Home » today » Business » Inflation showed signs of cooling one after another, and the four major indexes opened higher | Anue Juheng – US stocks

Inflation showed signs of cooling one after another, and the four major indexes opened higher | Anue Juheng – US stocks

Following the decline in the annual growth rate of the U.S. consumer price index (CPI) in July yesterday, the annual growth rate of the producer price index (PPI) announced on Thursday (11th) also declined, of which the monthly growth rate of PPI appeared The negative growth for the first time in two years will further bring good news for inflation, and encourage the four major U.S. stock indexes to open higher and higher.

Before the deadline,Dow Jones Industrial Averageup nearly 250 points or nearly 0.75%,Nasdaq Composite Indexrose more than 100 points or nearly 0.8%,S&P 500 Indexrose nearly 0.8%,Philadelphia SemiconductorThe index rose more than 1.5 percent.

According to data released by the U.S. Department of Labor, PPI increased by 9.8% in July, lower than market expectations of 10.4% and 11.3% in June; the monthly growth rate of PPI in July was negative by 0.5%, market expectations were 0.2%, and the previous value was revised. The latter was 1%, the first negative value since April 2020.

Core PPI unexpectedly turned negative for the first time in more than two years in July, largely reflecting lower energy costs and representing a welcome easing of inflationary pressures.

It is worth noting that PPI has exceeded CPI for 19 consecutive months, which means that US companies are still facing huge pressure on profit margins.

In addition, the number of people who received initial unemployment benefits last week reported on the same day was 262,000, an increase of 14,000 from the previously revised 248,000, a two-week increase in a row, slightly lower than the market expectation of 263,000, and close to the number since November last year. New highs, revealing a continued slowdown in the job market.

In terms of monetary policy, Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari still maintains his view that the federal funds rate will rise to 3.9% by the end of this year and 4.4% by the end of next year.

Chicago Federal Reserve Bank President Charles Evans said that July’s CPI did not accelerate any more and was the first “positive” inflation data since the Fed started raising interest rates, but he believed that the Fed was trying to suppress inflation. Still need to continue to raise interest rates. He supports interest rates rising to 3.25-3.50% by the end of this year and 3.75-4.0% by the end of next year.

San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said it was too early to declare victory over inflation. She sees interest rates rising to 3.5% by the end of the year, while not ruling out a three-point rate hike at the Federal Reserve’s September meeting.

On the energy front, the International Energy Agency (IEA) raised its forecast for demand growth this year. Soaring natural gas prices and heat waves prompted industrial and power generation companies to switch fuel to oil, and crude oil prices rose on the news. By contrast, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) forecasts a surplus in the global oil market this season.

cryptocurrencyaspect,Ethereum 2.0 has reached the final stage, and the third test chain has been tested and merged. Once completed, all upgrade preparations are complete, and incentivesetherPrices recovered to a two-month high. Before the deadline, according to CoinGecko data,ether It was up 3.8 percent in 24 hours at $1,905.25.

As of 21:00 on Thursday (11th) Taipei time:
S&P 500 Index Line Chart (Graphic: Juheng.com)
Stocks in focus:

Sonos(I AM-US) fell 22.44% to $17.66 a share in premarket trading

Smart speaker maker Sonos announced third-quarter earnings before the market. Affected by U.S. dollar exchange losses and inflation, consumer sentiment was affected. Revenue fell 1.8% year-on-year to $371 million, far below market expectations of $420 million. Earnings per share Reported $0.19, better than market expectations of $0.06. Sonos shares tumbled more than 20% in premarket trading.

Sonos also lowered its full-year financial forecast, predicting annual revenue of $1.73 billion to $1.76 billion, compared with a previous estimate of $1.95 billion to $2 billion, far below Wall Street’s forecast of $1.96 billion. In addition, Sonos previously announced that it will extend its timeframe to achieve its goals of $2.5 billion in annual revenue, 45-47% gross margin and 15-18% adjusted EBITDA margin beyond 2024.

Six Flags(SIX-US) fell 21.93% to $20.15 per share in early trade

U.S. theme park maker Six Flags reported bleak financial results for the last quarter before the market, with revenue and profit far below Wall Street analysts’ expectations, with revenue falling by more than 20%, and the stock price slumping nearly 13% before the market.

Bumble(BMBL-US) rose 0.52% to $34.67 a share in early trade

Dating app Bumble lowered its full-year revenue forecast, sending its shares down nearly 9 percent in premarket trading. In addition, Bumble is also facing challenges from Tinder parent company Match Group (MTCH-US), and its popular dating app Badoo in Western Europe was also affected by the Russian-Ukrainian war.

Today’s key economic data:
  • The U.S. PPI annual growth rate in July was 9.8%, expected 10.4%, and the previous value was 11.3%
  • US July PPI monthly growth rate reported -0.5%, expected 0.2%, the previous value of 1%
  • The annual growth rate of US core PPI in July was 7.6%, expected 7.6%, and the previous value was 8.4%
  • The monthly growth rate of core PPI in the United States in July was 0.2%, expected 0.4%, and the previous value was 0.4%
  • The number of Americans receiving unemployment benefits last week reported 262,000, expected 263,000, the previous value of 248,000
  • The number of people receiving unemployment benefits in the United States last week reported 1.428 million, expected 1.407 million, and the previous value of 1.42 million
Wall Street Analysis:

Lewis Grant, head of global equities at Federated Hermes, said that despite the Fed’s hawkish speeches, the recent news that inflation has cooled gave investors hope that the pace of the Fed’s rate hikes will slow down, and the long-debated soft landing does not appear to be there. Investors expected so difficult to achieve.

Oanda senior market analyst Craig Erlam said that with the good news from the US inflation data calming the entire market, investor sentiment must be more optimistic.


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