Stocks Hold Gains on Signs Consumer in Good Shape

Wall Street traders gearing up for the Federal Reserve decision refrained from making big bets as they awaited clues on the path of rates that will shape the outlook for markets over the next few months.

A solid reading on retail sales did little to move markets in early US trading, with equities holding gains and bonds yields edging mildly higher.

The value of retail purchases, not adjusted for inflation, increased 0.6% after a similar gain in July. The control-group sales — which feed into the calculation of goods spending for gross domestic product — climbed 0.7%, indicating a healthy quarter.

“The American consumer appears to be in good spirits,” said Ellen Zentner at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. “That’s good news for the economy, but it may heighten debate over how aggressively the Fed needs to cut rates.”

While Fed officials are still focused on bringing inflation to their target, they’re widely expected to cut rates in an effort to shield the labor market from further deterioration.

“Even if the job market is weak, it’s not hurting the consumer yet,” said David Russell at TradeStation. “While these numbers won’t prevent the Fed from cutting rates tomorrow, they reduce some of the longer-term dovish hopes.”

S&P 500 contracts signaled the US equity benchmark will open at a fresh record, with the Nasdaq 100 poised to rise for a 10th consecutive session. The yield on two-year Treasuries was little changed at 3.53%. The dollar fell.

Winning run

To Bret Kenwell eToro, given the recent labor market data, retail sales were a big question coming into this week.