Good morning. NYCB tumbles again, Dell heads for a record thanks to a boost from AI and Pimco warns bonds are heading back to the 1980s. Her [View in browser](
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Good morning. NYCB tumbles again, Dell heads for a record thanks to a boost from AI and Pimco warns bonds are heading back to the 1980s. Hereâs whatâs moving markets. â [David Goodman]( Want to receive this newsletter in Spanish? [Sign up to get the Five Things: Spanish Edition newsletter](. NYCB Falls Again Commercial real estate lender New York Community Bancorp is tumbling after saying it discovered â[material weaknesses](â in how it tracks loan risks, wrote down the value of companies acquired years ago and replaced its leadership to [grapple with the turmoil](. Itâs down more than 25% in premarket trading, after already falling 53% so far this year. Investors in regional banks have been on edge since, January when the company â a major lender to New York apartment landlords â said it is stockpiling cash to cover potential problems with loans. A wider index of regional lenders is down about 10% this year. Dell Soars Dell is moving in the other direction, with shares surging 21% in premarket trading and[set for a record high](. The jump comes after it reported better-than-expected sales and profit, fueled by demand for information technology equipment to handle artificial intelligence work. âWeâve just started to touch the AI opportunities ahead of usâ Chief Operating Officer Jeff Clarke said. Pimco Warning Pacific Investment Management Co. is warning that US fiscal largesse is at risk of dragging the [Treasury market back to 1980s](. In a paper this week, Pimco said a combination of stickier inflation and deteriorating budget estimates could see a return to the time when bond vigilantes demanded far higher compensation to own longer-dated bonds. Thereâs a risk such dynamics âcould start to reverse the 40-year downtrendâ of term premium â a key measure of how much bond investors are compensated for holding long-term debt, the paper said. Fading Relief The[lack of any nasty surprises]( in the US PCE data yesterday helped the S&P 500 notched its 14th record close this year, but the relief seems to be waning on Friday. [US equity futures]( swung from gains to losses during the course of the European morning, while the Stoxx 600 pared an advance after data showed euro-zone inflation eased [less than anticipated]( in February. Treasuries rose for a third session in a row, continuing a move that help net [a payout of 20-to-1]( for anyone who took heed of Citiâs advice on Wednesday to put on a âquiet bull structureâ options bet. Fed Officials The PCE data also allowed Fed officials to stick to a narrative of cautious optimism about rate cuts. Mary Daly yesterday said central bank officials [are ready to lower interest rates]( as needed but emphasized thereâs no urgent need right now, while John Williams reiterated that[he expects the central bank to cut rates later this year.]( Meanwhile Raphael Bostic said recent inflation readings indicate âthere are going to be some bumps along the wayâ to target, and Austan Goolsbee cautioned against reading too much into a single monthâs inflation data. Thereâs another deluge of Fed speakers due today, with at least seven officials slated to make remarks. The US also has manufacturing, construction and sentiment data ahead. What weâve been reading This is whatâs caught our eye over the past 24 hours. - warned cutting too soon is [a worse mistakeÂ](than waiting too long.
- [SNB Chief Jordan to exit]( after decade of currency and bank drama.
- Rising UK house prices are[just 3% below their Covid record-high.](
- BOJâs Ueda keeps [market players guessing]( over rate hike timing
- [Chinaâs factory activity slows]( as weak demand hampers growth. And finally, here's what Kristineâs interested in this morning When traders finally aligned with Federal Reserve on the outlook for interest-rate cuts in 2024, I expected wave of relief that would restart the rally in Treasuries. After all, while markets may have arguably overhyped their expectations for monetary policy easing, the direction of travel for rates remains the same â lower, which remains a positive for bonds⦠right? Not exactly. While Treasuries did enjoy a bit of an end-February rally, they also just delivered their biggest monthly decline since September and benchmark yields are holding near the highest levels in more than three months. So far, it hasn't shaken stocks, which continue to build on the euphoria induced by blowout Nvidia earnings last week. More broadly, S&P 500 companies are headed for their highest quarterly earnings beat rate since the fourth quarter of 2021, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence strategists Gina Martin Adams and Wendy Soong. Yet at some stage, yields that continue to march upwards â particularly on the back of growing expectations to remain higher for longer -- will have to bite for stocks. That will be especially true if more robust US data give credence to the idea that perhaps the economy doesn't need rate cuts -- or worse, maybe what it needs is rate hikes. As Jim Bianco of Bianco Research [put it](: âThe old adage on Wall Street is that rates go up until something breaks.â [Kristine Aquino]( is managing editor for Bloomberg Markets Today. Follow her on X at [@krisaqnews](. Like Bloomberg's Five Things? [Subscribe for unlimited access]( to trusted, data-based journalism in 120 countries around the world and gain expert analysis from exclusive daily newsletters, The Bloomberg Open and The Bloomberg Close. [Bloomberg Markets Wrap: The latest on what's moving global markets. Tap to read.]( Follow Us Like getting this newsletter? [Subscribe to Bloomberg.com]( for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and subscriber-only insights. Before itâs here, itâs on the Bloomberg Terminal. Find out more about how the Terminal delivers information and analysis that financial professionals canât find anywhere else. [Learn more](. Want to sponsor this newsletter? [Get in touch here](. You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Five Things to Start Your Day: Americas Edition newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, [sign up here]( to get it in your inbox.
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