The US Dollar (USD) edged slightly higher on Friday after a strong rally throughout the week, driven mainly by the rate differential. The key question for this week is whether the recent rise in US Treasury yields was overdone, given that September’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) only saw a slight increase compared to the previous month.
This contrasts with comments from several Federal Reserve (Fed) officials, who have signaled more rate cuts ahead.
The PPI report showed that annual headline inflation slowed to 1.8%, down from 1.9% in August, but still above the expected 1.6%. Core PPI, excluding food and energy, rose by 2.8%, exceeding estimates of 2.7% and the previous 2.6%, which was revised up from 2.4%. While the monthly headline PPI remained flat, the core figure grew by 0.2%, in line with expectations.
Despite the hotter-than-expected producer inflation, it is unlikely to significantly alter market expectations for a 25 basis point (bps) interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve (Fed) in November, according to the CME FedWatch tool.
On the earnings front major banks posted better-than-expected quarterly results, JPMorgan Chase surged 4.4% after reporting higher-than-forecast third-quarter earnings and raising its annual interest income outlook. Wells Fargo also saw its shares jump 5.6% on strong profit results.
Moreover, Tesla weighed on the consumer discretionary index, with its shares dropping 8.8% after the company unveiled its long-anticipated robotaxi but provided little detail on production timelines or regulatory challenges.
On the energy front, Oil markets remain bolstered by concerns over a potential escalation of Israel's conflicts with both Hamas and Hezbollah. The market is worried that any further escalation in the conflict could disrupt vital oil supplies from the Middle East.
Traders are now focused on upcoming key events, including Thursday's U.S. retail sales and jobless claims data, along with a policy review by the European Central Bank. Later on Monday, Fed Governor Christopher Waller is scheduled to speak.