Corporate America is moving on from inflation, just like the Fed

Fewer S&P 500 companies are mentioning high prices during earnings calls as the Fed readies its first rate cut.

Good morning! Retail sales data for August will release at 8:15 a.m. ET, marking the final key data release before we witness the Fed’s first rate cut in four years on Wednesday.

Huge couple days ahead — let's dive in.

Today’s letter is brought to you by Public!

If you’ve been paying attention to the Fed's latest movements, you know that we're in a pivotal moment. Bond yields are currently at a multi-year high, but the Fed could cut rates as soon as September. 

That makes now a window of opportunity. 

At Public.com, you can take advantage of today’s high yields with a Bond Account. It’s simple — add cash and invest in a diversified portfolio of corporate bonds.

The best part? You can lock in a 7% yield, and keep it, regardless of the Fed’s rate decisions.

Inflation chatter is cooling with inflation

Priorities continue to shift for the biggest companies in the US.

In the second quarter, the number of S&P 500 names mentioning “inflation” on an earnings call declined 21% compared to a year ago, according to FactSet. Compared to the same quarter in 2022 — when inflation peaked at a historic 9% — company mentions are down 42%.

In total, 235 companies cited the term in the most recent quarter, marking the second-lowest number in three years. 

As the chart from FactSet illustrates, the drop in chatter has tracked the annualized inflation rate, which has cooled for five months in a row to hit 2.5% in August.

While this isn’t a perfect indicator, it does signal that Wall Street’s concerns around high prices are tempering. 

This trend also mirrors how the Federal Reserve has moved inflation lower on its priority list over recent months. 

As policymakers ready their first cut in four years, it’s no secret that they are now focused on the labor market more than price stability.

Jerome Powell & Co. have said as much, and a slate of recent data have backed up that thinking. 

The unemployment rate hovers at 4.2% and job growth has slowed more than anticipated, particularly when factoring in the government’s steep data revisions.

All this has teed up a rate cut for Wednesday but uncertainty remains high.

As of Tuesday at 5 a.m. ET, markets see 67% odds for a jumbo 50-basis-point cut, CME data shows.

CME Fed rate cut odds

Those odds have more than doubled since one week ago even though we haven’t seen any new economic data.

“We sense markets may be pushing the pricing for tomorrow’s FOMC rate cut closer to 50bp in an attempt to influence the Fed decision, which is likely to be a very close one,” wrote ING economists in a note this morning.

The ING team does narrowly favor a quarter-point move, though they acknowledged it’s possible that the market will influence the Fed into taking a bigger swing.

Generally, the Fed does not act on a whim. Since the 2008 financial crisis, policymakers have made a point to avoid surprises.

That’s what makes Wednesday’s decision so unusual. Whether the central bank announces a small or big rate cut will deliver some degree of shock.

“Fed Chair Powell has his work cut out for him at this week’s post-meeting press conference if he doesn’t want to spook markets or look out of touch with their views of current economic conditions,” said DataTrek Research co-founders Nicholas Colas and Jessica Rabe.

Thoughts or feedback? Hit reply to this email or let me know on X @philrosenn.

Stock market outlook investors Fed Rate Cut

Elsewhere:

📊 The Dow hit a new record high. A 6% rally for Intel stock helped fuel those gains. Other tech names including Apple moved lower, though, dragging the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite down 0.5%. Notably, the S&P 500’s equal-weighted index hit an all-time high. (Yahoo Finance)

🎌Don’t forget the Bank of Japan. The Fed isn’t the only central bank plotting its next move. Japanese policymakers could surprise markets with an interest-rate increase at its next meeting on September 20. No move is expected, but there’s not exactly certaintyn. Either way, more volatility could hit global markets. (Barron’s)

📉 Shares of Tupperware Brands crashed 50%. The company is preparing to file bankruptcy after a multi-year effort to revive the business. It’s been struggling to manage over $700 million in debt, and executives have cautioned for years that things could quickly go belly-up. (Bloomberg)

Rapid-fire:

  • Larry Ellison dethroned Jeff Bezos as the world’s second-richest man thanks to Oracle’s stock surge (CNBC)

  • The White House awarded Intel up to $3 billion for chip production related to national security (Reuters)

  • Boeing’s employee strike could cost the company $100 million or more in daily revenue (Yahoo Finance)

  • The Fed’s rate cut will impact new-car loans, home prices and more — but policy effects won’t hit immediately (Business Insider)

  • Starbucks stock dipped after its head of North America, Michael Conway, plans to retire after taking the job earlier this year (Bloomberg)

  • Amazon’s CEO intends to slash management layers and put an end to work-from-home (Bloomberg)

Last thing:

Interested in advertising in Opening Bell Daily? Email [email protected]

Public.com Disclosures:

*5.1% APY as of 7.18.24. Rate variable and subject to change.

Paid endorsement for Open to the Public Investing, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC. All investing involves the risk of loss, including loss of principal.
Brokerage services for US-listed, registered securities, options and bonds in a self-directed account and the high-yield account are offered by Open to the Public Investing, Inc. Cryptocurrency trading services are offered by Bakkt Crypto Solutions, LLC (NMLS ID 1828849), which is licensed to engage in virtual currency business activity by the NYSDFS. Banking services are offered by Jiko Bank, a division of Mid-Central National Bank. Securities investments: Not FDIC Insured; No Bank Guarantee; May Lose Value. Securities in your account are protected up to $500,000. For details: www.sipc.org. See public.com/#disclosures-main 

Alpha is an experiment available to US members only, brought to you by Public Holdings, Inc. (“Public”). Alpha is an artificial intelligence investment exploration tool powered by GPT-4, a generative large language model offered by OpenAI. Any output generated by Alpha is not and should not be construed as investment research, investment advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell a security, nor should any output serve as the basis for any investment decisions. Alpha output is provided “as is” and Public makes no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy, completeness, quality, timeliness, or any other characteristic of Alpha output. We strongly recommend that you independently evaluate and verify the accuracy of any Alpha output for your use case. Additional disclosures at https://public.com/alpha

Reply

or to participate.