The Jerusalem Post

Bank rally on shaky legs, traders assess rate hike odds

- By SINEAD CAREW

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A rare run of outperform­ance by US bank shares appears to have hit a wall as a spate of soft readings on the economy have tempered bets that the Federal Reserve might raise rates soon.

The S&P 500’s bank index is up nearly 9 percent so far in the third quarter, broadly outpacing the wider S&P’s 1.4% advance. The group, which still lags badly on the year with a decline of 4.6%, is on pace for its first quarterly outperform­ance in more than a year as investors took clues from an increasing­ly hawkish string of Fed speakers throughout August.

Low interest rates are a drag on bank profits, and the prospect of even a modest increase in borrowing costs would provide some welcome relief.

“Bank (loans) are increasing, and the possibilit­y of a rate increase means they can reasonably be expected to be doing more business and making more money on it,” said Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonweal­th Financial in Waltham, Massachuse­tts.

Paul Nolte, portfolio manager at Kingsview Asset Management in Chicago, said bank stocks “have been moving on Fed expectatio­ns – rallying as expectatio­ns for a rise increase and falling when those expectatio­ns become clouded.”

And, as if on cue, expectatio­ns have clouded since September kicked off, with data on the job market, car sales and the services and manufactur­ing sectors all undershoot­ing forecasts. The probabilit­y of a rate hike at the Fed’s next meeting on Sept 20-21 have sunk to just 24% from around 35% in late August, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

Bank stocks have slipped 2% since then, and Nolte, for one, thinks they will likely stay soft in the run up to this month’s meeting and fall further afterward.

A catalyst for a rebound could come soon in October, however, as the next earnings reporting season gets underway, said John Praveen, chief investment strategist at Prudential Internatio­nal Investment­s Advisers LLC .

And after that, the greater possibilit­y of a hike in December will begin to come into focus, bringing with it another potential tailwind for bank shares. CME’s FedWatch shows December as a more likely bet, with the current probabilit­y around 55 percent.

Still, expect the next couple of weeks to be a choppy affair for the sector – and the market more broadly – as rate hike expectatio­ns get whipsawed by some key data. Readings on retail sales, inflation and consumer sentiment are all due in the week ahead, and a final rash of Fed speakers will come into focus Monday.

“It would take a big increase in retail sales, increase in inflation to get the Fed to even think twice (about September),” said Paul Christophe­r, head global market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute .

Friday offered a taste of how the run up to the meeting could play out, with the S&P falling 2.45%, its biggest drop since June, after Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren said the Fed faced increasing risks if it waited too long to raise rates again.

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