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Prepping for a Big Week

Prepping for a Big Week

Posted May 5, 2025 at 12:00 pm

Steve Sosnick
Interactive Brokers

After a week that completed nine straight days of stock market gains, it seems difficult to suggest that the coming one will be more consequential.  Yet any week that features an FOMC meeting has the potential to offer significant fireworks.  Throw in a significant set of Treasury auctions, and one might expect some additional volatility.  So far, though, the market says, “not really.”

The key highlight for the week is of course Wednesday’s FOMC meeting and Chair Powell’s ensuing press conference.  We recently received a superficially ugly GDP number and a generally solid jobs report amidst plunging crude oil prices.  It will be critical to hear which pieces of data weigh more and less heavily in the committee’s decision-making.

If I were able to ask a question at the presser, mine would be, “if the two parts of the dual mandate appear to be in conflict, which might you favor?”  Despite the solid rise in Nonfarm Payrolls and an unchanged Unemployment Rate, there are aspects of the labor market that appear to be deteriorating.  Might the current set of relatively quiescent price pressures allow the Fed to cut rates under those circumstances?

Instead, does Powell want to risk cutting rates while the tariff situation remains unsettled?  Remember, barring some deals, the 90-day moratorium ends in early July.  There is an FOMC meeting on June 18th.  I doubt that the Fed has the stomach to cut rates before there is certainty regarding any tariff-related pressures.  That is the sort of move that could torch a Fed Chair’s legacy.  Furthermore, Powell does not seem at all inclined to give into the President’s haranguing him about lowering rates.

The FOMC statement and comments from Powell should give us a better read on the respective likelihoods.

In the meantime, we will get important clues about international investors’ willingness to buy US Treasuries.  I am writing this just ahead of today’s 3-year note auction, which will be followed by a 10-year auction tomorrow and a 30-year auction on Thursday.  Although there are persistent concerns about foreign investors being net sellers of US assets, the last time these bonds were auctioned, the results were better than feared.   

Despite stocks adhering to their now usual pattern of selling off early, then garnering strength as the morning passes, we are still not yet in positive territory as I write this.  It’s tough to maintain a 10-day winning streak.  Then again, it was rare enough to get the 9-day streak that culminated on Friday.  Much will rely on traders’ views on the 3-year auction, and frankly, whether they care if the results aren’t to the bond market’s liking.  But as we noted last week, we still see relatively steep skews on near-term S&P 500 (SPX) options.  The general tone of the market seems quite sanguine, but under the surface there is some desire for hedging protection.  Maybe it will actually be necessary, but as the following table shows, we haven’t seen major fireworks after the last couple of FOMC meetings.  Will it be different this time?

1 and 3 dat changes after previous FOMC meetings

Source: Interactive Brokers

Past performance is not indicative of future results

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