The Pak Banker

Stock futures edge up despite China growth concerns

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Stock futures ticked up Wednesday morning to steady after dropping a day earlier, as September selling pressure returned to markets. New tepid economic data out of China also added to concerns over the pace of global growth.

Contracts on the S&P 500 rose above the flat line. Dow futures also steadied after the index shed nearly 300 points on Tuesday, resuming declines and falling for the sixth time in seven sessions. Shares of technology heavyweigh­t Apple (AAPL) edged up in early trading after the company unveiled its latest line of new products, including the iPhone 13 and new iterations of the iPad, iPad mini, and Apple Watch.

Key economic data out of China pointed to a much sharper-thanexpect­ed decelerati­on in growth last month, suggesting the recovery in the world's second-largest economy was losing steam at a faster rate than expected.

And elsewhere, shares of casinos with operations in Macau like Wynn Resorts (WYNN) and Las Vegas Sands (LVS) slid after the government announced plans to increase regulatory oversight of the gambling industry. China's retail sales grew just 2.5% in August over last year, coming in well below the 7.0% expected, according to

Bloomberg consensus data, and slowing sharply from the 8.5% pace posted in July. Industrial production also pulled back for the manufactur­ing-heavy country, with this rising 5.3% compared to 6.4% in July. The disappoint­ing prints sent shares of Chinese stocks like Alibaba (BABA), Pinduoduo (PDD) and JD.com (JD) lower.

Recent data for the U.S. has also pointed to decelerati­ng growth and some cooling in price pressures. The Labor Department's consumer price index (CPI), excluding volatile food and energy prices, ticked up by just 0.1% in August compared to July, posting its slowest monthly gain since February. Core CPI also rose less than expected over last year, the latest report released Tuesday showed.

However, the big contributo­rs to the drop were declines in prices for things like airfare and hotel room rates, which were likely only temporaril­y pushed down due to renewed concerns over the Delta variant. Still, the slower-thanexpect­ed rise in consumer prices helps vindicate some Federal Reserve policymake­rs' views that inflation will ultimately prove transitory, and offers more room for officials to keep current monetary policies in place for longer, some pundits said.

"We probably won't get the answer to whether it's transitory or not probably until 2022 - that's when the base effects will start to wash out and all the distortion­s start to kind of resolve themselves," Sameer Samana, Wells Fargo Investment Institute senior global market strategist, told Yahoo Finance on Tuesday.

"What the number today tells us is that the Fed probably has a little more wiggle room," he added. "If they don't want to do something at the meeting next week, given the weaker-than-expected [August] payrolls number, the inflation number today, also takes the pressure off of them to do something next week." Still, investors continue to appraise a host of risks to the economic and equity outlook, with price pressures serving as only concern.

And with U.S. equities still relatively close to all-time highs and the S&P 500 still up by more than 18% so far this year, jitters over the fundamenta­l backdrop have only been intensifyi­ng.

"I do think we're going to see a bit of an air pocket in concern from some of the companies going into year-end," Chris Retzler, Needham small cap growth fund portfolio manager, told Yahoo Finance. "Supply chains are still certainly stretched. Semiconduc­tors are a problem across almost every industry, and labor costs continue to be a problem. But looking a year out, I would think that those problems begin to abate, and that's good for long-term investors."

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