The Federal Reserve may have pretty much just hit its 2% inflation target

 

WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 18: Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell arrives to a news conference following the September meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee at the William McChesney Martin Jr. Federal Reserve Board Building on September 18, 2024 in Washington, DC. The Federal Reserve announced today that they will cut the central bank’s benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points to a new range of 4.75%-5%. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell arrives to a news conference following the September meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee at the William McChesney Martin Jr. Federal Reserve Board Building on September 18, 2024 in Washington, DC. 
Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images

This week’s inflation data provided more evidence that the Federal Reserve is nearing its objective, fresh on the heels of the central bank’s dramatic interest rate cut just a few weeks ago.

Consumer and producer price indexes for September both came in around expectations, showing that inflation is drifting down to the central bank’s 2% target.

In fact, economists at Goldman Sachs think the Fed may already be there.

The Wall Street investment bank Friday projected that the Commerce Department’s personal consumption expenditures price index for September will show a 12-month inflation rate of 2.04% when it is released later this month.

If Goldman is correct, that number would get rounded down to 2% and be right in line with the Fed’s long-held objective, a little over two years after inflation spiked to a 40-year high and unleashed an aggressive round of interest rate hikes. The Fed prefers the PCE as its inflation gauge though it uses a variety of inputs to make decisions.

“The overall trend over 12, 18 months is clearly that inflation has come down a lot, and the job market has cooled to a level which is around where we think full employment is,” Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said in a CNBC interview Thursday after the latest consumer price data was released. “We’d like to get both of them to stay in the space where they are right now.”

Some obstacles ahead

While keeping inflation at bay may not be an easy task, the latest data indicates that though prices are not receding from their troublesome heights of a few years ago, the rate at which they are increasing is pulling back.

The 12-month rate for the all-items consumer price index was at 2.4% in September, while the producer price index, a proxy for wholesale inflation and a leading gauge for pipeline pressures, showed an annual rate of 1.8%.

Goldman’s projection that the PCE index is heading to 2% is also about in line with tracking from the Cleveland Fed.

The central bank district’s “inflation nowcasting” dashboard pegs the 12-month headline PCE rate at 2.06% for September, which would get rounded up to 2.1%. However, on an annualized pace, inflation for the entire third quarter is running at just a 1.4% rate — well below the Fed’s 2% goal.

To be sure, there are some caveats to show that policymakers still have some work to do.

Core inflation, which excludes food and energy and is a metric that the Fed considers a better measure of longer-term trends, is expected to run at a 2.6% annual rate for the PCE in September, according to Goldman. Using just the consumer price index, core inflation was even worse in September, at 3.3%.

Fed officials, though, see the unexpectedly high shelter inflation numbers as a major driver of the core measure, which they figure will ease as a lower trend in rents works its way through the data.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell on Sept. 30, addressing the rent situation, said he expects housing inflation to continue to recede while “broader economic conditions also set the table for further disinflation.”

From a policy standpoint, lower inflation opens the door for the Fed to keep cutting rates, particularly as it turns its attention to the labor market, though there’s some trepidation about how quickly it should move.

September’s half percentage point reduction to a fed funds range of 4.75% to 5% was unprecedented for an economy in expansion, and the Fed at the very least is expected to return to its normal quarter-point pace. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic even said Thursday he’d be open to skipping a move altogether at the November meeting.

“Aggressive easing would risk spiking consumer demand just as it is settling into a sustainable pace,” PNC senior economist Kurt Rankin said in a post-PPI analysis. “This result would in turn put pressure on businesses to meet that demand, re-igniting gains in those businesses’ own costs as they jockey for the necessary resources to do so.”

Futures traders are betting on a near certainty that the Fed cuts rates by a quarter point at both the November and December meetings.

Britain’s King Charles cashes in as Crown Estate profits surge to over $1.4 billion

 

King Charles III in Camberley, England.
King Charles III in Camberley, England.
Dan Kitwood | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

LONDON — Britain’s King Charles III is set for a bumper £45 million ($58 million) pay raise after profits at the sovereign’s public estate more than doubled, according to official records.

Profits of The Crown Estate — a portion of which funds the monarchy — increased 148% from £443 million in 2022-23 to £1.1 billion ($1.4 billion) in 2023-24, an annual report showed Wednesday.

These bumper profits mean the taxpayer-funded Sovereign Grant, which supports the official duties of the King Charles-headed Royal Family, will rise more than 50% from £86.3 million in 2024-25 to £132 million during the following year.

The Crown Estate, the national portfolio of historical and commercial land-holdings, is owned by the British monarch but managed independently and its revenues are given to the government. In exchange, the monarchy currently receives 12% of Crown Estate profits — a proportion calculated on funds two years in arrears.

The Royal Family had been receiving 25% of profits to fund their duties and renovations, but the household agreed with the government to revise down the figure last year in anticipation of the profit surge. Had the percentage not been reduced, the royal household would have received £275 million.

The bumper results were derived primarily from the sale of options and leases on offshore wind projects on the seabed surrounding the British Isles, which is owned by The Crown Estate.

CEO Dan Labbad said the record results were due to decades of investment in offshore wind — sustainable energy being one of the king’s passion projects — as well as a “diverse and resilient” property and land portfolio.

“Today’s record results are the product of years of commitment and investment into helping create the UK’s world-leading offshore wind sector, as well as the active management of our diverse and resilient portfolio,” Labbad said in a statement.

Labbad also welcomed a forthcoming change in legislation, announced in last week’s King’s speech, that would broaden the Crown Estate’s investment powers. He said that it would allow the estate “even greater impact in the long-term national interest, from supporting the UK’s decarbonised, energy secure future to nature recovery, regeneration and economic growth.”

Separate accounts were published Wednesday by Buckingham Palace showing the rundown of royal finances from April 1, 2023, to March 31, 2024 — in the king’s first full year of reign.

The king’s coronation, which took place May 6 last year, cost the Sovereign Grant £800 million.

Staffing the royal household cost £27.9 million in the last financial year, while property maintenance was £47 million amid continued renovations of Buckingham Palace.

Travel expenses, meanwhile, came in at £4.2 million, with the king and queen’s four-day visit to Kenya last year costing £167,000.

Wall Street punishes Alphabet and Microsoft despite earnings beats after stocks hit record

 

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 09: Google CEO Sundar Pichai speaks at a panel at the CEO Summit of the Americas hosted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on June 09, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. The CEO Summit entered its second day of events with a formal signing for the "International Coalition to Connect Marine Protected Areas" and a speech from U.S. President Joe Biden. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
Google CEO Sundar Pichai speaks at a panel at the CEO Summit of the Americas hosted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on June 09, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.
Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images

Results were good, but not good enough.

That’s Wall Street’s reaction to quarterly results on Tuesday from Alphabet and Microsoft. Both companies reported revenue and earnings that exceeded estimates, yet the stocks sold off in extended trading.

In investor speak, the stocks were priced for perfection. Alphabet shares are up 56% for the year and climbed to a fresh high last week, exceeding the prior record from late 2021, the peak of the tech boom. Microsoft is up 70% over the past 12 months, also reaching a fresh high recently and surpassing Apple as the most valuable publicly traded company.

The companies generated excitement last year by riding the artificial intelligence wave, and were also lauded by shareholders for their dramatic cost-cutting efforts, which included eliminating thousands of jobs.

In the weeks heading into their earnings reports, investors were buying as if they expected positive surprises. They were left disappointed and nitpicking the numbers.

Alphabet on Tuesday reported 13% revenue growth, the fastest rate of expansion since early 2022. Sales of $86.31 billion topped the average estimate of $85.33 billion, according to LSEG, formerly Refinitiv. Earnings per share of $1.64 beat estimates by 5 cents.

Revenue at Microsoft increased 18% to $62.02 billion, topping the $61.12 billion average analyst estimate. EPS of $2.93 was 15 cents above consensus.

Both companies also beat expectations in their cloud businesses, with Google Cloud reporting 25% growth and Microsoft’s larger Azure and other cloud services expanding by 30%.

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PCs still big part of Microsoft’s financials but not ‘meaningful’ part of narrative: Adam Crisafulli

The one disappointment from Alphabet was in Google’s ad business, which delivered revenue of $65.52 billion, trailing analysts’ estimates of $65.94 billion, according to StreetAccount. Within ads, YouTube came in just shy of expectations.

Stifel analysts, who recommend buying the stock, said in a quick-take report on Tuesday that Alphabet produced “healthy advertising results, but not enough.”

Brian Wieser, an analyst at media and advertising consultancy Madison and Wall, said the market has unrealistic expectations for Google given its size and dominance.

“In my general conversations with public market investors and sell-side analysts, few have a correct view of the advertising market,” Weiser said. “Many think that growth can continue at double-digit levels for the fastest-growing companies for much longer a period of time than is realistic to expect.”

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Alphabet shares dropped almost 6% after the report. Microsoft’s drop was less severe. The stock initially fell by more than 2% and then pared some of its losses.

Microsoft’s outlook was a bit light, overshadowing the earning and revenue beat. The company called for fiscal third-quarter sales between $60 billion and $61 billion, while analysts polled by LSEG had expected $60.93 billion.

Shares of chipmaker AMD also dropped despite better-than-expected revenue numbers and profit that met estimates. The stock, which is up 137% in the past year on excitement about its artificial intelligence processors, fell almost 6% after the announcement.

Attention now turns to Thursday, when AmazonApple and Meta all report quarterly results. Like Alphabet and Microsoft, Meta shares have climbed to a record this month. Apple hit its all-time high in December, while Amazon remains about 6% below its record from 2022.

—CNBC’s Jonathan Vanian, Jordan Novet and Kif Leswing contributed to this report

WATCH: This was a ‘high expectation’ quarter for Alphabet

Tesla shares drop almost 6% on earnings miss and warning of volume growth decline this year

 

ROME, ITALY - DECEMBER 15: Elon Musk, chief executive officer of Tesla Inc and X (formerly Twitter) Ceo speaks at the Atreju political convention organized by Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy), on December 15, 2023 in Rome, Italy. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's right-wing political party organised a four-day political festival in the Italian capital. (Photo by Antonio Masiello/Getty Images)
Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, speaks at the Atreju political convention organized by Fratelli d’Italia (Brothers of Italy) in Rome, Italy, on Dec. 15, 2023.
Antonio Masiello | Getty Images

Tesla reported revenue and profit for the fourth quarter that missed analysts’ estimates as automotive revenue increased just 1% from a year earlier. The stock slid almost 6% in extended trading.

Here are the key numbers:

  • Earnings per share: 71 cents, adjusted vs. 74 cents expected by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv.
  • Revenue: $25.17 billion vs. $25.6 billion expected by LSEG.

Total revenue increased 3% from $24.3 billion a year earlier. Operating margin for the quarter came in at 8.2%, down from the year-ago quarter’s figure of 16% and slightly higher than 7.6% in the prior quarter.

Meager growth in auto revenue was partly due to a reduced average selling price following steep price cuts around the world in the second half of the year. Net income for the quarter more than doubled to $7.9 billion, or $2.27 per share, from $3.7 billion, or $1.07 per share, a year earlier. The increase was mostly due to a $5.9 billion one-time noncash tax benefit.

Tesla said in its investor presentation that vehicle volume growth in 2024 “may be notably lower” than last year’s growth rate as the company works toward launching its “next-generation vehicle” in Texas. The company cautioned investors that it’s “currently between two major growth waves.”

CEO Elon Musk was asked on the earnings call if investors should be uncomfortable with his stated desire to own 25% of Tesla. The question was in reference to a recent tweet, in which Musk said that’s how much voting control he would want before turning Tesla into a “leader in AI and robotics.”

Musk responded by saying he doesn’t want to be in the position to be “voted out by some sort of random shareholder advisory board.” He highlighted proxy advisory firms Institutional Shareholder Services, or ISS, and Glass Lewis as groups creating challenges, alongside activists that “infiltrate” companies and “have strange ideas about what should be done.” In mentioning ISS, Musk said he calls the group “ISIS,” referring to the Islamic State.

ISS didn’t immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

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Elon Musk is very much in charge of Tesla, him wanting more stock is ‘weird’: Ross Gerber

When asked about the timeline for production of Tesla’s humanoid robot, called Optimus, executives declined to give any specific guidance.

Musk described Optimus as, “something that I think has the potential to far exceed the value of everything else combined” for Tesla. He claimed that Tesla’s technology developed in its automotive unit translates well to the humanoid robot “because the car is just a robot on four wheels.”

Optimus is “by far the most sophisticated humanoid robot that’s being developed anywhere in the world,” Musk added. Competitors in the market include Boston Dynamics, Agility Robotics and Figure. Other robotics companies such as Sanctuary, Apptronik, 1X, Fourier and Unitree are all working on dexterous manipulation hardware, mimicking human hands.

Musk said Tesla has “got a good chance of shipping some number of Optimus units next year,” but he didn’t specify their capabilities or the cost. Musk admitted on the call that he tends to be optimistic on timelines.

Cybertrucks hit the market

During the quarter, Tesla began selling Cybertrucks to customers. The company said in its investor deck that, “We expect the ramp of Cybertruck to be longer than other models given its manufacturing complexity.” Tesla said it now has the capacity to build more than 125,000 of the vehicles in a year. On the earnings call, Musk called the Cybertruck “our best product ever and a “head-turner.”

“I see us delivering somewhere on the order of a quarter-million Cybertrucks a year,” he said, without giving a precise timeframe.

A Tesla Cybertruck at a Tesla store in San Jose, California, US, on Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2023. The first Cybertruck customers will receive the vehicles during a launch event at Tesla's Austin headquarters this week. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images
A Tesla Cybertruck at a Tesla store in San Jose, California, on Nov. 28, 2023.
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

For the full year, Tesla said automotive revenue reached $82.42 billion, a 15% increase from 2022. The energy division, which is much smaller than Tesla’s core business, was a bright spot, with revenue rising 54% to $6.04 billion. The unit sells solar energy generation and energy storage systems. Tesla’s “Services and Other” revenue rose 37% from a year earlier to $8.32 billion.

Operating income decreased year over year to $2.1 billion in the quarter, with Tesla blaming the declining profits on the reduced average sales price of its vehicles and an increase in operating expenses “partly driven by AI and other R&D projects.” Spending on research and development increased to $1.09 billion from $810 million a year earlier, though it was down from $1.16 billion in the prior quarter.

In its shareholder presentation, Tesla confirmed that it had rolled out a new version of its premium driver assistance software, marketed as its Full Self Driving Beta or FSD Beta option. The software doesn’t make Tesla’s cars autonomous, as they still require an attentive driver at the wheel.

As of the end of 2023, Tesla had 54,892 Supercharger connectors available to drivers around the world at 5,952 stations.

Tesla shares have dropped about 16% so far this year as of Wed

‘Taiwan is China’s Taiwan’: Beijing says Taiwan’s ruling party is not representative of popular opinion

 

Taiwan and China flags together textile cloth, fabric texture
Taiwan and China flags together textile cloth, fabric texture
Oleksii Liskonih | Istock | Getty Images

TAIPEI — China dismissed the outcome of Taiwan’s Saturday elections, saying its ruling Democratic Progressive Party does not represent mainstream public opinion after it failed to win a majority in the presidential and legislative votes.

“Taiwan is China’s Taiwan,” Chen Binhua, the spokesperson for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, said on Saturday after DPP’s Lai Ching-te emerged as the winner of the self-governing island’s presidential contest with more than 40% of the popular vote.

“This election cannot change the basic pattern and the development of cross-Strait relations, nor can it change the common desire of compatriots on both sides of the Taiwan Strait to draw closer,” Chen added, according to a CNBC translation of a report from Xinhua, the official state news agency.

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Beijing has framed the self-ruled island’s election as a choice between “peace and war, prosperity and decline” — with Chinese President Xi Jinping regarding reunification with the mainland “a historical inevitability.” Beijing has repeatedly labeled Lai as a “stubborn worker for Taiwan independence” and a dangerous separatist.

China has never relinquished its claim over Taiwan — which has been self-governing since the Chinese Nationalist Party, or Kuomintang, fled to the island following its defeat in the Chinese civil war in 1949.

The outcome of Taiwan’s presidential and legislative elections will likely shape China’s posture toward the island, while also influencing China-U.S. relations and security in the broader Indo-Pacific region.

‘Somebody has it wrong’ on U.S. recession risks as oil, gold and Treasurys diverge, fund manager says

 

'Somebody has it wrong' on the risk of a U.S. recession, hedge fund manager says
VIDEO03:10
‘Somebody has it wrong’ on the risk of a U.S. recession, hedge fund manager says

Markets are confused over the odds of a U.S. recession, and “somebody has got it wrong,” according to hedge fund manager David Neuhauser.

The CIO of Livermore Partners told CNBC on Monday that many investors are hoping for a “Goldilocks” scenario, in which the economy doesn’t grow too quickly, or shrink too much.

“The outlook was, of course, that the Fed’s going to look to be cutting rates because they see a soft landing approaching. And it looks like, on the surface, it is,” he told “Squawk Box Europe.”

Recent jobs data and inflation figures have boosted hopes that a recession can be avoided in the U.S. Nonfarm payrolls outpaced expectations in November, and inflation figures for October also beat estimates, with consumer prices coming in flat on the previous month and up 3.2% from a year prior.

“But at the same time, underneath the surface, you’re seeing a lot of cracks,” Neuhauser added.

He identified weakness in the U.S. consumer and the global economy — China in particular — and in the fact that inflation numbers remain stubbornly high in a number of countries.

“It looks like the U.S. is the best spot to be in, and I think that today that’s true. Except I think that [the] forward path — are we going to see things start to fall off a cliff? Or are we going to, sort of, glide path down and corporate earnings are going to be sheltered from the storm?” he said.

“That’s the thing, I think, people don’t have a really good understanding of today, but they’re believing that that’s going to happen — that’s the narrative.”

Oil and gas markets, which Livermore Partners is invested in, are “telling a whole different story” when it comes to the economic outlook, according to Neuhauser.

“When you look at the oil … and you look at the gold market, that’s telling you recession is in the front,” he said. “But when you read the tea leaves in terms of what analysts are saying, economists are saying as far as the U.S. economy — that the soft landing is approaching. That’s what, actually, the 10-year [Treasury yield] is telling you.”

Brent crude futures with February expiry were trading around $75.67 per barrel early Monday, down over 20% from their peak of around $97 per barrel in September.

Spot gold prices have soared from their early October lows of around $1,810 per ounce. The commodity was trading around $1,991 an ounce Monday, off a record high above $2,100 per ounce seen last week.

Both falling oil prices and rising gold prices indicate growing recessionary fears. At the same time, heightened expectations of a soft landing (following the strong jobs data) saw 10-year Treasury yields jump Friday. The 10-year yield was hovering around 4.254% early Monday.

“Somebody has it wrong here, is what I’m trying to tell you,” Neuhauser added. “It’s hard to describe who has it [wrong] yet. So I’m just really waiting and seeing to decipher what’s the right path to take.”

China’s premier says country will work to achieve growth targets

 

BEIJING, CHINA - JULY 11: Chinese Premier Li Qiang, (R) speaks during a meeting with Asian Development Bank (ADB) President Masatsugu Asakawa at the Great Hall of the People on July 11, 2023 in Beijing, China. (Photo but Mark Schiefelbein - Pool/Getty Images)
Chinese Premier Li Qiang, (R) speaks during a meeting with Asian Development Bank (ADB) President Masatsugu Asakawa (not pictured) at the Great Hall of the People on July 11, 2023, in Beijing, China.
Getty Images

BEIJING — China’s Premier Li Qiang said Wednesday the country would work to achieve its economic targets for the year, according to an official readout.

His remarks came a day after China reported disappointing data for July, prompting some economists to warn of rising downside risks to the country’s gross domestic target of around 5% growth. GDP rose by 5.5% in the first half of the year from a year ago.

Li is head of China’s State Council, the country’s top executive body. He was speaking at a meeting of the council on Wednesday.

During the meeting, Li called for expanding domestic demand and boosting consumption. He also said efforts should be made to “organically combine” security with development — in the context of promoting business overall.

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That’s according to a CNBC translation of the Chinese readout.

Its only mention of employment called for using “multiple channels” to increase jobs. But there was no mention of the property market.

Market worries about spillover from China’s massive real estate sector to the rest of the economy have reemerged this month as once-healthy developer Country Garden now hovers on the brink of default.

Palo Alto Networks CEO says Microsoft has a long way to go on cybersecurity

 

Microsoft off to a good start, has a long way to go with secure service edge: Palo Alto Network CEO
VIDEO01:34
Microsoft off to a good start, has a long way to go with secure service edge: Palo Alto Network CEO

Cybersecurity company Palo Alto Networks’ CEO Nikesh Arora told CNBC’s Jim Cramer that while Microsoft’s foray into the cybersecurity sphere certainly substantiates the market, the company is just dipping its toes into a sector Palo Alto has been swimming in for years.

“This whole SASE market is going to be very huge, and we’ve sowed the seeds and invested in this five years ago, and first things first, this is a huge validation for the market,” Arora said, adding that the tab on these projects could be billions of dollars heftier now that Microsoft is in the game.

Earlier this week, Microsoft announced it would be expanding its cybersecurity offering entering the Secure Access Service Edge space, known as SASE, a large part of the cybersecurity market dominated by smaller companies like Palo Alto. Palo Alto’s stock plummeted 7% on Wednesday because of this announcement, with peers CrowdStrike and Zscaler also taking a hit.

“They’re dipping their toes into the SASE space, we’ve been here for a while, clearly there are other industry players who’ve been in this space for a while,” Arora said of Microsoft. “From what I read, they’re sort of heading off into a good start, but they have a long way to go.”

Arora added that Palo Alto can provide comprehensive services that Microsoft might not be able to do.

“While Microsoft’s entering the SASE market, the world is going towards a multi-enforcement point, zero-trust network,” he said. “We can give hardware firewalls, software firewalls, SASE capability, to deliver that across all of the stuff with one single pane of glass is what all our customers are asking.”

Microsoft declined to comment on the matter.