The Federal Reserve may very well be done hiking rates for now, but US stocks still face a pullback from the risk of a hard economic landing, according to Bank of America Corp. strategists.
Signs of softening in the labor market are a “strong tell” that the Fed would pause rate hikes, and a “benign” reading on jobs data due on Friday would be the “last piece of the Goldilocks jigsaw,” strategist Michael Hartnett said. However, he expects more indications of a so-called hard landing from this month onward.
“Sell the last rate hike,” Hartnett wrote in a note dated Thursday. The strategist correctly predicted the US stock slump last year, and has remained bearish in 2023 even as the S&P 500 rallied 17%.
Investor sentiment more recently has been supported by bets that a weakening U.S. economy would prompt a dovish shift in the Fed’s policy outlook. The S&P 500 advanced in the past two weeks, although it still ended August with its first monthly decline since February. The focus Friday is on the Labor Department’s non-farm payrolls report, which is expected to show the US added the fewest jobs since the end of 2020 last month.
Barclays Plc strategist Emmanuel Cau also said that the market’s interpretation of bad economic data as good news for stocks only works “up to a point and so long as earnings don’t get hit.”
The “benefit of lower rates due to weaker growth is fragile,” Cau wrote in a note. “With much bad news already out in Europe and China, the US consumer may hold the fate of equities.”
From outstanding individuals to innovative organizations, find out who made the final shortlist for top honors at the IN awards, now in its second year.
Cresset's Susie Cranston is expecting an economic recession, but says her $65 billion RIA sees "great opportunity" to keep investing in a down market.
“There’s a big pull to alternative investments right now because of volatility of the stock market,” Kevin Gannon, CEO of Robert A. Stanger & Co., said.
Sellers shift focus: It's not about succession anymore.
Platform being adopted by independent-minded advisors who see insurance as a core pillar of their business.
RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.
As inheritances are set to reshape client portfolios and next-gen heirs demand digital-first experiences, firms are retooling their wealth tech stacks and succession models in real time.