Bank earnings, inflation — What you need to know for the week ahead

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It’s been a shaky start to the fourth quarter for markets.

After a third quarter that saw stocks enjoy their best run since 2013, each of the major averages finished this week with losses as tech stocks took the biggest hit while a rise in Treasury yields had most of the market’s attention.

On Friday, all three major indices closed red with the Nasdaq pacing losses, falling 1.1% during a week in which the tech index dropped 3.2%. The small-cap Russell 2000 — which dropped 2.5% this week — was down about 0.9% on Friday while the Dow and S&P 500 closed off their lows, though both logged losses greater than 0.5%.

The stock market’s volatility this week was largely dictated by moves from the bond market where yields on U.S. Treasury bonds across the curve moved higher with the 10-year yield finishing the week at 3.23%, the highest level since 2011. Yields moved higher on Friday after the September jobs report showed the U.S. economy remains strong as the unemployment rate moved to a 49-year low of 3.7%, indicating the Fed will likely raise rates once more this year and up to four times in 2019.

“The recent strength of the economy appears to be pushing Fed officials in an increasingly hawkish direction,” said Andrew Hunter, U.S. economist at Capital Economics. “But the corresponding surge in market interest rates this week only reinforces our own view that economic growth will slow sharply next year.”

President Donald Trump on Friday took to Twitter and focused on the current economic expansion — not the potential slowdown in growth Hunter and other economists have discussed — saying simply, “Just out: 3.7% Unemployment is the lowest number since 1969!” Let the good times roll.

President Donald Trump makes his second visit to Minnesota, with a rally on Thursday, Oct. 4, 2018, in Rochester, Minn. (Glen Stubbe/Star Tribune via AP)
President Donald Trump makes his second visit to Minnesota, with a rally on Thursday, Oct. 4, 2018, in Rochester, Minn. (Glen Stubbe/Star Tribune via AP)

In the week ahead, investors will have a bit of an abbreviated schedule with bond markets closed on Monday for Columbus Day — likely keeping volumes down across the Street — while equity markets in the U.S. will be open all five trading days.

China’s Shanghai stock exchange will also re-open on Monday after having been closed this past week for a national holiday. This re-opening comes after shares of a number of Chinese companies listed in the U.S. fell sharply this past week.

On the economic calendar, investors will face a lighter calendar after this past week’s big jobs report with inflation data out Thursday the main highlight. Economists expect that “core” consumer prices, which exclude the cost of food and gas, will rise 2.3% over last year in September. The Fed is targeting 2% inflation.

And on the earnings side, things will start to pick up towards the end of the week with major U.S. banks marking the unofficial start of earnings season as JP Morgan (JPM), Wells Fargo (WFC), Citigroup (C), and PNC Financial (PNC) will all report earnings on Friday.