3 biggest market trends occurring amid Fed rate cut optimism

3 biggest market trends occurring amid Fed rate cut optimism

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Treasury yields (^TYX, ^TNX, ^FVX) cruise higher following this week's hotter-than-anticipated inflation prints. Markets and investors alike are holding out on hope that the Federal Reserve will initiate interest rate cuts as early as June.

Yahoo Finance's Seana Smith reviews several of the biggest factors pressuring markets, from rate cut expectations to lagging Magnificent Seven members and spiking crude oil prices.

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

JULIE HYMAN: Joining us now with her top takeaways from the trading day is Yahoo Finance's Seana Smith, host of the Morning Brief. And one of the things that you've been watching today is something I've been watching very closely too which is the 10-year yield, which is had a big move today on the back of economic data.

SEANA SMITH: Yeah, a huge move to the upside. The biggest one day pop actually that we've seen in just about a month. And it was on the heels of that PPI print that we got out just before the bell this morning.

And the reason why we're seeing such a reaction play out within the Treasury market, within the bond market today, just because it shows how nervous the market is about Fed policy and exactly what the Fed's plan for rate cuts is going to look like later this year. When you take a look at those expectations right now, we know the market's pricing in three cuts before the end of the year.

When you take a look at the Fed swaps right now, they seem to be pushing out that first cut. It might not be until July. And we're going to get the dot plot just next week.

And so I think so much is going to be riding on what exactly that tells us about the Fed cut, about the timing of that Fed cut. And because of that, we're seeing this massive move in yields once again.

I also want to point out that this isn't exactly unusual. We have seen this over the last couple of big data releases that we've gotten over the last couple of weeks. So earlier this week, when that CPI print was released, we did see also a big reaction in the bond market.

And then also going back to the jobs data as well. And so it gets me back to the point of the market clearly very jittery and very much on edge about what the next move is going to be from the Fed.

JOSH LIPTON: Yeah, it's also we were talking earlier, Seana, too about how many some pretty notable economists saying the market's got it wrong. There aren't cuts coming. I mean, first from Apollo, Torsten Slok over there.