Wentz Weekly Insights
Stocks Finish 2023 Strong With Over 20% Gains
- Nikkei 225 (Japan) +28.24%
- Hang Seng (Hong Kong) -13.82%
- SSE Composite (Shanghai) -3.70%
- STOXX Europe 600 (Europe) +12.74%
- FTSE 100 (UK) +3.78%
- TSX Composite (Canada) +7.97%
- 2-year yield: down 17 basis points to 4.25%
- 10-year yield: unchanged at 3.88%
- 30-year yield: up 7 basis points to 4.03%
- Crude oil: -10.73% to $71.65/barrel
- Silver: +0.21% to $24.09/oz
- Copper: +2.10% to $3.89/lb
- Gold: +13.45% to $2,071.80/oz
- Dollar index: -2.11%
Week in Review:
Recent Economic Data
- Home prices continued to accelerate heading into the latter part of fall, according to the latest data from the S&P Case Shiller Home price index. The index shows home prices rose 0.6% in October for the ninth consecutive monthly increase, which comes after seven straight declines that ended calendar year 2022. Home prices are now up 4.8% from a year ago, up from the 4.0% 12-month rate from September, and are up 6.9% from the lows in January, and 46.8% from pre-pandemic levels. Detroit was the fastest growing market with a 8.1% annual gain with San Diego and New York the next two, while Portland still is the slowest with a 0.6% decline in prices. Cleveland area has seen a 6.4% increase in home prices over the past year.
- One of the main drivers of inflation, the supply of money – measures the amount of money circulating through the US economy, has seen a decline in recent months, but the latest data for November saw a slightly uptick in the money supply. The supply of money grew 0.2% in the month after declining 13 of the past 16 months. The money supply is down 3.0% from a year ago and down nearly $1 trillion from the highs July 2022, or 4.3%. Despite the decline, money supply is still up nearly 35% from pre-pandemic levels, one of the main sources of inflation, and with the record decline of 4.3%, that is more likely than not to lead to a decline in economic activity.
- For the week ended December 23, there were 218,000 new unemployment claims, which was up 12k from the prior week, with the four-week average relatively unchanged at 212,000. The number of continuing claims rose slightly to 1.875 million, with the four-week average down 12k to 1.865 million.
- Pending home sales were unchanged in November matching the lowest level since mid-2020, and down 5.2% from a year earlier, according to the pending home sales index by the National Association of Realtors. The number is based on signed contracts during the month, so gives us the most current look on buyers and does include signings when rates were coming down from a 23 year high they reached in October. The indicators on showings saw a “surge of interest” however.
- Mortgage rates fell for the ninth consecutive week, dropping from a 23 year high of nearly 8% late October, to the lowest since May. According to Freddie Mac’s mortgage survey, the average prime rate on a 30-year loan was 6.61% last week. The rate has ranged from 6.09% to 7.79% in 2023.
Other News
- Microsoft and OpenAI are being sued by the New York Times over copyright infringement. The NY Times claims the companies have illegally used content including millions of articles from the newspaper to train its AI models. NY Times said it first approached the companies in April to find a solution over their use of its intellectual property in the use of AI models, but all sides failed to reach a solution.
- Nvidia unveiled its new GPU, the GeForce RTX 4090D, that was designed specifically for China as a workaround the to export restrictions recently put in place on advanced chips. This is just two months after the restrictions went in place, which at that time Nvidia said it did not expect a “meaningful” impact on financial results.
- Mastercard SpendingPulse readings show retailers’ sales (includes in store and online) grew 3.1% for this year’s holiday shopping period which is measured November 1 to December 24. Subtract out higher prices from inflation and real, inflation adjusted, retail sales were flat at best.
The Week Ahead
After several weeks of quietness in the markets, we expect volatility to pick back up in the weeks ahead. The focus this holiday-shortened week will shift back to the labor market. There will be several data releases on the jobs market including job openings on Wednesday, which are expected to remain steady near a 2-year low of 8.750 million, jobless claims and the ADP payroll numbers on Thursday, and the Department of Labor’s employment report on Friday. Economist’s consensus estimate sees another 160,000 jobs added in December with the average wage up 3.9% in 2023. Other data releases include the PMI manufacturing index and construction spending on Tuesday, the ISM manufacturing index and 2023 vehicle sales on Wednesday, and factory orders and the non-manufacturing ISM index on Friday. In addition, the meeting minutes from the recent FOMC meeting in December will be released Wednesday afternoon. After a break in earnings reports from the holiday, several companies will release latest quarterly results this week including Conagra Brands and Walgreens on Thursday and Constellation Brands on Friday. There are a couple public appearances scheduled by Fed policymakers, but lighter than normal and occurring in the second half of the week.