Zero rate cuts by the Fed this year ‘definitely on the table,’ Matt Higgins of RSE Ventures says
The Federal Reserve is unlikely to cut rates thrice this year, Matt Higgins, CEO and co-founder of RSE Ventures, said Thursday on CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia,” in a view at odds with Fed signals and market expectations.
No rate cuts were “definitely on the table,” with one cut most likely later in the year, he added.
The Federal Reserve signaled Wednesday that it would cut interest rate three times in 2024 while holding them steady at its latest meeting.
“If unemployment does not start to pick up, and you don’t see some more downward pressure on core inflation, I’m not sure there are going to be three rate cuts in the second half of this year,” Higgins said.
– Dylan Butts
Gold prices hit a new record — market watchers expect rally to continue
Spot gold hit over $2,200 per ounce Thursday, notching a new high after the U.S. Federal Reserve reaffirmed plans for three rate cuts this year. And there’s more room for bullion to rally.
Prices could rise to $2,300 per ounce in the second half of 2024, especially against the backdrop of expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve could cut rates in the second half of 2024, Aakash Doshi, Citi’s North America head of commodities research, told CNBC.
State Street’s APAC Gold Strategist Robin Tsui wrote in a March 21 note that he anticipates gold could hit $2,400 per ounce once the Fed starts to pivot.
—Lee Ying Shan
Nikkei 225 hits new record high as business sentiment improves, exports strengthen
Japan’s Nikkei 225 index hit a new record on Wednesday, rising as much as 40,642.89 and surpassing its all-time closing high of 40,109.23.
The rally was powered by consumer cyclicals and industrial stocks, and also came on the back an improved business sentiment in Japan, as well as better exports data for February.
The top gainer on the index was semiconductor firm Sumco Corp which gained 5.42%, followed by financial technology firm Rakuten Group, which was up 3.65%.
New Zealand unexpectedly slips into technical recession as economy contracts 0.1%
New Zealand slipped into a technical recession last year as the country’s gross domestic product contracted by 0.1% in the fourth quarter of 2023 compared to the quarter before.
This was a surprise contraction as economists polled by Reuters had expected 0.1% growth.
The contraction followed a 0.3% fall in GDP in the quarter ending September 2023, which meant that the country has experienced two successive quarters of contraction — the commonly accepted definition of a technical recession.
On a year-on-year basis, GDP in New Zealand expanded 0.6%, slowing from the 1.3% growth recorded in the third quarter.
— Lim Hui Jie
Fundstrat’s Tom Lee sees Russell 2000 rising 50% in 2024
The Russell 2000 popped nearly 2% on Wednesday for its best day in more than a month – and Fundstrat Global Advisors’ Tom Lee thinks the small-cap benchmark has even higher to go.
On a relative value basis, small caps are back to where they were in 1999, which was “a launch point for a 12-year outperformance period,” Lee, head of research at Fundstrat, said on CNBC’s “Last Call.”
“I think that means with the Fed doing a dovish pause and CEOs getting more confident, that means M&A and IPOs and people looking at other sectors – I do think the Russell can rise 50% this year,” he said. Indeed, the Federal Reserve held rates steady and kept to its forecast of three rate cuts in 2024 at the conclusion of its March meeting on Wednesday, lifting the major averages to record closes.
An array of factors could boost the Russell 2000 this year, he added, noting that companies that earn money in the small-cap index are trading around 11 times earnings, “a huge PE story, along with a price-to-book story.” The benchmark also has a big biotech weight, and the financial companies within the Russell 2000 are likely to benefit once the Fed begins cutting rates, he said.
“I think the Russell 2000 represents… the best of things that happen when the Fed starts cutting,” Lee said.
–Darla Mercado
Reddit prices IPO at $34 per share
Reddit priced its initial public offering at $34 per share.
That number is at the top of the expected range of between $31 and $34. It values the social media company at around $6.5 billion.
Reddit will make its public market debut Thursday under the ticker “RDDT.”
— Alex Harring, Leslie Picker, Jonathan Vanian
Corporate buybacks of stock are surging, Bank of America says
It’s not just institutional and individual investors pushing stock prices higher. Last week was huge for corporate buybacks of stock too, Bank of America equity and quantitative strategists including Savita Subramanian said in a note out Tuesday.
Buyback trends are “hitting multi-year highs,” BofA noted, with those conducted by the bank’s own corporate clients reaching the third highest weekly level ever in data going back to 2010.
The pace of repurchases is also “tracking above the typical seasonal levels at this time” of year for a second straight week, the strategists wrote. So far in 2024, buybacks as a percentage of the entire S&P 500 market capitalization have totaled 0.34% versus the 2023 high at the same time of year at 0.29%.
Buybacks over the past 52 weeks as a percentage of total market value are the highest since August 2020, during the first Covid pandemic summer, according to BofA.
— Scott Schnipper
Stocks head for winning week
Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., February 28, 2024.
Brendan Mcdermid | Reuters
With more than half of the trading week in the rearview mirror, the three major indexes are on track for gains.
The Nasdaq Composite has led the three higher this week, adding 2.5%. The Dow and S&P 500 were each up about 2.1%.
— Alex Harring
Big tech advance may be coming to an end, UBS warns
The big technology rally may be on “borrowed time,” according to UBS.
Strategist Jonathan Golub said the advances to Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft and Nvidia could be short-lived. While valuations are not an issue in this case, he said an end to these major gains for the “Big 6” stocks is becoming a question of when, not if.
“With earnings momentum rapidly decelerating for the Big 6, and the broader market trend improving, continued outperformance of these stocks—and the narrowness of market returns that it implies—becomes increasingly difficult,” Golub wrote in a note to clients Wednesday. “While upward revisions are currently supporting these companies, the deceleration in future profits cannot be ignored.”
Golub’s call comes amid a year of strength for the sector, with the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite up more than 9%.
— Alex Harring
See the stocks moving after hours
Micron offices in San Jose, California, US, on Thursday, Nov. 30, 2023.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images
These are some of the stocks posting notable moves in extended trading:
- Micron Technology — Shares popped 13% after the semiconductor company beat expectations on revenue and gave strong guidance for the measure. The company also posted earnings per share despite analysts forecasting a loss.
- Five Below — The value retailer tumbled 13% on weak fourth-quarter earnings and outlook for the current quarter and full year.
See the full list here.
— Alex Harring
Stock futures are higher
Stock futures traded modestly higher shortly after 6 p.m. ET.
Dow futures added 0.1%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.2% and 0.3%, respectively.
— Alex Harring