The Market's Fate Lies in Fed Hands
"The best-laid schemes o' mice an' men gang aft agley"
-- Robert Burns
A Tour of Markets
The first and most important market is inflation expectations, as measured by the yield spread between ordinary 10-year notes and TIPS. This break-even rate of inflation rose during the rate-cut era, but paused and actually began to decline as the Federal Reserve tightened and the yield curve flattened. From Wednesday to Friday, it increased from 2.3711% to 2.4602%.The Yield Curve
The yield curve, as measured by the spread between 10-year and two-year Treasury notes, steepened prior to April 2004 under the weight of monetary ease. Once the Federal Reserve began to tighten, the curve narrowed as long-rates fell slightly and the two-year yield rose significantly. If higher crude oil prices contributed to increased inflationary expectations and a steeper yield curve, it was hardly apparent. It was this bullish flattening of the yield curve, the drop in long-term rates, that kept the economy perking along -- the famous "conundrum." No more: The two-10 segment of the curve steepened from 11.523 basis points on Monday to 28.173 basis points on Friday.The Euro
If the Federal Reserve is going to create more dollars, then each dollar should be worth less in the absence of increased domestic demand. The euro strengthened significantly against the dollar between September 2001 and April 2004, but then leveled off into a totally random relationship to crude oil thereafter. The euro jumped from 1.2234 on Monday to 1.2531 on Friday.U.S. Stocks
Certain business-oriented television networks keep flashing the current price of crude oil in the "bug" in the lower-right-hand corner of the screen. The implication, extant for more than a year now, is crude oil prices are so critical for stocks that constant monitoring is a good idea. That may have been true between September 2001 and April 2004, when the Russell 3000 fell as crude oil prices rose, but that certainly has not been true since. From April 2004 onward, the Russell 3000 index has risen despite (because of?) higher crude oil prices. The index rose again last week, with the biggest portion of that gain, from 698.97 to 706.84, coming on Wednesday, the day when the magnitude of the Katrina catastrophe really became apparent.High-Yield Bonds
Now let's turn to a subject addressed last week, stress in the corporate bond market. If higher crude oil prices pinch consumer spending and increase everyone's cost of doing business -- two reasonable assertions -- then they should also lower the credit quality of the most vulnerable firms. Nice theory, but there's no evidence in support of it: The option-adjusted spread (OAS, a measure of a bond's risk) of the Merrill Lynch High Yield Master Index fell consistently between September 2001 and April 2004, and then declined slightly into last week even as crude oil prices shot higher and short-term rates rose. The measure rose 33 basis points, or nearly 10%, last week.- Loading Comments...
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| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,318.16 | 1,091.38 | 2,146.04 | 33.56 |
Oil *
77.53
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DOWN
14.28
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DOWN
3.52
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DOWN
10.78
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UP
0.07
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10 Yr
3.36%
SPDR Gold
112.94
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-0.14%
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-0.32%
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-0.50%
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+0.21%
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