Week Ahead: Commodity Prices, Fed Hike Prospects To Continue Pressuring Equities

 | Mar 27, 2022 12:20

  • An array of drivers could force steeper Fed rate hikes
  • Yields near three-year highs suggest possible bear market ahead
  • Traders will have plenty to grapple with during the week ahead as an array of varied and complex drivers are likely to impact markets in potentially conflicting ways.

    Even as the Russian attack on Ukraine continues, the US's much followed March employment report will be released on Friday. If it shows tight labor conditions, bets will increase that the next Fed rate hike will be a half-percent. Total employment will create upward pressure on wages, as employers continue to vie for workers.

    Higher salaries would also increase demand, driving up costs even after US CPI has reached a more than four-decade high. Another current inflationary trigger, oil prices—which have been rising—could further accelerate inflation. The price of oil is already at the highest level since April 2011 and just 0.04% below the most elevated levels since 2008.

    If the price of crude does challenge that record, as some predict, the Fed will almost certainly be forced to keep raising interest rates. The impact of higher crude won't only impact commuter costs, American industry relies on oil for manufacturing and transportation of its products. Thus, when the price of oil rises so does the cost of a plethora of other goods.

    Adding to investor worries, inflation was already on the rise in the aftermath of COVID. Costs of products manufactured internationally escalated worldwide when commercial routes became bottlenecked. Now, even as lockdown restrictions are easing, newly instituted sanctions against Russia, and a retaliatory counter ban put in place by President Vladimir Putin on exports of commodities and raw materials from Russia, could drive costs even higher.

    h2 Dip Buyers Lift Markets To Finish The Trading Week/h2

    On Friday, US markets finished with a choppy session to close out the week. Most indices gained when dip buyers came out in force.

    The S&P 500 rose 0.51% for the day. Energy outperformed, adding 2.19% in value Friday, tracking volatile oil prices. The second-best performer for the day was Utilities, +1.45%. Since the beginning of the Russia–Ukraine crisis, this defensive sector has been providing superior results. The remaining cyclical sectors were more than a full percentage point lower than Energy. Technology and Consumer Discretionary were the only sectors in the red on Friday.

    On the final day of last week's trade the Dow Jones advanced 0.44%. Conversely, the NASDAQ 100 and Russell 2000 both finished lower, just under 0.1% each. After the virus's first wave those two sectors were on opposite sides of the cyclical rotation, but since the Fed turned more hawkish, they've generally moved in tandem.

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    For the week, the S&P 500 climbed 1.79%, boosted primarily by the Energy sector, which added 6.59%. Coming in at almost half of that, Materials jumped 3.7%, reflecting the rising cost of commodities. Healthcare and Real Estate were the only two sectors in the red on a weekly basis, -0.52% and -0.21%, respectively.