead, CPI Review – 12/12/23

Log-in here if you’re a member with access to the Closer.

Looking for deeper insight into markets? In tonight’s Closer sent to Bespoke Institutional clients, we begin with a look at the drop in volatility and a preview of tomorrow’s Fed day (pages 1 – 3).  We then dive into the latest CPI data (pages 4 and 5) before turning over to a look at the stocks most positively and negatively correlated with rates (page 6). We finish with a recap of today’s solid 30 year bond reopening (page 7).

See today’s full post-market Closer and everything else Bespoke publishes by starting a 14-day trial to Bespoke Institutional today!

Inflation Still Moving in the Right Direction

This morning’s Consumer Price Index for November was mostly in line with expectations (although the headline reading was slightly higher than expected), and the lack of any meaningful surprises has allowed the market to continue with what has lately been the path of least resistance, which has been higher. The report also showed that the most rapid leg of disinflation is most likely behind us, and while that could lead some to believe that the road ahead will be a slog, that isn’t necessarily the case.

For starters, the focus of monthly inflation reports lately has been in Core CPI (ex-food and energy). After peaking at 6.6% in June 2022, the November year/year reading came in at 4.0% for the second month in a row.

The chart below shows the historical 12-month rate of change in the y/y core CPI.  Over the last 12 months, that rate of increase has declined by two full percentage points, and outside of the prior two months, that is one of the sharpest declines since the early 1980s.  In other words, the 12-month rate of change is still declining, but the pace of decline is slowing.

November’s streak also ended what has been a monumental streak of monthly declines in the y/y core CPI reading. At seven months in October, it was the second longest streak on record, trailing only the ten-month streak of declines ending in December 1975.

Understandably, the end of the streak of declines along with the slowing rate of decline in the y/y core CPI reading could lead one to think that inflation levels are plateauing at a higher level.  However, a look at the trend of monthly prints in core CPI shows a potential tailwind in the months ahead.  The chart below shows the monthly change in core CPI over the last 24 months. While it hasn’t exactly been linear, the trend is lower.  In the twelve months from December 2021 through November 2022, eight out of twelve monthly prints were 0.5% or above, but in the last twelve months, only one print has been 0.5%.

Just looking at the last year (shaded area in chart) it’s a similar trend.  From December 2022 through May 2022, every monthly print was 0.4% or above, but in the most recent six months, every print has been 0.3% or below.  If just the trend of the last six months remains in place, for the next six months the y/y reading will be replacing monthly prints of 0.4% or more with prints of 0.3% or less which should help to keep the trend of disinflation going.

Small Business Sentiment Mixed Under the Hood

The NFIB unveiled its latest look at small business sentiment early this morning. The headline number remains in the bottom decile of its historical range, falling 0.1 points to 90.6 in November. That is compared to expectations which called for the number to be unchanged last month.

Across the categories factoring into the index, breadth was mixed in November with four categories falling, four rising, and one unchanged.  Like the headline number, many categories are also in the bottom few percentiles of their respective historical ranges, albeit with some exceptions like robust readings in plans to increase employment, current inventories, and job openings hard to fill.

As we discussed in our Morning Lineup, combining the report’s readings on employment shows some rebounding conditions for labor markets over the past few months.  Looking more closely, though, it is hard to say labor market conditions are materially accelerating.  As shown, hiring plans have risen, but on net more companies are reporting negative employment changes.  In a similar vein, compensation plans have risen sharply including a six point jump month over month in November (the largest one month increase since last October and the third largest on record), even though actual changes to compensation have been flat. Meanwhile, fewer businesses are reporting job openings are hard to fill. Small businesses are showing labor conditions have cooled over the past couple of years but are far from weak as any more recent improvements have been from plans rather than observed changes.

Similarly, sales expectations rebounded in November, contrary to a flat reading on actual sales and earnings changes. Perhaps most importantly, the share of businesses reporting higher prices has fallen down to 25,  matching the July low.  In combination with the higher reading on sales expectations, that likely helped the number of firms reporting now as a good time to expand.

Looking at the reverse, of those reporting now as not a good time to expand, the single biggest reason given for such sentiment was economic conditions.  That is typically the most widely cited reason historically followed by political climate (the NFIB has a tendency to be sensitive to politics, namely which party holds the presidency), but for the first time in at least a decade, financial conditions and interest rates earned the number two spot.  As shown below, the number of firms reporting that rates are holding them back from expanding has risen steadily since the current tightening cycle began.

As mentioned previously, actual earnings changes saw no improvement in November and are sitting near historically weak levels.  As for the reasons given for lower earnings, increased costs remain a key reason, but November also saw a significant jump in those reporting sales volumes as a problem.  In other words, inflation and weaker demand appear to be weighing on small business earnings.

Despite the burden of interest rates and expectations for credit conditions sitting at the lowest levels in over a decade, small businesses have actually increased capital expenditures dramatically to a new post-pandemic high. However, that is counter to capital expenditure plans, which have fallen in the past few months, and inventories showing drawdowns.

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