Fed speak, tech earnings and PCE inflation will test Wall Street this week

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Wall Street will navigate a light slate of headline drivers over the coming week, but could nonetheless face a series of risks heading into the end of the third quarter, as it looks to build on late-September gains powered in part by Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts.

The S&P 500, fresh off its best five-day gain of the year heading into last week's Fed rate decision, has stretched its 2024 gain to around 20% heading into the final three months of the year. The benchmark is supported in part by a resilient economy, rising corporate profits and a newly dovish central bank outlook.

Megacap tech stocks, of course, are responsible for the bulk of the benchmark's gains, but analysts are starting to see a consistent rotation into value and midcap stocks. The Russell 2000 has well outpaced gains for both the S&P 500 and the tech-focused Nasdaq over the past month.

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That rotation, tied to the Fed's longer-term rate projections, will be tested this week with key readings on consumer confidence, business activity and new-home sales, all of which are expected over the first three trading days.

Data from Bank of America's weekly "Flow Show" report suggest investors are still hoping to find equity-market value. Some $33.8 billion flowed into U.S. stock funds last week, the third highest total of the year.

"As rate-cut bets have fluctuated throughout 2024, solid earnings growth and a strong performance from a larger number of sectors have powered the S&P 500 to new high after new high," said Bret Kenwell, U.S. investment analyst at eToro.

"So long as the economy holds up and inflation doesn’t roar back to life, lower rates and strong earnings growth can continue to drive stocks higher over the long term."

Micron earnings will highlight a quiet reporting week on Wall Street, with the chipmaker updating on its fiscal fourth quarter after the close of trading Wednesday.

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Larger headline risks heading into the end of the week include the Labor Department's weekly tally of jobless claims — the final reading before its crucial September employment report on Oct. 4 — as well as the release of the Fed's' preferred inflation gauge, the PCE price index, before trading starts on Friday.

Prior to the opening bell on Thursday, the Commerce Department will also publish its second revision of second-quarter GDP growth, which was last pegged at 3%.

Micron and Costco earnings on deck

On the earnings front, chipmaker Micron Technology  (MU)  will publish its fiscal- fourth-quarter report after the close of trading Wednesday. That release is expected to show key developments in memory chip pricing as well as a broader sense of the AI investment theme heading into the final months of the year and beyond.