The Week on Wall Street
Stocks rose last week, with help from two
developments: the announcement of further U.S.-China trade talks as well as August hiring and
manufacturing numbers that seemed to bolster the argument for a rate cut by the Federal Reserve.
The broad U.S. equity market, as represented by the S&P 500, added 1.79% during a 4-day trading week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average improved 1.49%; the Nasdaq Composite, 1.76%. Foreign shares tracked by the MSCI EAFE index gained 1.69%.[1][2][3]
Trade Talks Poised to Restart
Trade representatives from the U.S. and China
are planning to head back to the negotiating table early next month. This news came Thursday from
China's ministry of commerce, which confirmed a verbal agreement among Secretary of the Treasury
Steven Mnuchin, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He.
Formal trade discussions between the U.S. and China last happened in July. China has said that it wants punitive U.S. tariffs on its products removed in the event of a deal.[4]
Weaker Hiring & Manufacturing Data
Payrolls expanded with just 130,000 net
new jobs in August, according to the Department of Labor; 25,000 were temp jobs linked to the federal
government's 2020 Census. The main jobless rate stayed at 3.7%. The U-6 rate, which measures both
unemployment and underemployment, rose 0.2% to 7.2%.
A key gauge of U.S. factory activity, the Institute for Supply Management's manufacturing purchasing manager index, fell to 49.1 in August. A number below 50 indicates factory sector contraction. Some investors took these hiring and manufacturing reports as hints of a slowing economy, one which the Federal Reserve could potentially try to stimulate with an interest rate cut.[5][6]
What's Next
August inflation data arrives this week, and if looks especially
mild, it may amount to another suggestion that the Fed should ease. The European Central Bank
concludes a meeting on Thursday, and Fed officials will certainly pay attention to its latest policy
statement.[7]
THE WEEK AHEAD: KEY ECONOMIC DATA
Thursday: A new Consumer
Price Index, tracking both monthly and yearly inflation.
Friday: The August
retail sales report from the Census Bureau.
Source: Econoday / MarketWatch Calendar, September 6, 2019
The Econoday and MarketWatch
economic calendars list upcoming U.S. economic data releases (including key economic indicators),
Federal Reserve policy meetings, and speaking engagements of Federal Reserve officials. The content
is developed from sources believed to be providing accurate information. The forecasts or
forward-looking statements are based on assumptions and may not materialize. The forecasts also are
subject to revision.
THE WEEK AHEAD: COMPANIES REPORTING EARNINGS
Thursday:
Broadcom (AVGO), Kroger (KR)
Source: Zacks, September 6, 2019
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