General market news
- The 10-year Treasury yield opened at 1.59 percent early Monday and quickly dropped to 1.54 percent. (It had opened last Monday at 1.50 percent.) The range of 1.58‒1.60 percent seems to be the ceiling for the 10-year, and we think this could continue for some time, as investors around the globe continue to seek the relative safe haven of U.S. Treasuries.
- The S&P 500 was relatively flat for the second week in a row, gaining just 0.06 percent. The energy sector continued its rally from the prior week with an increase of 2.2 percent. This performance was backed by a 9-percent rebound in WTI crude oil prices, which moved to $48.52 per barrel. The increase came after comments from Russia’s energy minister about successful talks with Saudi Arabia to attain market stability. The Nasdaq Composite Index also moved slightly higher by 0.16 percent.
- The economic news last week was mixed. The week began with soft inflation data, as the Consumer Price Index remained relatively unchanged in July, showing a nominal 0.1-percent increase in core prices. Increases in medical care and housing costs tried to push the index higher, but energy prices and food costs pulled down the final value. On the other hand, Industrial Production increased 0.7 percent, led by improvements in mining segments.
Equity Index | Week-to-Date | Month-to-Date | Year-to-Date | 12-Month |
S&P 500 | 0.06% | 0.67% | 8.39% | 7.36% |
Nasdaq Composite | 0.16% | 1.62% | 5.56% | 5.79% |
DJIA | 0.02% | 1.00% | 8.45% | 9.87% |
MSCI EAFE | ‒0.09% | 1.37% | 2.21% | ‒2.37% |
MSCI Emerging Markets | 0.75% | 5.07% | 17.63% | 12.11% |
Russell 2000 | 0.59% | 1.47% | 9.90% | 4.39% |
Source: Bloomberg
Fixed Income Index | Month-to-Date | Year-to-Date | 12-Month |
U.S. Broad Market | ‒0.29% | 5.68% | 5.37% |
U.S. Treasury | ‒0.67% | 5.08% | 4.56% |
U.S. Mortgages | ‒0.04% | 3.27% | 3.68% |
Municipal Bond | 0.03% | 4.42% | 6.89% |
Source: Morningstar Direct
WHAT TO LOOK FORWARD TO
We will focus on housing at the beginning of this week, with releases of New and Existing Home Sales, which are both expected to have slowed down in July.
We will also see the release of July Durable Goods Orders data and the second estimate of second-quarter Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth.