Weekly Update 6/24/2024

Your Weekly Update for Monday, June 24, 2024.

Beacon Rock Wealth Advisors is a dba of BR Capital, Inc. is a financial planning and registered investment advisory firm in Camas, Washington. We are always available to answer your finance questions. Give us a call at (800) 562-7096 or send an email to [email protected].

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Have a great week!

Mike Elerath
CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERTM
CERTIFIED IN LONG-TERM CARE
[email protected]

Bill Roller
NMLS #107972
CHARTERED FINANCIAL ANALYST
CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERTM
CHARTERED MARKET TECHNICIAN
[email protected]

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Click on the image below to go to https://youtu.be/DhjdbwD2ORQ Ā to see the video from June 7 in which Mike Elerath, Bill Roller, and Keller Williams Realtor Michael Harding discuss the financial markets and Clark County real estate.

Weekly Video

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Summary

Markets were UP SLIGHTLY last week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was UP 1.46% to 39,155.10 while the S&P500 ended UP 0.65% to 5,467.65. The Nasdaq Composite ROSE 0.02% to 17,694.70. The annual yield on the 30-year Treasury ROSE 4.7 basis point(s) to 4.398.

Economic data for the shortened week included some gains in retail sales and better results for industrial production, while existing home sales and housing starts fell back.

Equities saw further gains globally, led by international more than U.S., where value outpaced growth. Bonds were mixed to lower as yields ticked higher. Commodities were also mixed, with declines in grains offset by a rise in crude oil.

Economic Notes

(+) The S&P Global U.S. manufacturing PMI index ticked up by 0.4 of a point to 51.7 for Juneā€”further into expansion, despite calls for a slight decline. New orders rose nearly a point to over 51, as did employment to over 53. On the other hand, overall output and both input and output prices fell back but remained expansionary. The S&P Global U.S. services PMIĀ index also rose in June, by 0.3 of a point, further into expansion at 55.1, also despite calls for a decline of about a point. The underlying components were strong as well, with gains in new business activity and employment moving higher, while input/output prices declined but remained in expansionary territory. These indicators both point to expansion, with the combined index reaching its highest level in two yearsā€”keeping a soft landing intact, and recessionary forces at bay.

(-) Retail salesĀ rose by 0.1% in May, below the 0.3% median forecast, while several prior months saw downward revisions. Removing autos from the number turned it to a negative -0.1%, as auto sales rose nearly 1%, offset by a -2% decline in gas station sales. Core/control sales saw a rise of 0.4%, with other significant sectors being gains in sporting goods and non-store/internet, while furniture, food/beverage, and food services sales declined. Over the past year, retail sales remain up over 2% on a nominal basis, but down -1% on a ā€˜realā€™ inflation-adjusted measure, with several years of inflation-adjusted change after the pandemic peak. This metric shows signs of stress on the lower-end consumer, which was taken positively by markets to some degree as that raises the odds of an eventual rate cut.

(+) Industrial productionĀ for May rose 0.9%, exceeding the 0.3% expected. This was led by manufacturing production, up the same 0.9%, with gains from auto, while utilities production rose nearly 2%, and mining rose 0.3%. Over the past 12 months, overall production was up only 0.4%, led by high-tech equipment up 8% over that time. This index has been relatively flat over the past year and a half, pointing to subdued manufacturing activity overall. Capacity utilizationĀ ticked up by a half-percent to 78.7%.

(-/0) The New York Fed Empire manufacturing indexĀ rose 9.6 points to -6.0, stronger than the -10.0 median expectation. This was an improvement, but the overall index remained in contraction. Under the hood, new orders rose by 15 points to a barely-contractionary -1.0, while shipments moved back into expansion. Employment saw a decline of several points, further into contraction. Prices paid also fell back, but still solidly in expansion, while prices received fell dramatically to a less dramatic expansion. Expected business conditions for the next six months expanded sharply, and nearly doubled from 16 to 30. This series has remained particularly volatile over the past several years on a month-to-month basis, likely due to seasonality adjustments, so is less reliable as an indicator than usual.

(-) Existing home salesĀ declined by -0.7% in May to a seasonally-adjusted annualized rate of 4.11 mil. units, slightly better than the -1.0% decline expected by consensus. Sales were down -3% over the last 12 months. Single-family units falling nearly -1% accounted for the entire change, as condos/co-ops were unchanged, and entirely in the South region, as all other areas saw flat results. The median sales price for existing homes is up 6% from a year ago to a record high of $419,300, continuing nearly a year straight of annual price gains. The inventory of unsold homes grew 7% from the prior month to an equivalent of 3.7 monthsā€™ supply. With homeowners that have mortgages ā€˜locked inā€™ at low rates at least half of where todayā€™s rates are, the subdued sales activity continues.

(-) Housing startsĀ fell -5.5% in May to a seasonally-adjusted annualized rate of 1.277 mil. units, well below the 0.7% increase expected by consensus, in addition to downward revisions for several prior months. In fact, this was the lowest starts level in four years. The majority of the decline came from a -5% drop in single-family, while the volatile multi-family group also fell, by -7%. Regionally, the West saw a 10% rise, while the Midwest fell by the greatest degree, down -19%. Building permitsĀ fell -3.8% to a seasonally-adjusted annualized rate of 1.386 mil. units.

(0) Initial jobless claimsĀ for the Jun. 15 ending week fell by 5k to 238k, just above the 235k median forecast. Continuing claims for the Jun. 8 week rose by 15k to 1.828 mil., above the 1.810 mil. expected. It appeared seasonal and other factors continue to play a role, particularly in MN, due to a policy change last year that could have added up to 10k to the claims figure after adjustments. Otherwise, no major changes.

(-) The Conference Boardā€™s Index of Leading Economic IndicatorsĀ for May declined by -0.5%, a tenth worse than the pace of Aprilā€™s decline. The monthly result was led by weakness in manufacturing new orders, consumer sentiment regarding business conditions, and fewer building permits. Over the last six months, the LEI fell by -2.0%, which was still an improvement on the prior six-month period decline of -3.4% (ending in Nov. 2023), with generally the same factors as in May pulling down the index. The year-over-year change in the LEI has reaccelerated higher, although remaining negative. Per the Conference Board, current LEI levels continue to fall above recession territory, although they point to sub-1% GDP growth over the next two quarters.

Market Notes

Period ending 6/21/2024 1 Week % YTD %
DJIA 1.50 4.87
S&P 500 0.63 15.36
NASDAQ 0.01 18.26
Russell 2000 0.80 0.40
MSCI-EAFE 0.07 4.97
MSCI-EM 0.98 7.42
Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate -0.15 -0.07
U.S. Treasury Yields 3 Mo. 2 Yr. 5 Yr. 10 Yr. 30 Yr.
12/31/2023 5.40 4.23 3.84 3.88 4.03
6/14/2024 5.51 4.67 4.22 4.20 4.34
6/21/2024 5.49 4.70 4.26 4.25 4.39

U.S. stocks saw moderate gains in the four-day trading week, with mixed economic data to react to. By sector, consumer discretionary, energy, financials, and industrials all saw gains of at least a percent, which led to sharper ā€˜valueā€™ outperformance over ā€˜growthā€™ for a change. Utility and technology (mostly due to Nvidia and Apple) stocks lagged the pack with negative returns, with the aside that Nvidia overtook Apple and Microsoft as the largest stock in the world, as measured by market cap. Real estate also fell back by nearly a percent with yields moving higher.

Foreign stocks experienced gains, with mixed results compared to the U.S., with strength in Europe Ā and the U.K. outweighing a decline in Japan. The Bank of England left their key policy rate unchanged, as expected, although a couple of members voted for a quarter-point cut, pointing to potential broadening dovishness. However, the Swiss National Bank cut rates by 0.25% for the second meeting in a row, taking the policy level down to 1.25%; lower inflation was one catalyst, as was likely a desire to reduce the strength of their currency. Japan also appeared to be weighed down by uncertainty over upcoming monetary policy choices. Emerging markets also fared well for the week, led by rebounds in Mexico and South Africa, following election-related concerns during the last few weeks. This isnā€™t atypical, especially in certain emerging market nations, as a wider band of potential political outcomes (some on the more extreme side), can give way to sighs of relief when new administrations begin to look a bit more moderate and status quo.

Bonds fell back slightly last week, with yields ticking up across the U.S. Treasury yield curve, by several basis points from the 2-year area out to the 30-year. High yield outperformed slightly with positive results. Internationally, bonds lost ground in developed markets due to the secondary headwind of a stronger dollar, while emerging market bonds saw gains.

Commodities were mixed for the week, with energy up several percent, offset by agriculture down -4% (mostly due to higher wheat supplies), while metals were little changed. Crude oil prices rose over 3% last week to $81/barrel, due to lower U.S. supply reports and ramped up Israel-Gaza military activity.

Mortgage Rates

ā€œMortgage rates fell for the third straight week following signs of cooling inflation and market expectations of a future Fed rate cut,ā€ said Sam Khater, Freddie Macā€™s Chief Economist. ā€œThese lower mortgage rates coupled with the gradually improving housing supply bodes well for the housing market. Aspiring homeowners should remember itā€™s important to shop around for the best mortgage rate as they can vary widely between lenders.ā€

TheĀ 30-year FRMĀ averaged 6.87 percent as of June 20, 2024, down from last week when it averaged 6.95 percent. A year ago at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 6.67 percent.

TheĀ 15-year FRMĀ averaged 6.13 percent, down from last week when it averaged 6.17 percent. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 6.03 percent.

Mortgage Rates

Freddie Macā€™s Primary Mortgage Market SurveyĀ® is focused on conventional, conforming, fully amortizing home purchase loans for borrowers who put 20% down and have excellent credit. Average commitment rates should be reported along with average fees and points to reflect the total upfront cost of obtaining the mortgage. Borrowers may still pay closing costs which are not included in the survey.

Through our relationship with Mortgage Window, Inc. Ā (NMLS#2485156) in Vancouver, Washington we originate residential and reverse mortgages.

Selected Cryptocurrencies

Symbol Name Price 24h % 7d % Market Cap Volume(24h)
BTC Bitcoin $61,146.23 -4.93% -6.72% $1,205,560,245,571 $26,600,624,064
ETH Ethereum $3,314.78 -5.25% -5.95% $405,316,806,459 $17,398,852,284
BNB BNB $564.70 -4.16% -5.72% $83,340,905,601 $1,773,427,598
SOL Solana $127.50 -4.90% -11.11% $58,921,887,899 $2,397,894,636
XRP XRP $0.48 -1.90% -5.22% $26,504,325,798 $1,065,357,227
TON Toncoin $7.34 -4.82% -5.83% $18,039,083,827 $400,335,401
DOGE Dogecoin $0.12 -5.48% -12.35% $17,057,991,225 $818,088,091
ADA Cardano $0.37 -3.46% -7.45% $13,366,823,740 $296,538,174
TRX TRON $0.12 -0.54% 2.34% $10,428,523,948 $260,901,943
SHIB Shiba Inu $0.00 -6.67% -15.55% $9,888,008,463 $273,799,448
AVAX Avalanche $24.79 -2.10% -13.70% $9,761,641,499 $525,890,324
LINK Chainlink $13.38 -1.24% -6.61% $8,134,889,816 $299,149,828
DOT Polkadot $5.62 -2.66% -9.49% $8,075,853,159 $175,439,539
BCH Bitcoin Cash $353.62 -8.51% -14.83% $6,974,675,951 $277,551,316
NEAR NEAR Protocol $5.23 -3.51% -1.32% $5,702,915,474 $459,644,091
MATIC Polygon $0.55 -4.45% -7.55% $5,481,535,336 $249,414,046
UNI Uniswap $8.95 -10.77% -18.27% $5,370,966,639 $162,678,978

Information current as of 5:45 AM PDT, Monday, June 24, 2024. Source: https://coinmarketcap.com

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Sources: Ryan Long, CFA, FocusPoint Solutions, American Association for Individual Investors (AAII), Associated Press, Barclays Capital, Bloomberg, Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, FactSet, Financial Times, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Asset Management,

MarketfieldAsset Management, Morgan Stanley, MSCI, Morningstar, Northern Trust, Oppenheimer Funds, PIMCO, Standard & Poorā€™s, StockCharts.com, The Conference Board, Thomson Reuters, T. Rowe Price, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Federal Reserve, Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post. Index performance is shown as total return, which includes dividends, with the exception of MSCI-EM, which is quoted as price return/excluding dividends. Performance for the MSCI-EAFE and MSCI-EM indexes is quoted in U.S. Dollar investor terms.

The information above has been obtained from sources considered reliable, but no representation is made as to its completeness, accuracy or timeliness. All information and opinions expressed are subject to change without notice. Information provided in this report is not intended to be, and should not be construed as, investment, legal or tax advice; and does not constitute an offer, or a solicitation of any offer, to buy or sell any security, investment or other product. FocusPoint Solutions, Inc. is a registered investment advisor.

Notes key: (+) positive/encouraging development, (0) neutral/inconclusive/no net effect, (-) negative/discouraging development.