'Hot inflation is over.' Here's where what that means for investors, says this portfolio manager.

A firmer start is ahead for stocks.

Investors seem to be perking up after Apple spoiled the mood some on Monday via a report it plans to slow its hiring roll.

If true, Apple
AAPL,
-2.06%
has good company, as Facebook parent Meta Platforms
META,
+1.54%,
Alphabet
GOOGL,
-2.46%,
Microsoft
MSFT,
-0.96%,
Tesla
TSLA,
+0.20%
and Amazon
AMZN,
+0.18%
have either announced cuts or plans to slow hiring amid fears of recession fueled by an aggressive Federal Reserve.

But one big worry could be off the table soon, according to our call of the day from the president and chief executive of Stock Traders Daily and portfolio manager at Equity Logic, Thomas H. Kee Jr.

“There is a very good chance that the hot inflation data is now officially in the rear view mirror,” Kee told clients recently. “Obviously, we can never be sure, but with oil cratering and transitory inflation pressures waning, this is a real possibility.”

While the market has been jittery about inflation causing Fed hikes, “much higher rates are already built into expectations, and everyone expected the FOMC to be more aggressive at the beginning, then calm down thereafter.”

Kee thinks a 75 basis-point hike next week might lead to a bigger move the next time as well, or a hike of 100 basis points, marking “the end of the ‘fast start.”

He has long been a fan of keeping investment simple, alternating investments between cash and the highly liquid SPDR S&P 500 ETF
SPY,
-0.83%.
He has said that since 2000, moving to cash when his proprietary crash indicator signaled high risk, then holding SPY at all other times, would mean beating the market by 530%.

Speaking to MarketWatch in May, Kee predicted volatility would make this a market to trade, but he now sees a market to hold. And a play on that ‘end of hot inflation’ favors tech, with the Invesco QQQ Trust Series I QQQ
QQQ,
-0.85%,
an ETF that tracks the Nasdaq-100 index, his favored play here.

He said if markets press higher with fewer rate fears then QQQ should continue to outperform, recovering even more than SPY, though that exchange-traded fund could still work out as well. Down about 27% year to date, the ETF is up 3% on the month, versus a 19% drop and 1.2% gain, respectively for SPY.

Kee also threw in a couple of stock recommendations. First up is Apple
AAPL,
-2.06%,
which he considers “a good stock that is beaten down,” and has owned in the portfolio from $135 per share.

The second is Credit Suisse
CS,
+1.90%

CSGN,
+1.20%,
which he considers a “speculative value play,” noting it trades near 31% of its tangible book value of $19 per share, versus historically trading around 61% of that. “The stock is beaten up because of a series of bad events and they have cleaned up their act. This stock is likely to double over the next 12 months,” he said.

Kee said his proprietary Evitar Corte Model, which uses FOMC monetary policy to define market crash risk, is signaling no market meltdowns until next year. “No new highs though. There’s no new money to make new highs. But [a] good bounce back = to maybe -5% YTD or so. That means 15% return or so,” he said.

And: Rallies toward 4,000-4,100 should be viewed as an opportunity to reduce risk says BTIG strategist

The buzz

Johnson & Johnson
JNJ,
-2.24%
posted a forecast-beating profit, but cut its outlook, and Hasbro
HAS,
+0.27%
is dipping after a revenue miss. Halliburton
HAL,
+3.55%
stock is up as an “all but sold-out” North America market boosted earnings. IBM shares
IBM,
-1.28%
are dropping, after the tech group reported an upbeat second quarter, but executives warned about a strong dollar hit.

After the close, investors will be eager to see if Netflix
NFLX,
+0.96%
reversed an exodus of streamers.

General Motors
GM,
-0.76%
was downgraded to hold by Deutsche Bank, which sees traditional auto makers struggling to regain investor interest.

NCR
NCR,
+1.50%
is soaring on a report the consumer transactions software and services company was in talks for a buyout by private-equity firm Veritas Capital.

Bank of America’s monthly poll of global fund managers says pessimism among managers have never been higher.

Building permits and housing starts both dipped in June. Data showed China’s holdings of U.S. Treasurys dipped below $1 trillion, the first time since 2010.

The European Union’s budget commissioner said the bloc isn’t expecting a restart this week of the crucial Nord Stream pipeline that sends gas from Russia to Europe. European gas prices are surging this morning.

A heat wave in Europe is sending temperatures soaring in the U.K. for a second day, while there are over 1,000 people dead and thousands of acres of land have burned in Spain and Portugal. This Twitter post shows a train temporarily stopped with flames on either side, in northern Spain on Monday.

The markets

Stock futures
ES00,
+0.70%

YM00,
+0.51%

NQ00,
+0.77%
are moving higher, while bond yields
TMUBMUSD10Y,
2.999%

TMUBMUSD02Y,
3.174%
inch up and oil
CL.1,
-1.95%
prices drop. The dollar
DXY,
-0.68%
is dropping and bitcoin
BTCUSD,
+2.83%
is hovering at just under $22,076.

The chart

As the Fed embarks on an aggressive hiking path, long-dated U.S. Treasury bonds and the iShares 20+ Year U.S. Treasury Bond ETF (TLT)
TLT,
-1.04%
are showing signs of a potential long-term trend reversal, says Larry Tentarelli, editor and publisher of the Blue Chip Daily Trend Report.

The 2/10-year yield curve has inverted to the lowest level since December 2000, meaning the bond market is beginning to price in an economic slowdown. “Historically, in a slowing economy, longer-term bond yields tend to drop, which should bode well for long-dated Treasurys and (TLT),” he said.


Blue Chip Daily

Tentarelli notes the TLT recently reclaimed its 50-day moving average, and, on a weekly trend, completed a bullish weekly MACD cross, a sign of improving trend momentum. He advises watching for the TLT to stay above 108-110 on any pullbacks.

Longer-term trend reversals can take some time to develop, as markets move from downtrend to uptrend, but the upside potential from here is favorable. Read the full post here.

The tickers

These were the top-searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m. Eastern:

Ticker

Security name

GME,
+3.53%
GameStop

TSLA,
+0.20%
Tesla

AMC,
+7.61%
AMC Entertainment

XELA,
+34.33%
Exela Technologies

AAPL,
-2.06%
Apple

NIO,
+0.58%
NIO

AMZN,
+0.18%
Amazon

NVDA,
+2.15%
NVIDIA

BABA,
+0.68%
Alibaba

IBM,
-1.28%
IBM

Random reads

The COVID-19 pandemic has turned this Thai city’s famed monkeys into aggressive thieves.

Wedding crasher? Huge waves in Hawaii swamp this couple’s big day.

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