Wall Street Week Ahead: US stocks train sights on Jackson Hole Fed gathering
Investors are keenly waiting for the Jackson Hole symposium. Federal Reserve policymakers will gather to discuss interest rate cuts. These cuts could potentially boost stock prices. Jerome Powell's speech on Friday will be crucial. Market anticipa...

"We may have a lot at stake; this is a potentially significant event this year," said Steven Sosnick, market strategist at IBKR. "What if, once again, people are going into this expecting a dovish Powell and he comes out with all guns blazing?" The futures market still expects the Federal Open Market Committee to cut rates by a quarter of a percentage point at least twice more this year, including an initial cut at its mid-September meeting.
Companies likely to benefit most from lower borrowing costs have been among the big winners in recent Wall Street trading, said Andrew Slimmon, head of Applied Equity Advisors at Morgan Stanley Asset Management.
"It's all about homebuilders, cyclical stocks, industrials, and materials companies," Slimmon said.
Shares of leading homebuilders such as PulteGroup, Lennar, and D.R. Horton are up between 4.2% and 8.8% in the last week, as of midday Friday, thanks largely to the recent drop in mortgage lending rates.
Their gains trounced the 1% rally in the Standard & Poor's 500 index over the last week. The group has outpaced the broader market more dramatically over the last month, with gains of 15% to 22% compared to 3.3% for the S&P 500. But their future gains hinge on mortgage rates continuing to fall, something that a recent uptick in 10-year Treasury bond yields puts into question.
Any hint by Powell that he is paying more heed to bearish signals on inflation than to other, more benign indicators might threaten those gains, Slimmon said.
"The more I have seen the homebuilders rally, the more it tells me the market thinks the Fed is going to cut, which means any suggestion at Jackson Hole that this is not going to happen will make markets more vulnerable" to a selloff, he added.
To keep markets calm, Powell will have to walk a fine line and underscore the Goldilocks conviction held by many investors that the economy is neither overheating nor at risk of tipping into a recession, said Ashwin Alankar, head of global asset allocation at Janus Henderson.
"He can't scare the market by saying the Fed believes the economy really needs a lot of stimulus," Alankar said.
SENTIMENT SHIFT?
Some market-watchers on Thursday said they already detected a shift in sentiment. In a note to clients, Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie Group, said as recently as Wednesday, "the talk on the street was of a 'mega' rate cut" but that a dovish cut in September was "more grounded in reality."
"The calendar is getting pretty quiet," said Jeff Blazek, co-chief investment officer, multi-asset, at Neuberger Berman.
The biggest risk of all, however, may be the market's recent euphoria, which has defied a litany of bad news and left April's tariff-driven nosedive in the rear-view mirror.
"Going into this event, the more smug we feel ... the greater the risk of a market-moving reaction," said Sosnick.
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