November Recap

Hello again! Here is an overview of what you need to know about key market and economic events in November. Take a look below.


Major Stock Indexes
 
November was a great one for long-term investors in U.S. stocks—essentially the polar opposite of October.
 
For the month of November, the S&P 500 added a whopping 8.92%, the Nasdaq 100 tacked on 10.67%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 8.77%.
 
Fed Rate Decision
 
During November, market bulls were cheering the prospects of a more accommodating Federal Reserve (Fed), hopeful for rate cuts as early as May 2024. Are their expectations too lofty? Let’s dig in.
 
The fresh month kicked off with the Fed policy meeting on November 1st, as the Fed left interest rates unchanged in line with market expectations.
 
There were no surprises in the Fed decision, and market participants turned decidedly optimistic that the Fed has finished raising rates, even though the Fed has not made an explicit statement containing this declaration.
 
Market watchers could be overly optimistic concerning the Fed, with some even pricing in the Fed’s first rate cut in May of 2024.
 
In the near term, markets expect no change in rates at the December 13th meeting, indicating a 97.1% probability of no change in rates as of market close on November 30, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.
 
Cooler Jobs Market
 
The most recent October non-farm payrolls data showed a slightly softer labor market with 150,000 jobs created versus expectations of 170,000, a steep drop from September data, which showed 297,000 jobs created.
 
United Auto Workers (UAW) auto strikes factored into the data, contributing to a decline in the manufacturing sector. Healthcare, government, social assistance, and construction jobs were areas of strength.
 
The softer jobs data was cheered by market bulls, potentially indicating that Fed tightening is showing its intended effects by cooling the economy. But we don’t want things to cool too much! Think Goldilocks — we want it to be “just right.”
 
Consumer Inflation Decelerated in November
 
To the delight of market bulls, the declining consumer inflation trend continued in November.
 
Monthly government Consumer Price Index (CPI) data released on November 14th sparked a stock market rally, as the Consumer Price Index showed a 3.2% rise year-over-year in October—below Dow Jones estimates of 3.3%.
 
Core inflation, which strips food and energy from the metric, fell to the slowest annual pace since September of 2021, at 4%. This was also below analyst expectations of 4.1%.
 
Falling energy prices helped the headline figure, with oil and gas prices dropping in October.
 
Decelerating inflation helped set the tone for November, encouraging market bulls that the worst of rising prices could be in the rearview mirror.
 
Consumer Health
 
After three straight monthly declines, consumer confidence increased in November, indicating expectations for easier times ahead for consumers.
 
Retail sales fell less than expected in October, although the figure showed its first decline in seven months. The consumer has remained remarkably resilient throughout the interest rate hiking cycle and inflationary pressures.
 
And while retail sales fell in October, November could be a different story once the complete Black Friday and Cyber Monday data becomes available.
 
We, the consumer, drive the economy at the end of the day! It is easy to lose sight of this fact with so many headlines and market noise. Again, the consumer has been unbelievably resilient for a prolonged period.
 
Treasury Yields – and Mortgage Rates – Fall
 
Inflation loosening, employment growth declining, major equity indexes up, and lower government bond yields were the prevailing components of the market in November.
 
The widely monitored 10-Year Treasury Note Yield declined sharply, closing the month at a yield near 4.351% versus October’s closing level near 4.874%. This represented a decline of over 50 basis points month-over-month.
 
The dip in rates is good news for sidelined prospective mortgage borrowers and great news for long-term investors in U.S. equities. Remember, major U.S. stock indexes and Treasury yields have an inverse relationship.
 
Relaxed Markets
 
Short-term market volatility subsided impressively in November, with the CBOE S&P 500 Volatility Index falling to levels not seen since pre-COVID days.
 
When S&P 500 Volatility falls, it translates to investor fear leaving the marketplace, along with the price of S&P 500 put options declining. Many portfolio managers use S&P 500 put options to hedge market risk, and the appetite for them was weak throughout November, indicating market confidence.
 
Some investors also watch the CNN Fear and Greed Index to gauge investor sentiment.
 
As long-term investors, market sentiment in the short term is not a major deciding factor for most of us. However, it can be helpful for those employing dollar cost-averaging techniques.
 
Unquestionably, investor sentiment did a proverbial “180” from October to November.
 
The Takeaway
 
November featured a complete reversal in sentiment from October, courtesy of declining interest rates, continuing signs of softening inflation, and the job market cooling.
 
Though it might seem counterintuitive at first, the deceleration in inflation and weaker employment data is ultimately good news, as it indicates the Fed’s rate hikes are having the intended effect.
 
Headwinds remain, but you wouldn’t know it by glancing at the major stock market averages. Long-term investing continues to be the ticket.
 
With that said, I’d love to hear how things are going on your end. Are you planning any year-end tax selling? Remember to consult with your tax advisor if you have such intentions.
 
What I am reading


Scarcity Brain: Fix Your Craving Mindset and Rewire Your Habits to Thrive with Enough by Michael Easter

(Excerpt) Almost any behavior is fine in moderation. But why do we suck so bad at moderating? Why do we keep eating when we’re full? Why do we keep shopping when we own too much? Why do we keep drinking when we’re already tipsy? Why do we scroll social media when it makes us miserable? Why do we binge-watch another episode even when we realize a more meaningful life beyond the screen is passing us by?
 
These behaviors are often fun and rewarding in the short term but backfire in the long run. In researching my new book, I learned that these behaviors track back to how we react to feelings of “scarcity.” All it takes is a “scarcity cue” to get there.
 
Slot machines, sports gambling, dating apps, TikTok, chasing “likes” on social media—they have the three parts of a scarcity loop: opportunity, unpredictable rewards, quick repeatability. The opportunity to get something of perceived value starts it off. Not knowing exactly when we’ll get that thing of value sucks us in—that’s unpredictable rewards. We experience an exciting, suspenseful anxiety as we wait to see whether this occasion will deliver the good stuff. Research shows that our brains fixate on uncertainty. They naturally suppress systems that take in other information, and we focus on whatever is unpredictable. The loop aspect is that you can quickly repeat the behavior, and you can repeat it infinitely. As with TikTok or dating apps, you swipe, swipe, swipe until you get what you want. Then repeat swipe, swipe, swipe, boom. All kinds of algorithms learn to breadcrumb users.