Pre. Settlement | N/A |
Settlement Date | 2026-05-19 |
Open | 69.34 |
Bid | 69.30 |
Last Price | 69.46 |
Day's Range | 69.32 - 69.35 |
Volume | |
Ask | 69.34 |
On today's episode of Morning Brief, Hosts Seana Smith and Brad Smith break the latest Consumer Price Index data and analyze the market open. The latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) report shows prices rose 0.2% in September, which was more than the 0.1% Bloomberg consensus estimate. Year-over-year prices rose 2.4% versus the 2.3% estimate. When stripping out the more volatile food and energy components, prices rose 0.3% month-over-month and 3.3% year-over-year, both higher than economists were expecting. US stocks (^DJI, ^IXIC, ^GSPC) opened Thursday's session lower as Wall Street digested the hotter-than-expected CPI report. The Nasdaq Composite fell by over 0.40%. Yahoo Finance Senior Reporter Alexandra Canal and Catalysts Anchor Madison Mills break down inflation's impact on shelter pricing and auto insurance costs. Yardeni Research Chief Markets Strategist Eric Wallerstein believes that following September's CPI print, the Federal Reserve doesn't have to cut rates during the rest of 2024. He explains, "Unfortunately, we're going to get some weather impacts in the jobs data in the coming months. But I think as long as inflation isn't getting towards 2% so dramatically, and there's no crisis that unfolds in the labor market, which I don't foresee, I don't think there's anything that gives the Fed reason to cut further this year," Wallerstein explains. Omair Sharif, Inflation Insights president, adds, “Admittedly, some things were hotter than expected today. But I think some of that stuff is more likely than not to just be a one-off in this particular month." He continues, “Given that hot print today, even though I do think some of this stuff will reverse course pretty quickly, I think that's if you were thinking 50 bps [cut at the Fed’s November meeting] that's pretty much been wiped out at this stage… I think the Fed still wants to progress slowly here. So I think 25 [bps cut] is the base case for November.” Marvin Loh, State Street senior global macro strategist discusses how the tech sector (XLK) will be impacted by the Federal Reserve's rate-cutting cycle. Loh believes that tech will be "one of the bigger beneficiaries" of the Fed's interest rate cuts. He notes that the sector has demonstrated strong earnings growth, and it is one of the few areas of the market that hasn't experienced significant revisions. "So that kind of stronger story is still out there. You know, quality growth generating cash and really defendable moats are kind of where you want to put some of your long-term bets," he tells Yahoo Finance. Delta Air Lines (DAL) fell short of estimates for the airline operator's third quarter, posting profits of $1.50 per share ($1.52 was expected) and revenue of $14.59 billion ($14.68 billion expected). Delta CEO Ed Bastian cited the CrowdStrike (CRWD) outage to have shaved off $0.45 from the company's adjusted earnings per share. Bloomberg Intelligence analyst George Ferguson explains, "The results are a little bit muddy from CrowdStrike, but labor costs were up 13% year-over-year. So, labor continues to be a big challenge for the airlines. And again, with this revenue, this unit revenue declining, that makes things more challenging." Ferguson highlights the struggle an airline like Delta will face as it strives to grow in the marketplace. Oil prices tick higher (CL=F, BZ=F) as Hurricane Milton made landfall in Florida and amid ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates, explains, “The oil market is pricing in a greater probability of a war between Iran and Israel that would result in a supply disruption. And I should point out that since last year, when Hamas invaded Israel, there has been no oil supply disruption. But prices recently have been rising of a fear that one might happen.” This post was written by Melanie Riehl
Spikes in fuel demand due to Hurricane Milton and concerns over potential supply disruptions in the Middle East have pushed oil prices up.
Investors assess what’s next in the Federal Reserve’s easing cycle ahead of the November meeting and the upcoming election. Kenny Polcari, Slatestone Wealth's chief market strategist, asserts the Fed will do what it needs to do to hold the market ahead of the presidential election, though investors need to tread cautiously to navigate the post-election market. “I'm not sure it's going to be a completely soft landing. I think we actually want a little bit of a harder one in order to help bring prices down. But I think what the market is assuming or what the market is hoping for, is that we're going to have that they've succeeded in creating this soft landing and that it's going to be all good,” Polcari tells Yahoo Finance, saying that he doesn’t think the Fed needs to cut rates at the upcoming November meeting. “I actually think the market is trying to tell you that maybe they're not going to cut rates next month. The labor market is not falling apart. The economic data is not necessarily collapsing around us, and there is a risk that inflation is going to start to rear its ugly head again. If oil (CL=F, BZ=F) continues to rally.” Polcari says, “I think it's actually amazing that the market has shrugged off a lot of what's happened. Not only from the geopolitical side and the conflicts going on around the world but even what's happening here in the United States from the presidential election and the opposite sides that the candidates are on and what that means for the economy, as well as where we are with the Fed and with inflation and with interest rates.” He outlines, “Here's what I think is going to happen if we continue to see bond yields rise… that's certainly going to cause some headwinds for stock investors, equity investors if they fear that yields are going to continue to move higher. And I actually think they're probably going to move a little bit higher. I don't think they're going to spin out of control, but I do think that's going to be the catalyst that's going to continue going to try to control [and] at least put an at least put a top on how stocks are advancing and let it pull back a little bit and churn.” The strategist notes, “Don't forget we're in we're three weeks away from the presidential election cycle. The Fed is not going to let the market collapse three weeks ahead of that cycle. They're just not. They're going to do anything they can to kind of hold it in place. It's after the election, after we know what the result is, that I fear that the Fed is going to allow the markets to trade more freely and allow them to pull back. And I think that's why investors need to be cautious.” To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Morning Brief here. This post was written by Naomi Buchanan.