Articles Tagged: fomc

15 articles found

If Washington Goes Dark: How a Shutdown Data Blackout Could Scramble Fed Timing, Markets and Rate‑Cut Bets

The clock is running down on Capitol Hill, and with it the flow of the economic data that underpins Federal Reserve policy. If Congress fails to fund the government, a broad shutdown would trigger a "data blackout" from key statistical agencies—potentially sidelining the monthly jobs report, consumer inflation gauges and national income data just as the Fed navigates a shifting balance of risks. Markets are already bracing: consumer confidence has slipped to a five-month low and the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) may stand as the last labor snapshot for weeks. A blackout would not just inconvenience forecasters. It would complicate the Fed’s data‑dependent reaction function ahead of its October and December meetings, force investors to lean harder on private proxies, and likely widen uncertainty premiums across rates and risk assets. Below, we map what turns off and what stays on, why it matters for the Fed, how markets may reprice cuts in a fog of missing data, and the practical playbook investors can use if official statistics go dark.

government shutdowndata blackoutFederal Reserve+17 more

Inside the $100B OpenAI–NVIDIA Pact: Chips, Compute, and the New Economics of Model Building

NVIDIA’s pledge to invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI, tied to a 10-gigawatt buildout of AI supercomputing, is not just another mega-deal—it is the capital markets’ clearest signal yet that compute is the strategic high ground of artificial intelligence. The architecture is unusually explicit: money arrives in $10 billion tranches, capacity arrives in gigawatts, and the first phase targets the second half of 2026 on NVIDIA’s next-generation Vera Rubin systems. OpenAI positions NVIDIA as a preferred, not exclusive, supplier across chips and networking, preserving leverage with other partners while concentrating on the stack that currently defines frontier AI performance. The stakes extend well beyond a bilateral relationship. A 10 GW program equates to roughly 4–5 million GPUs—about NVIDIA’s total expected shipments this year—and it forces hard choices about energy, siting, and financing. The pact reverberated immediately in markets, with NVIDIA shares rallying on the announcement and broader indices hitting fresh highs. Behind the pop is a recalibration of AI’s cost structure: concentrated access to compute becomes a moat, training throughput becomes the new velocity metric, and the economics of inference compress toward power, density, and interconnect performance. This article dissects the capital stack, engineering constraints, chip and cloud implications, and policy risks that will determine whether this bet on scale earns the returns its size implies.

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Oracle’s 30% Spike: Cloud Megadeals, AI Capacity, and a $455B Backlog — Does the Outlook Justify the Rerating?

Oracle rocketed after earnings despite a headline EPS and revenue miss, as investors focused on an extraordinary multiyear demand picture tied to artificial intelligence and cloud infrastructure. Remaining performance obligations surged to $455 billion, management mapped a path from roughly $10 billion of OCI revenue in FY2025 to $18 billion in FY2026 and as high as $144 billion by FY2030, and capex is set to climb about 65% to approximately $35 billion this year to build capacity. The core debate now is whether backlog quality, conversion tempo, and execution against aggressive capacity plans can sustain the stock’s rerating in the face of power, supply, and competitive constraints.

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Jobs Curveball vs. Rate Cut: How August’s Report Could Sway a September Fed Move — Signals for Investors and Homebuyers

Friday’s August jobs report lands less than two weeks before the Federal Reserve’s September 16–17 meeting, with markets primed for a potential policy pivot and mortgage rates easing to their lowest levels since last fall. The twist is that revisions risk is unusually elevated after July’s sharp downside shock and subsequent leadership turmoil at the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That sets up a high‑volatility window for bonds, equities, and housing finance even if the headline payroll number isn’t a blowout. Weekly jobless claims have drifted higher but remain in a historically healthy range, openings have cooled, and mortgage rates have slipped toward 6.5%—all consistent with softer labor demand. In a politicized backdrop, how quickly investors and borrowers interpret the details beyond the headline could be the edge.

jobs reportnonfarm payrollsFed rate cut+9 more

Why Salesforce Slid After a Q2 Beat — What Soft Guidance and Rapid AI ARR Growth Mean for the Cloud‑Software Trade

Salesforce beat consensus on both revenue and earnings in fiscal Q2 (ended July 31), but shares fell as investors focused on a softer-than-expected Q3 revenue outlook and a largely unchanged full‑year top‑line guide. The reaction — in a year when the stock is already down roughly 28% — underscores a market that’s punishing even small signs of growth caution in high‑multiple software. At the same time, AI momentum is building: management said Data Cloud and AI annual recurring revenue (ARR) reached $1.2 billion, up 120% year over year, and Agentforce has now surpassed 12,500 total deals, including over 6,000 paid. That tension — near‑term guide conservatism versus rapid AI ARR growth — is shaping both Salesforce’s narrative and the broader cloud‑software trade, where capital remains concentrated in infrastructure and data platforms while application vendors are pressed to show crisp monetization and durable growth.

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California Housing Market 2025: Rates, Supply, Climate Risk, and Policy Shake-Ups

California enters late 2025 as one of the nation’s most expensive, supply‑constrained housing markets—now shaped as much by the path of interest rates and a tightening insurance landscape as by zoning reform and construction costs. National rate dynamics are again dictating affordability and transaction volume, while climate‑driven losses in wine country and other high‑risk zones are repricing risk in appraisals, listings, and buyer decisions. Mortgage demand remains near cyclical lows, cancellations have climbed to a series high, and 30‑year mortgage rates have eased modestly from early‑summer peaks. At the same time, explicit wildfire‑hazard disclosures are associated with measurable sale‑price discounts, and premium spikes in high‑risk regions are complicating closings. This report integrates near‑term market signals with California’s policy framework (RHNA targets, SB 9/ADUs) and climate‑insurance realities to frame scenarios for the next 12–18 months—and highlight the watch list for the Bay Area, Southern California, the Inland Empire, and beyond.

California housing marketmortgage ratesCase-Shiller+18 more

Nvidia beats on earnings and guidance, but stock wobbles as data center whispers loom large

Nvidia cleared Wall Street’s bar again. For fiscal Q2 2026 (reported Aug. 27), the AI leader delivered adjusted EPS of 1.05 versus 1.01 expected and revenue of $46.74 billion versus $46.06 billion expected, and guided the current quarter to $54 billion (±2%), modestly ahead of the roughly $53.1 billion consensus — while reiterating that multiyear AI infrastructure demand should remain robust. Yet shares slipped as investors digested a second straight quarter of data center revenue arriving a touch light versus whisper numbers and as China-related H20 shipments remained excluded from guidance amid licensing uncertainty. The reaction underscores how perfection has become the default expectation two years into the AI buildout (according to CNBC).

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Apple’s AI Play: Strategic Upside Meets Legal and Valuation Crosswinds

Apple’s operating-system-level push into generative AI—bringing ChatGPT-powered capabilities alongside on-device intelligence to iPhone, iPad, and Mac—arrives with markets steady and rates gradually normalizing. As of today, Apple trades at $227.16, up about 8.9% over the last 30 days, while SPY is at $642.47 (+2.8%) and QQQ at $570.32 (+2.5%), reflecting firm risk appetite across mega-cap tech and broad equities (per Yahoo Finance - Market Data). Cross-asset signals are constructive but nuanced: the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield is 4.28% versus 3.73% on the 2-year—about +55 bps 2s/10s—while the 3-month is 4.29%, leaving the 3M/10Y essentially flat at roughly -1 bp, a marked improvement from the deep inversions seen in 2023–24 (U.S. Treasury - Yield Data).

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After Jackson Hole: What Powell’s Rate‑Cut Signal Means for Bonds, Yields and Investor Playbooks

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell used Jackson Hole to underscore a data‑contingent shift: if labor‑market risks continue to build and tariff‑related price effects prove to be a one‑time level shift rather than persistent inflation, policy easing is on the table. His comments that “the shifting balance of risks may warrant adjusting our policy stance” and that policy is “not on a preset course” re‑anchored the front end of the Treasury curve and boosted risk appetite, according to BBC and NPR reporting. Equities rallied into the close of his speech, with volatility easing and cyclicals firming alongside mega‑cap tech—consistent with a lower expected discount‑rate path. Market pricing corroborates the pivot. The effective fed funds rate is 4.33% for July (FRED), while the 2‑year Treasury is 3.68% and the 10‑year is 4.26% as of Aug 22 (U.S. Treasury). The 10s–2s spread has re‑steepened to roughly +58 bps and has held positive through mid‑to‑late August, per FMP’s 10y–2y spread series and Treasury yields. Over the last 30 trading days, major benchmarks advanced—SPY +3.3%, QQQ +2.8%, Dow +2.6%, and small‑caps (IWM) +5.2%—while TLT rose ~1.7% and GLD gained ~0.8% (Yahoo Finance). The VIX fell from ~17 to ~14, signaling easier financial conditions (Yahoo Finance). This piece examines the curve mechanics behind Powell’s signal, policy implications, cross‑asset impacts, and portfolio positioning for a data‑dependent glide path.

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AI Euphoria Meets Earnings Gravity: Will the AI Bubble Pop or Deflate Gracefully?

A week that began with a 26% collapse in C3.ai and a 20% drop in CoreWeave ended with the Nasdaq 100 flirting with record highs, underscoring the tension that now defines artificial intelligence investing. As of Friday’s close, the S&P 500 (SPY) finished at $645.31 and the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ) at $571.97, while Nvidia (NVDA) advanced to $177.99, per Yahoo Finance. The volatility backdrop eased, with the VIX at 14.22, also according to Yahoo Finance. The macro backdrop remains supportive: the 10-year Treasury yield sits at 4.26% and the 2-year at 3.68%, a positive 58-basis-point 10y–2y spread that marks a decisive exit from inversion, per U.S. Treasury data. The effective fed funds rate is 4.33% and unemployment is 4.2% (July), while real GDP is running near $30.33 trillion SAAR in Q2, according to FRED. That policy and liquidity cushion, however, is being tested by uneven AI monetization and timing risks. C3.ai’s CEO called preliminary sales “completely unacceptable,” while CoreWeave’s wider-than-expected loss hit sentiment ahead of its lock-up expiration even as it raised 2025 revenue guidance and highlighted a $30.1 billion backlog, CNBC reported. At the same time, cash-rich incumbents continue to execute: Cisco posted a narrow beat with strong AI infrastructure orders, and Foxconn reported a 27% profit jump as AI servers climbed to 41% of revenue, per CNBC. The result is a market where index-level optimism coexists with stock-specific air pockets—making backlog conversion, margins, and balance sheet strength the critical differentiators.

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What Bond Markets Are Saying About the Fed: Yield Curve, Inflation Signals, and a Playbook for Investors

U.S. bond markets have pivoted in the wake of Chair Jerome Powell’s Jackson Hole remarks, with the Treasury curve re-steepening as front-end yields drift lower and long-end term premium re-emerges. As of August 22, 2025, the 10-year Treasury yield is 4.26% and the 2-year is 3.68% (U.S. Treasury), putting the 10s–2s spread near +58 basis points, per FRED’s T10Y2Y. Market-implied inflation remains anchored: the 5-year breakeven is 2.48% and the 10-year is 2.41%, while the 10-year TIPS real yield is about 1.94% (FRED). The effective federal funds rate stands at 4.33% for July (FRED), still restrictive by historical standards. Equities have responded with improving breadth and lower volatility, and long-duration bond proxies have stabilized as real yields level off (Yahoo Finance).

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The Labor Market’s Slow Rebalancing: Wage Disinflation Meets a Normalizing Yield Curve

The multi-asset snapshot now points to a cooler but resilient growth backdrop with disinflation traction and a yield curve that has turned positively sloped. As of Friday’s close, SPY was 643.44 and QQQ 577.34, with DIA at 449.53 and IWM at 227.13; developed ex-U.S. (EFA) sat at 92.19 and EM (EEM) at 49.94, according to Yahoo Finance. Treasury yields reflect a normalized curve: 2Y 3.75%, 5Y 3.85%, 10Y 4.33%, and 30Y 4.92% (U.S. Treasury, 2025-08-15), leaving 2s10s at +58 bps and 2s30s at +117 bps. Market-based inflation expectations remain anchored with 5y breakeven at ~2.42%, 10y at ~2.38%, and 5y5y forward near ~2.34% (FRED). Headline PCE inflation was ~2.6% YoY in June, with core PCE ~2.8% YoY, and CPI in July at ~2.7% (core ~3.0%) (FRED/BEA). The unemployment rate is near 4.2% with prime-age employment still elevated and wage growth easing toward high-3%s (BLS/FRED). Volatility is subdued in equities (VIX ~15–16) but episodic in rates (MOVE recently eased after spikes) per Yahoo Finance and FRED. The July FOMC statement emphasized balanced risks and data dependence; the SEP medians still show disinflation progressing toward 2% and the policy rate drifting toward the mid-3s over the next two years (Federal Reserve/FOMC).

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Intel Stock Outlook: Policy Tailwinds vs. Execution Headwinds in an AI-Centric Cycle

As of Thursday, August 14, 2025 (4:00 pm ET), Intel (INTC) closed at $23.86 with an implied market capitalization of approximately $99.13 billion (per Yahoo Finance and FMP). Broader risk appetite was firm: SPY $644.95, Nasdaq Composite 21,710.67, and SOXX $254.14, while the VIX slipped to 14.51 (Yahoo Finance). Semis leadership remained concentrated in AI bellwethers: Nvidia (NVDA) $182.02, AMD $180.95, and TSM $241.00 (Yahoo Finance). Rates context as of August 14, 2025 shows a normalizing, upward-sloping curve: 2Y 3.74%, 5Y 3.82%, 10Y 4.29%, 30Y 4.88%, with the 2s10s spread at +55 bps and 3M–10Y roughly flat (−0.01 bps), signaling transition from deep inversion (U.S. Treasury). Market-based inflation metrics are anchored: the 10-year breakeven is 2.39% and 10-year TIPS real yield 1.87% (FRED). High-grade and high-yield credit spreads remain supportive at ~0.78% (IG OAS) and ~2.90% (HY OAS), respectively (FRED).

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Unveiling the Veil: The Growing Distrust in US Inflation Data and Its Ripple Effects on Financial Markets

In a world where economic indicators are the compass guiding financial decisions, the trustworthiness of inflation data is paramount. However, recent revelations and market reactions suggest a growing skepticism towards US inflation metrics. With a $2 trillion market in securities linked to these figures, the implications are profound. This article delves into the complexities of this distrust, examining the nuances of market sentiment, potential political influences, and the data's reliability. As bond investors express concerns and political maneuvers raise eyebrows, we explore the multifaceted perspectives on this issue, drawing from recent economic data and Federal Reserve communications.

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Federal Reserve's Delicate Balance: Navigating Interest Rate Decisions Amidst Political and Economic Pressures

In a climate of economic uncertainty, the Federal Reserve faces mounting pressure to cut interest rates, a move that has captured the attention of global markets and political leaders alike. As of August 5, 2025, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has maintained the federal funds rate at 4.33%, according to Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). This decision comes amidst a backdrop of lackluster employment growth and persistent calls from President Trump for a more aggressive monetary policy. While some market analysts, including those from Goldman Sachs, anticipate a series of rate cuts, the FOMC remains cautious, weighing the implications of such moves on both domestic and international fronts. This article delves into the complex dynamics at play, examining the latest data and divergent perspectives that shape the Fed's policy decisions.

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