Paid Dr Ed's Video Webcast 12/12/22 Dec 12, 2022 1 min read paid A few choice negative words about consumer spending prospects from a few high-profile bank CEOs tripped up the S&P 500 last week. Below is exclusive early access to Dr Ed's Webcast for paid members. This post and video will open to the public on a later date. Ed Yardeni
Paid The Economic Week Ahead: Dec. 12-16 Dec 11, 2022 1 min read paid All we want for Christmas is a lower-than-expected November CPI (Tue.) and a less hawkish press conference (Wed.) by Fed Chair Jerome Powell. The Santa Claus rally depends on this seasonally happy scenario. The week ahead starts with the NY Fed's November survey of consumer expectations (Mon.). The recent drop in gasoline prices should moderate inflationary expectations. November's NFIB small business survey (Tue.) should provide additional Ed Yardeni
Paid PPI Inflation Is Moderating Dec 10, 2022 1 min read paid On Friday, we learned that November’s headline PPI inflation rate rose 0.3% m/m, higher than the 0.2% expected, and October’s increase was revised up from 0.2% to 0.3%. The good news is that the y/y comparisons showed that the PPI final demand inflation rate peaked at 11.7% during March and fell to 7.4% during November, the lowest since May 2021. Ed Yardeni
Public Technicals Remain Bullish Dec 8, 2022 1 min read Jitters about a consumer-led recession over the past few days pushed the CBOE equities Put/Call Ratio up to 1.46 yesterday (chart). That's a very elevated reading and suggests that there is too much pessimism. It favors a yearend rally rather than a yearend crash. There is also still lots of bearishness in Investors Intelligence Bull/Bear Ratio. It rose to 1.34 this past week (chart) Ed Yardeni
Paid Fork In The Road Dec 7, 2022 1 min read paid It was another day of recession jitters in the stock market as the CEOs of Bank of America and Wells Fargo reported that they are seeing slowing consumer spending and borrowing. That may be so, but there wasn't any evidence of a slowdown in October's consumer credit data released by the Fed today. Total consumer credit rose $27.1 billion in October, up from a revised Ed Yardeni
Public Yearend Jitters Dec 6, 2022 2 min read The stock market has the jitters as investors worry that the economy may be too strong and too weak at the same time. Yesterday the S&P 500 fell because November's non-manufacturing purchasing managers index was stronger than expected (chart). Investors concluded that the economy may be too strong requiring the Fed to raise interest rates still higher, increasing the risk of a recession. Today, stock prices Ed Yardeni
Public Dr Ed's Video Webcast 12/5/22 Dec 5, 2022 1 min read We’ll be glad to put this year behind us—pessimism reigned as inflation raged, the Fed tightened, and investors revalued stocks downward. But the resultant bear market was a mild one as bear markets go. Below is exclusive early access to Dr Ed's Webcast for paid members. This post and video will open to the public on a later date. If it ended on October 12, as Ed Yardeni
Paid Feshbach's Market Call Dec 5, 2022 1 min read paid Before Friday, we had four excellent put/call ratios in a row and six out of the last 7 day excluding Friday, which was the first poor reading. The market also had a noticeable improvement in breadth on the latest rally. Ed Yardeni
Paid The Economic Week Ahead, Dec. 5-Dec. 9 Dec 4, 2022 1 min read paid It's always nice to get a break from the Federal Open Mouth Committee's chattering. The FOMC participants' blackout period started yesterday and will last through Friday, December 15. Ed Yardeni
Paid Calm Waters For Now Dec 3, 2022 2 min read paid The S&P 500 recovered nicely on Friday after it reacted badly to the morning's stronger-than-expected November payroll report, especially the higher-than-expected gain in wages. The knee-jerk reaction was that the end of the Fed's monetary tightening cycle would take longer to occur. But by the end of the day, the S&P 500 was down just 0.12% and remained above its 200-day Ed Yardeni
Public Soft Landing Dec 1, 2022 2 min read The bears disparaged yesterday's stock market rally claiming that Fed Chair Jerome Powell's speech at the Brookings Institution was hawkish and didn't justify the market's bullish spin. We believe that the bulls correctly perceive that inflation peaked this summer and were relieved to hear Powell say that the Fed might be willing to let inflation subside without pushing the economy into a Ed Yardeni
Public Moon Shot? Nov 30, 2022 2 min read Fed Chair Jerome Powell was a bit less hawkish today. He said he still thinks there is a "path to a soft or softish" landing for the economy. He also suggested that the next hike in the federal funds rate on December 14 is likely to be 50bps rather than 75bps. So stock prices exploded to the upside. The DJIA soared more than 735 points, or 2.2% Ed Yardeni