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Morning Commentary

New Sheriff In Town

By Charles Payne, CEO & Principal Analyst
3/22/2018 9:30 AM

Well, there’s a new sheriff in town, and his name is Jerome Powell.  The new Federal Reserve Chairman held a solid press meeting, opening his bottle of water before he commenced to taking questions.

He was mostly straightforward, although he became visibly irked over persistent questions over a potential trade war with China, which he says that it poses no threat to the Fed’s economic outlook, even though a few members brought up the topic.

These participants stated that business folks have articulated concerns over a potential trade war but reiterated the trade policy isn’t within their purview.

Economy Rolling Along

Although the Fed increased its economic outlook for a range of metrics, it didn’t change its inflation estimate, which keeps the Goldilocks scenario in place.

The Fed now sees a stronger Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth and lower unemployment rate this year through 2020.  All these changes coincide with the only fractional change in the headline and core Personal Consumer Expenditure (PCE) inflation projections.

Economic Projections

2018

2019

2020

GDP

Current

2.7

2.4

2.0

December 

2.5

2.1

2.0

Unemployment

Current

3.8

3.6

3.6

December 

3.9

3.9

4.0

PCE Inflation

Current

1.9

2.0

2.1

December 

1.9

2.0

2.0

Core PCE Inflation

Current

1.9

2.1

2.1

December 

1.9

2.0

2.0

 

Where Rates Go From Here?

Still, the biggest question going into Powell’s first Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) gathering remained with the answers, because he didn’t give investors a bullseye:

Conclusion

The market on Wednesday was confused enough to sell stocks into the close, but I don’t think that’s a big deal.  It’s true this new sheriff has to get his posse on the same page, but that will happen over time.

I like that Powell didn’t take the bait on potential tariffs, which could be announced today. His comment that it won’t change the Fed’s outlook angered the political class but is important for investors that have been selling on recent headlines.

The bottom line, for now, is the U.S. economy is on fire and the Fed will try it’s best not to be too aggressive.  As for the idea, more press conferences mean more rate hikes. There have been a lot of rate hikes without press conferences, and that’s a narrative I do not subscribe to.

Message of the Market

There was intriguing action:

I don’t put much into the two hours of trading at the conclusion of the FOMC gathering; the fact the Dow couldn’t hold onto a two-hundred-point rally hurts less, but this isn’t a market that can afford to keep losing midday bumps.

Today’s Session

So, Wall Street slept on the Fed’s decision, and Powell’s press conference, and decided there might be four rate hikes this year, and that’s enough to sell stocks.  I don’t agree four hikes should be baked into our assumptions, but it was interesting when Powell suggested the Fed wouldn’t interrupt asset sells to deal with changes in economic conditions.

There are also worries about pushing back against China, even as everyone agrees they are ripping off America. 

Once again, investors are going to have to understand the fundamentals and value proposition of their holdings and be ready to buy weakness.   I have a list and will continue to refine it – these are the moments that create opportunities that allow investors to beat the market and “experts” big time.  

If you are not on our Hotline service, contact your account representative or email info@wstreet.com to get started today. 


Comments
IF TRUMP SIGNS THE NEW OMNIBUS SPENDING BILL THE MARKET IS TOAST

ERNEST REMUS on 3/22/2018 9:57:53 AM
Not sure the market is toast but all hope would fade for real reforms and spending restraints. Wall Street actually loves the bill but the clock speeds up a cataclysmic implosion from debt. But the lack of willpower among GOP to push back and do the will of voters is alarming. CP

Charles Payne on 3/22/2018 10:05:43 AM
90% of the Congress should be FIRED immediately! The stewardship of our fiscal condition is already appalling and this , if signed, is clearly malfeasance and worthy of recalls to the Senate, House and Executive branch!

garro on 3/22/2018 11:33:59 AM
The excessive spending by Congress reminds me of the online video by Felonious Monk where he talks about how inane it is that the Federal government cannot "balance their own checkbook" and continues to comment, "How is it possible to keep hitting and EXCEEDING the debt ceiling. They would have taken MY credit card away...a long TIME ago if I did this!" The GOP has the voting power to RESIST such spending increases and yet "The Party In Power" is just rolling over, time and again. Charles, you KNOW this cannot CONTINUE in spite of the rosy predictions that increased manufacturing and employment with provide an "offset" to such spending. I must agree with garro that members of the Senate and House will ONLY get the "message about fiscal responsibility" when "We the people...." let them KNOW how we feel....at the ballot box.

James Warlin on 3/22/2018 12:21:41 PM
Trump voters will lose all faith in him if he doesn't veto this bill. It will be Trump that is toasted.

Emery Haggin on 3/22/2018 12:34:30 PM
I think voters know Congress on both sides of the aisle is corrupt, that spending bill represents hundreds of special interests. It will be Trump that is toast as he was elected to "clean the swamp."

Kat Makinney on 3/22/2018 2:13:10 PM
 

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