Archive for April, 2025

Week of April 25, 2025 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead

Wednesday, April 30th, 2025

“Do more of what works and less of what doesn’t” — Unknown

1. Trump U-Turns on Powell, China Follow Dire Economic Warnings — Trump entered office with a steadfast desire to reshape the global economy. But his resolve has appeared to waver in the face of turmoil in equities and bonds and pleas from powerful executives who fear his sweeping tariffs and interference with the Federal Reserve could set off an economic calamity. Trump on Tuesday said he had no intention to fire Powell — despite days of criticism over the central bank’s policies — and said he believed a deal with Beijing would significantly reduce the sweeping tariffs he’s posted on Chinese goods. After a report that the US would be willing to phase in lighter tariffs on Beijing over five years on Wednesday, Trump told reporters that China was “going to do fine” once talks had settled.
2. March home sales drop to their slowest pace since 2009 — Sales of previously owned homes in March fell 5.9% from February to 4.02 million units on a seasonally adjusted annualized basis, according to the National Association of Realtors. That’s the slowest March sales pace since 2009. Sales were 2.4% lower than March 2024 and slumped across all regions month-to-month. They fell hardest in the West, the priciest region of the country, down more than 9%. The West, however, was the only region to see a year-over-year gain, due to strong activity in the Rocky Mountain states where job growth is strong.
3. Economy Orders for big-ticket items like autos and appliances surged 9.2% in March in rush to beat tariffs — So-called durable goods orders soared a seasonally adjusted 9.2% on the month, up from a 0.9% gain in February and well ahead of the Dow Jones forecast for a 1.6% increase. Excluding defense, the increase was even higher, at 10.4%, though the ex-transportation number was flat. Transportation equipment orders surged 27%, led by a 139% increase in nondefense aircraft and parts. In addition to aircraft and autos, the durables category also includes items such as appliances, computers and jewelry. On the durables goods side, the advanced report reflects a pull-forward effect as Trump dangled threats against U.S. trading partners through March before announcing his “Liberation Day” duties on April 2. Trump slapped a 10% tariff against all imports as well as a select charges against dozens of countries that he ultimately tabled for 90 days for negotiations.
4. US Consumer Sentiment Slides While Inflation Expectations Jump — The final April sentiment index fell to 52.2 from 57 a month earlier, according to the University of Michigan. While a slight improvement from the preliminary gauge of 50.8, the latest figure is the fourth-lowest in data back to the late 1970s.
Consumers anticipated inflation will rise at an annual rate of 4.4% over the next five to 10 years, the data out Friday showed. They expect prices to rise at a 6.5% pace over the next year. While down from a preliminary reading of 6.7%, year-ahead price expectations are still the highest since 1981.

The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com:

Week of April 18, 2025 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2025

“Set your own rules and stick to them; never argue with the market; never make a play you can’t afford; never give way to irrational exuberance. Above all, don’t be a sucker.” — Jesse Livermore

1. China Goes After Boeing, Tells Airlines Not to Order New Aircraft From U.S. Jet Maker — Beijing has told Chinese airlines not to place new orders for Boeing jets and is requiring carriers to seek approval before taking delivery of aircraft they have already ordered, according to people with knowledge of the Chinese regulator’s guidance. Cutting off deliveries to China could dent revenue for the cash-strapped jet maker, which has been working to clear out parked planes and ramp up production and deliveries amid a quality crisis. Longer-term, the Chinese market is crucial; Boeing has forecast it will account for a fifth of the world’s airplane deliveries in the next two decades. Of 130 airplanes Boeing delivered globally this year through March, 18 went to Chinese airlines. Boeing delivered two planes to Chinese airlines earlier this month, according to data from Cirium.
2. March Retail Sales Beat. Consumers Are Stocking Up Ahead of Tariffs — Retail sales gained 1.4% in March from February, better than economists’ forecasts for a 1.3% increase, the Census Bureau reported. “Auto makers, by way of incentives, and savvy consumers are likely attempting to get ahead of future uncertainty surrounding auto pricing levels by taking advantage of March deals,” said Chris Hopson, principal analyst at S&P Global Mobility, in a news release at the end of March. That said, spending among other categories was strong, as well. Stripping out sales of autos and gasoline, retail sales notched a monthly gain of 0.8%, higher than projections for a 0.5% increase.
3. US Mortgage Rates Jump Most Since October, Denting Home Demand — the contract rate on a 30-year mortgage increased 20 basis points in the week ended April 11 to 6.81%, the highest since February, according to Mortgage Bankers Association data released Wednesday. Rates on adjustable and 15-year fixed mortgages also climbed. The jump in financing costs brought an abrupt end to a six-week stretch of increasing home-purchase applications, highlighting home-buyer sensitivity to interest rates as housing prices remain elevated. MBA’s purchase applications index dropped 4.9%. The refinancing gauge slumped more than 12%, the fourth decline in the last five weeks. Mortgage rates track yields on 10-year Treasuries, which soared last week by a half percentage point as the trade war shakes global markets. The weekly surge in yields was the largest in more than two decades, raising fears the US is losing its status as the world’s safe haven. Yields have gradually retreated so far this week.
4. Trump Lashes Out at Powell, Says ‘Termination Cannot Come Fast Enough’ — late last week, in the Oval Office, Trump told reporters he had the power to dismiss Powell as Fed chair—a position that is at odds with Powell’s view of the law. Trump is upset that the Fed isn’t lowering interest rates to cushion the fallout from his trade war. Powell is “too late. He’s always too late, little slow,” Trump said. Inflation in the U.S. could rise more than in other countries in the coming months because Trump has imposed a range of tariffs. Whether the Fed chair can be removed before the end of a four-year term is an open question because it has never been attempted. Trump is trying to dismiss several other Biden appointees who have challenged their removal by citing a 90-year legal precedent that has shielded them from dismissal over a policy dispute.

The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com:

Week of April 11, 2025 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead

Tuesday, April 15th, 2025

“keep your head while others are losing theirs” Rudyard Kipling

1. Trump: 10% Tariffs Across the Board. ‘Worst’ Trade Partners Will Pay More — Trump presented a large chart listing the specific tariff levels for certain countries, which can be seen below. These include a 34% tariff on goods from China, 46% on those from Vietnam, and 32% on those from Taiwan. Cambodia has the highest tariff rate of any country at 49%. Goods from the European Union will be levied at a 20% rate. “You know, you think of European Union, very friendly. They rip us off. It’s so sad to see. It’s so pathetic,” he said.

2. US Services Index Falters as Employment Shrinks Most Since 2023 — The Institute for Supply Management’s gauge of services dropped to 50.8 from 53.5 a month earlier, according to data released Thursday. The figure was weaker than all but one estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists. Readings above 50 signal growth. A month earlier, the employment index advanced to the highest level since the end of 2021. A Wednesday report showed private-sector hiring accelerated in March by more than projected in a fairly broad advance.
A sustained trend of weaker employment readings may raise concerns of a broader slowdown in a labor market that has been the economy’s bedrock. Meanwhile, the ISM prices-paid index eased slightly to a still-elevated 60.9 in March.
3. Trump Pauses ‘Reciprocal’ Tariffs, but Hits China Harder — Trump said Wednesday that his 10%, baseline tariff on virtually all imports would stay in effect. But he implemented a 90-day pause for the higher, so-called reciprocal rates he had announced a week earlier on nations the administration views as “bad actors” on trade—except for China. In an early afternoon social-media post, Trump wrote that he had raised the tariff imposed on China to 125%, “effective immediately.” An administration official said that Canada and Mexico would remain exempt, for now, from the 10% baseline global tariff. While America’s neighbors remain subject to plans to impose 25% tariffs on most imports to the U.S. for what Trump says is their role in fueling the fentanyl crisis, an exemption is still in place for these levies on autos and many other goods compliant with the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement.
4. Consumer Sentiment Sinks, Approaching Three-year Low with Inflation Worries Highest Since 1981 — The University of Michigan’s gauge of consumer sentiment fell to 50.8% in a preliminary April reading from 57.0% in the prior month. It is the lowest level since June 2022. Sentiment has dropped for four straight months and is down 30% from December. Federal Reserve economists believe that if consumers expect high inflation, it will be easier for firms to raise prices, leading to higher price pressure.

The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com:

Posted in Daily Commentary | No Comments »

Week of March 29, 2025 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2025

1. Conference Board’s Consumer Survey Drops to 12-Year Low — the Conference Board’s monthly survey showed that forward-looking expectations for income, business and labor-market conditions dropped to the lowest level in 12 years, hitting an index level of 65.2. Levels below 80 often signal a recession, the Conference Board said. Meanwhile, the survey’s index showing consumers’ view of the current situation fell to 92.9, down 7.2 points from a month earlier, marking the fourth straight month of declines. Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had expected the index to land at 93.5 in March. Analysts have been keeping a close eye on consumer surveys because of mounting evidence of a gloomy mood that could presage a real economic slowdown. In surveys of families and businesses alike in recent weeks, new tariffs are emerging as a central concern. But so far, there has been scant sign of a slowdown in backward-looking data such as the unemployment rate and GDP figures that show what has actually happened in the economy.
2. Trump Plans 25% Tariff on Imported Vehicles — President Trump said he would impose 25% tariffs on global automotive imports to the U.S., making good on a pledge to impose duties on cars and trucks from other nations. The U.S. will start collecting the auto tariffs on April 3, Trump said, the day after he is slated to announce a broader slate of trade actions. Trump’s so-called reciprocal tariffs, slated for that day, were originally planned to equalize U.S. tariffs with those charged by foreign nations, but Trump said Wednesday that the tariffs he plans to implement would likely be lower than that. Trump also said the reciprocal tariffs will target “all countries,” and not just the 15% of nations that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had said could be given priority in the April 2 action.
Trump’s team has whipsawed between a maximalist approach to tariffs and offering potential leniency for companies and trading partners. Trump originally said he would impose sector-specific tariffs on industries such as semiconductors, lumber and pharmaceuticals on April 2. But he reiterated on Wednesday that those industry-specific tariffs wouldn’t happen on that date, though they could be announced later.
3. RFK Jr. to Unveil Plans to Cut 10,000 Health Department Workers — Kennedy plans to cut 10,000 employees, according to a statement Thursday. Combined with other departures from buyouts, the reductions mean the agency will employ 62,000 workers, down from 82,000. The secretary also intends to consolidate the department’s 28 divisions into 15 and cut regional offices from 10 to five. HHS said it plans to lay off 3,500 employees at the Food and Drug Administration, but those cuts will not include drug, medical device or food reviewers or inspectors. The CDC workforce will be cut by around 2,400 people. Around 1,200 more employees will be laid off at the National Institutes of Health, mostly focused on purchasing, human resources, and communications.
4. US Consumer Spending Barely Rises, Key Inflation Gauge Picks Up — Consumer spending was weaker than expected again in February while a key inflation metric picked up, in a double whammy for the economy before the brunt of tariffs. Inflation-adjusted consumer spending edged up 0.1%, on the low end of economists’ estimates, after a slump January that analysts mostly blamed on bad weather. Notably in February, Americans reduced spending on services for the first time in three years in the face of higher prices — including on dining out. The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation rose 0.4% from January, the most in a year, according to Bureau of Economic Analysis data out Friday. The so-called core personal consumption expenditures price index, which excludes food and energy items, was up 2.8% from last year, remaining stubbornly above the Fed’s 2% target.

The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com:

Posted in Weekly Summary | No Comments »

Search
Calendar
April 2025
M T W T F S S
« Mar   May »
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930  
Archives
Categories
The information provided by The EGS Blog is based on sources believed to be reliable, but it is not guaranteed to be accurate. There is no guarantee that the recommendations of The EGS Blog will be profitable or will not be subject to losses. The information provided by The EGS Blog is not a recommendation or a solicitation that any particular investor should purchase or sell any particular security in any amount, or at all. The investments discussed or recommended herein may be unsuitable for investors depending on their specific investment objectives and financial position. At any time EGS LLC and its principals may maintain positions that are contrary to positions announced within the subscription service. In no event will The EGS Blog be liable to you or anyone else for any incidental, consequential, special, or indirect damage (including but not limited to lost profits or trading losses). PAST PERFORMANCE IS NO GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS

© Copyright 2025 Market Outlook All Rights Reserved
Design by EGS Sponsored by Equity Guidance LLC