US stock index futures flat
US stock index futures were little changed in early trade this morning. This follows on from another strong session on Wednesday, which brought fresh all-time closing highs for the S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000. These closed up 0.6%, 1.1% and 1.0% respectively. The Dow was effectively unchanged, leaving the index just 0.2% below its own all-time closing high from Friday.
Source: TN Trader
Last night saw the release of the minutes from the Federal Reserve’s September FOMC meeting. This was when the Fed cut rates by 25 basis points, as expected, to resume its loosening of monetary policy, which had been on pause since last December. The meeting was notable for several reasons, including that Stephen Miran, President Trump’s preferred choice as a replacement governor, deviated from the broad consensus by voting for a 50-basis-point cut.
But the minutes also revealed another clear division among policymakers, who were narrowly split between one or two more 25 basis point cuts before year-end. But it was also clear that all FOMC members were concerned about recent weakness across the labour market. This follows two successive weak Non-Farm Payroll numbers.
Unfortunately, the ongoing government shutdown has meant that September’s update, which was scheduled for last Friday, couldn’t be released. Despite this lack of clarity, the probability of two further rate cuts this year has risen, according to the CME’s FedWatch Tool, and this has helped to underpin US equities. Overall, investors took the minutes in their stride, viewing them as neither overly dovish nor hawkish.
Meanwhile, NVIDIA rose over 2% yesterday after CEO Jensen Huang noted that computing demand has “gone up substantially” this year. The world’s most valuable company by market capitalisation rose another 1% in early trade this morning, to mark another all-time intra-day high. Otherwise, the tech majors were mixed, with no notable winners or losers.
With no major US data releases scheduled due to the ongoing government shutdown, attention today turns to remarks from Fed Chair Jerome Powell at a community bank conference, followed by comments from Michelle Bowman and Mary Daly later in the day. Traders will also keep an eye on third-quarter earnings reports from Delta Air Lines and PepsiCo before the bell.