Stocks might ‘go nowhere’ for the rest of this year amid Fed uncertainty and US debt concerns, market vet says
The S&P 500 might be stuck in place for the rest of the year, Ed Yardeni says.
The market vet thinks no more Fed rate cuts are coming until 2025 as the economy stays strong.
US government debt will also continue to rise, limiting the Fed’s ability to cut rates, he said.
The stock market could be bumping up against a ceiling for now, market veteran Ed Yardeni said.
The longtime investor and president of Yardeni Research said he sees limited capacity for central bankers to cut interest rates, thanks to the strength of the US economy and a troubling outlook for the federal debt balance.
That means further policy easing may not come until 2025 — and the S&P 500 could stay stuck around 5,800 through the end of the year, he said in a recent note to clients.
That would imply less than a 1% gain for the benchmark index in the next two months.
Stocks have already been going “nowhere fast” since the Fed issued a jumbo-sized rate cut in September, Yardeni said. The S&P 500 has climbed 2% since the Fed’s last policy meeting, while the S&P 500 equal-weighted index has risen 3.8%.
“We expect that it might go nowhere fast over the rest of this year too, hovering around 5,800. The outlook for fiscal policy will probably remain unsettling after the election and the Fed might not lower the FFR over the rest of this year after all,” Yardeni wrote.
Yardeni pointed to strength in recent economic data, which suggests that further rate cuts might not come out of the Fed’s meeting this week or in December.
For one, real GDP growth was strong in the third quarter, rising 2.8% year-over-year.
Business equipment investment rose 11% over the third quarter, following a near-10% increase in the prior quarter. Investment in information processing equipment, in particular, hit a record high, according to data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Weakness in the job market has concerned some investors, with the US adding far fewer payrolls than expected in October. Yet, analysts have said the labor market weakness was at least partly the result of events including union strikes and Hurricanes Helene and Milton.
Importantly, the unemployment rate remained near a historic low last month at 4.1%.
“The bond market agrees with our opinion that the Fed cut the FFR too much, too soon,” Yardeni added, pointing to the recent rise in bond yields, which indicate higher interest rate expectations among bond investors.
Government borrowing, meanwhile, looks poised to increase over the coming months, a factor economists have said could indirectly fuel inflation, and therefore limit the Fed’s ability to cut rates.
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