The following originally appeared on Blue Line Futures
1. Record Highs
The NASDAQ 100 has been lurking within 2 percent of its all-time high since late February and Friday’s monster gain of 1.8
percent finally achieved the inevitable. While the lack of wage growth in Friday’s jobs report provided the green light, the ground
work had already been laid through the exacerbated selloff on tariff talk.
Friday’s breakout above its previous high had strong leadership which is more reason to believe this new leg can run;
Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX) +4.5 percent,
Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ:
GOOGL) +3 percent, Microsoft Corporation
(NASDAQ: MSFT) +2.2 percent, Amazon.com
Inc (NASDAQ: AMZN) +1.75, Apple
Inc (NASDAQ: AAPL) +1.7, and Facebook
Inc (NASDAQ: FB) +1.6 percent. This week’s inflation
data (CPI) will play a key role in next week’s FOMC Meeting, but the inconsistent and mundane wage growth will make it difficult
for the Fed to bubble wrap their hike with a hawkish rhetoric.
This was the fear at the end of January and upon Fed Chair Powell’s first congressional hearing on February 27th where he was
considered outspoken and hawkish. Without a hot read on CPI this week, we are likely to see a more neutral Fed. This would be a
major catalyst for higher equity markets. With the macro-fundamentals now providing a tailwind, the next major upside target in the
NQ is 7372-7384.
Furthermore, while the S&P lags its all-time high by 3.3 percent, the small cap and domestic focused Russell 2000 trails its
by only 1.4 percent. A breakout above the old record high of 1619.2 opens the door for the next leg higher in the Russell 2000
which targets 1697-1700.
2. CPI
February’s Consumer Price Index data is due out Tuesday at 7:30 am CT. The Core read that excludes food and energy is the most
closely watched data point. January’s Month-over-Month release on February 14th showed an increase of 0.3 percent for the second
month in a row. This was the first time since January and February 2016. All things considered, those two months marked a peak in
the rise in inflation.
Former Fed Chairwoman Yellen had recently expressed her concern that inflation was stalled due to the Fed hiking rates too
quickly. However, new Fed Chair Powell surprised pundits with his hawkish and assertive tone during his congressional hearing and
this reinvigorated the Dollar. Friday’s Nonfarm Payroll already confirmed that there was no traction in January’s wage inflation.
If CPI misses on Tuesday, this would be lights out for the Dollar.
3. China data
Industrial Production, Fixed Asset investment, and Retail Sales are due out of China on Tuesday Evening. While many put the
largest focus on industrial production, we tend to keep a closer eye on Fixed Asset Investment. Regardless of your preference, this
data comes at a critical time for commodity prices. The Dollar Index is trading about 2 percent from its recent low, a jump that
put pressure on commodities priced in Dollars. However, Friday’s miss on wage growth will now provide a headwind for a further rise
in the greenback. Lost in the noise last week was a very great on China CPI. A strong read on this trio of data points for the
world’s second-largest economy combined with a weaker dollar is likely to spark tremendous broad-based commodity buying.
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