Wall Street Week Ahead: Jobs data could spur Fed action on stimulus
Wall Street Week Ahead: Jobs data could spur Fed action on stimulus
By Richard Leong
NEW YORK |
Sat Aug 31, 2013 1:17am EDT
(Reuters) - Wall Street is bracing for a wave of economic reports next
week, including the August jobs report, which might prove decisive in
determining whether the economy is strong enough for the Federal Reserve to dial back its bond purchases in mid-September.
Anxiety about the Fed possibly reducing its
$85 billion monthly stimulus, also known as QE3, has hurt the stock
market, which recorded its steepest monthly fall since May 2012.
But
the stock market's greater anxiety, which has developed in recent
weeks, is that the Fed will press ahead with a reduction in support,
even as the economy
remains fragile. The recent data has failed to provide evidence of the
convincing growth the Fed says it wants to see. Until then, stocks will benefit from the cheap money resulting from the Fed's bond purchases.
"Next
week's data should make or break the September expectations," said Mike
O'Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading in Greenwich,
Connecticut.
A strong jobs report
will likely reinforce the view the Fed will opt to decrease its bond
purchases at its September 17-18 meeting, while a weak one would do the
opposite, analysts said.
"From a real economy perspective, QE3 has done very little. From a financial markets
perspective, it has had a major influence. If it is really not helping
the real economy beyond pushing financial assets higher, there is no
point in continuing the risk of increasing the balance sheet," said
O'Rourke.
For the month, the Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 3.1 percent in August; the Dow Jones industrial average lost 4.4 percent and the Nasdaq slipped 1 percent. .N
Speculation
on the timing of Fed action has triggered a bond market sell-off that
sent mortgage rates to two-year highs. The surge in home borrowing costs
this summer has shown signs of slowing the housing recovery. Analysts
also are watching if the higher rates have discouraged employers from
adding workers.
Economists polled
by Reuters forecast domestic employers likely hired 180,000 workers in
August, more than 162,000 in July, while the jobless rate likely held
steady at 7.4 percent, which is a four-year low.
Deutsche
Bank economists said that if the payrolls figure exceeds 190,000 and
the unemployment rate falls to 7.3 percent, they expect the Fed will
start cutting bond purchases. "August employment would have to
meaningfully disappoint for the Fed to back away from the timetable
presented by Chairman Bernanke in the June post-meeting press
conference," they wrote.
Prior to
the payrolls data on Friday, traders will face a heavy schedule of
economic releases after the three-day holiday weekend. They include the
latest readings on vehicle sales and national factory and service
activities. <ECI/US>
U.S. financial markets will close on Monday for the Labor Day holiday.
Investors are watching the tense situation between the West and Syria. Signs of a U.S.-led military strike against Syria after chemical weapons were used to kill civilians could hurt the appetite for stocks globally.
Traders pared expectations on such a move after the British parliament voted against a military strike. But France
said it supported punishing the Syrian government for the attack on
civilians. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Friday the
chemical weapons attack in Damascus last week killed more than 1,400
people.
Despite the sharp moves in
equities due to the Syrian unrest, "we still expect the market to stop
short of a 10 percent decline," said Mike Dueker, head economist for
North America at Russell Investments in Seattle.
Light
volume in late summer likely exaggerated August's stock decline,
analysts said. The uncertainty has also boosted measures of volatility.
The CBOE Volatility Index .VIX rose above 17 on Friday, a two-month
high.
Bonds, in comparison, posted
small losses. They were poised to lose 0.54 percent in August, according
to Barclays' Aggregate bond index that tracks U.S. investment-grade
debt returns.
SHAKY SEPTEMBER
While
Syria and economic data will be next week's main concerns, other
developments, such as President Barack Obama's nominee to succeed Ben
Bernanke as Fed chief and another possible showdown between Obama and
congressional Republicans over the federal debt might keep investors on
edge, analysts said.
"There is no
doubt that September is teed up for a tsunami of data coming at us and
headlines coming at us," said David Lyon, investment specialist at JP
Morgan Private Bank in San Francisco, California, which manages $910
billion in assets.
"So the market
will look at September and really start to find its footing based on
some of the economic data that comes out as well as clarity around some
of these policy decisions at the central bank level or the geopolitical
level," he said
History might complicate that view.
September
has traditionally been the worst month for stocks, with an average 0.6
percent decline in the S&P 500 index over the past 62 years,
although it rose 2.4 percent last September.
This
September marks a milestone - the five-year anniversary of the global
credit meltdown during which Wall Street witnessed the downfall of
Lehman Brothers, the sale of Merrill Lynch, the near-demise of insurance
giant AIG.
In that turbulent September 2008, the market tumbled 9.1 percent.
(Additional reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak and Rodrigo Campos; Editing by Kenneth Barry)
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