
1. Moving the Markets
Time flies by, as we all know. It was almost a year ago that stocks plunged amid worries regarding falling oil prices and the uncertainty about China’s economic growth. Well, a year has passed and not much has changed. The price of oil remains under $50 per barrel and China’s growth continues to slow.
At the moment, there is not a lot of market-moving info to get investors excited. Q2 earnings season (which better than expected, despite the S&P 500 suffering its fourth straight quarter of negative profit growth) is winding down. And there was only one key economic data point released today: Existing home sales, which disappointed, with sales down 3.2% in July to an annualized rate of 5.39 million. Economists were expecting sales at an annual rate of 5.5 million units, down from 5.57 million units in June.
Precious metals had a rough morning when one of the big players, possibly in need of raising cash, dumped $1.5 billion of gold futures contracts within a 10 minute period, which took the starch out of any upward momentum. Silver and gold miners joined in the misery and closed lower as well.
Wall Street is eagerly awaiting a key speech on monetary policy by Fed Chair Yellen on Friday at a closely watched central bankers meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Investors will be listening to any clues from Yellen regarding the timing of the next interest rate hike.
The Fed last hiked rates back in December, which was their first rate increase in nearly a decade and moved rates off of zero. Will the jawboning be just that or will an actual decision be made? My guess is that based on economic realities, the Fed is stuck between a rock and a hard place and can’t afford even a meager 0.25% rate hike.




