Jackson Hole to Set the Stage
August 18, 2025
RECAPPING LAST WEEK
Investors’ growing confidence on interest rate cuts propelled the S&P500 and Nasdaq Composite
indices nearly 1% higher to new record weekly closes despite mixed inflation data. The Russell
2000 jumped 3%, and international stocks posted solid gains. An extension of the tariff truce
between the U.S. and China also boosted sentiment. Seven of eleven S&P500 sectors finished
positive, led by healthcare, communications, and discretionary. Crude oil prices were little
changed even as OPEC raised its global oil demand forecast for 2026 and lowered its estimate for
U.S. supply growth, suggesting a tighter market.
Gold futures fell 2% as traders awaited further clarification on whether gold bars would be subject to
U.S. tariffs. Ethereum continued to dominate cryptocurrency flows, surging 18% before settling for an
8% weekly gain. U.S. Treasury yields initially moved lower after Tuesday’s CPI report, which revealed that consumer prices
increased only moderately last month. That news also sent equity indices sharply higher as rate
cut expectations increased. However, Thursday’s producer price index report showed a 0.9%
jump MoM due to a large increase in services and food prices, a result in line with economists’
view that tariffs continue to pose higher inflation risks. Two-year Treasury yields—a good proxy for
where investors think the Fed funds rate is headed—fell to a three-month low of 3.66% before
ending the week modestly higher at 3.76%. Meanwhile, the odds of a September rate cut—which
approached 100% after the CPI report—still stood near 85% at week’s end, despite the upsurge in
wholesale prices.
In other economic news, U.S. consumer sentiment sank to 58.6 this month, well
below estimates of 62.0. Inflation expectations were the main reason for the drop, as the one-
year outlook rose to 4.9% from 4.5%, while the long-run view increased to 3.9% from 3.4%. Retail
sales, which are not adjusted for inflation, grew 0.5% last month, and the June figure was revised
up to 0.9%. Overseas, China’s industrial production and retail sales figures for July missed
forecasts, raising pressure on the government to create additional stimulus measures to stoke
domestic demand. Japan’s economy expanded at a better-then-expected 1% annualized pace in
Q2 and 0.3% QoQ as export volumes performed well in the face of tariffs. Australia’s central bank
lowered rates by 25 basis points to 3.60% on Tuesday while downgrading the country’s economic
outlook. Another rate cut is expected later this year even as wage growth remained elevated.
Finally, Eurozone GDP grew by just 0.1% in Q2 as industrial output dipped, while Britian reported
growth of 0.3% after a 0.7% expansion in the prior quarter.
THE WEEK AHEAD
On the geopolitical front, President Trump met with Russian President Putin over the weekend to
discuss a ceasefire deal, with Ukrainian President Zelensky headed to Washington today. Looking
at this week’s economic agenda, all eyes will turn to the Kansas City Fed’s annual three-day
symposium, which begins Thursday in Jackson Hole. This gathering is always viewed as an
important signpost for future Fed policy, and this year will be no different, given recent
developments in the U.S. jobs and inflation data, and the political pressure coming from the
current administration.
Fed Chair Powell is scheduled to speak on Friday morning. Additionally, minutes from this month’s FOMC
meeting will be released on Wednesday. August’s flash PMI data arrives this week and will be the first
insights into how the latest round of tariffs are affecting the world’s major developed economies.
There is a slew of housing data on tap, including building permits and existing home sales. Last week,
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway revealed major purchases in U.S. homebuilding stocks, as well as in
beleaguered healthcare conglomerate UnitedHealth Group. Earnings reports from retail giants Walmart, Target, and Home Deport round
out the domestic calendar. On the international side, inflation updates from Canada, the UK, and
Japan are some of the major releases scheduled, along with the flash PMI reports.
(Schwab)