A daily market update from FS Insight — what you need to know ahead of opening bell
“Integrity, wisdom, skill, intelligence – such things are forged in adversity.” – Mencius
Overnight
Helene lashes the South with wind and flood rains after coming ashore as a Category 4 storm AP
Newsmax and Smartmatic settle defamation lawsuit over false 2020 election claims WSJ
Ports seek order to force dockworkers to bargaining table as strike looms at East and Gulf ports AP
Japan’s scandal-hit ruling party picks next ex-Defense Minister Shigeru Ishiba as next PM BBC
Chinese stocks post best week since 2008 after stimulus blitz FT
US economy grew at a solid 3% rate last quarter, government says in final estimate AP
French preliminary inflation eases more than expected in September RT
U.S. new vehicle sales expected to have struggled during third quarter CNBC
UK clears Amazon’s AI partnership with Anthropic RT
Super Micro stock plunges on report of Justice Department investigation BAR
EU privacy regulator fines Meta 91 million euros over password storage RT
Costco posts major earnings beat, but misses on these metrics IBD
Swiss National Bank delivers third straight rate cut WSJ
China’s newest nuclear submarine sank, setting back its military modernization WSJ
Earth to briefly gain second ‘moon’, scientists say BBC
Chart of the Day

Overnight |
S&P Futures -7
point(s) (-0.1%
) Overnight range: -14 to +8 point(s) |
APAC |
Nikkei +2.32%
Topix +0.73% China SHCOMP +2.88% Hang Seng +3.55% Korea -0.82% Singapore -0.25% Australia +0.1% India -0.12% Taiwan -0.16% |
Europe |
Stoxx 50 +0.32%
Stoxx 600 +0.26% FTSE 100 +0.3% DAX +0.55% CAC 40 +0.3% Italy +0.44% IBEX +0.14% |
FX |
Dollar Index (DXY) +0.01%
to 100.57 EUR/USD -0.21% to 1.1154 GBP/USD -0.24% to 1.3383 USD/JPY -1.04% to 143.31 USD/CNY -0.0% to 7.011 USD/CNH +0.22% to 6.9883 USD/CHF -0.21% to 0.8444 USD/CAD +0.1% to 1.3479 AUD/USD -0.12% to 0.6888 |
Crypto |
BTC +1.84%
to 65871.88 ETH +1.39% to 2668.58 XRP +0.1% to 0.5896 Cardano +2.61% to 0.4056 Solana +1.95% to 158.57 Avalanche +3.81% to 29.97 Dogecoin +7.43% to 0.1244 Chainlink +2.0% to 12.74 |
Commodities and Others |
VIX +1.63%
to 15.62 WTI Crude -0.12% to 67.59 Brent Crude -0.1% to 71.53 Nat Gas +6.23% to 2.75 RBOB Gas -0.46% to 1.952 Heating Oil -0.39% to 2.128 Gold -0.32% to 2663.91 Silver -0.69% to 31.8 Copper +0.95% to 4.625 |
US Treasuries |
1M -1.5bps
to 4.6889% 3M -1.7bps to 4.5967% 6M -1.2bps to 4.3883% 12M -2.0bps to 3.9622% 2Y -0.2bps to 3.6266% 5Y -0.9bps to 3.5585% 7Y -1.4bps to 3.6505% 10Y -1.1bps to 3.7848% 20Y -0.9bps to 4.1736% 30Y -1.2bps to 4.1191% |
UST Term Structure |
2Y-3
M Spread widened 0.2bps to -99.3
bps 10Y-2 Y Spread narrowed 0.9bps to 15.6 bps 30Y-10 Y Spread narrowed 0.0bps to 33.2 bps |
Yesterday's Recap |
SPX +0.4%
SPX Eq Wt +0.84% NASDAQ 100 +0.72% NASDAQ Comp +0.6% Russell Midcap +0.68% R2k +0.57% R1k Value +0.66% R1k Growth +0.2% R2k Value +0.59% R2k Growth +0.55% FANG+ -0.15% Semis +2.88% Software +0.52% Biotech +0.45% Regional Banks +1.1% SPX GICS1 Sorted: Materials +1.97% Tech +0.89% Fin +0.54% Indu +0.5% SPX +0.4% Healthcare +0.32% Comm Srvcs +0.31% Cons Disc +0.14% Cons Staples -0.05% Utes -0.72% REITs -1.05% Energy -2.0% |
USD HY OaS |
All Sectors -5.1bp
to 359bp All Sectors ex-Energy -5.5bp to 331bp Cons Disc -8.4bp to 311bp Indu -7.1bp to 261bp Tech -4.4bp to 346bp Comm Srvcs -5.8bp to 593bp Materials -7.4bp to 339bp Energy +7.0bp to 333bp Fin Snr -8.2bp to 316bp Fin Sub -1.5bp to 231bp Cons Staples -4.7bp to 322bp Healthcare -6.7bp to 370bp Utes -1.2bp to 222bp * |
Date | Time | Description | Estimate | Last |
---|---|---|---|---|
9/27 | 8:30AM | Aug PCE m/m | 0.1 | 0.2 |
9/27 | 8:30AM | Aug Core PCE m/m | 0.2 | 0.16 |
9/27 | 8:30AM | Aug PCE y/y | 2.3 | 2.5 |
9/27 | 8:30AM | Aug Core PCE y/y | 2.7 | 2.62042 |
9/27 | 10AM | Sep F UMich 1yr Inf Exp | 2.7 | 2.7 |
9/27 | 10AM | Sep F UMich Sentiment | 69.4 | 69.0 |
10/1 | 9:45AM | Sep F S&P Manu PMI | 47.0 | 47.0 |
10/1 | 10AM | Sep ISM Manu PMI | 47.6 | 47.2 |
10/1 | 10AM | Aug JOLTS | n/a | 7673.0 |
10/3 | 9:45AM | Sep F S&P Srvcs PMI | n/a | 55.4 |
10/3 | 10AM | Sep ISM Srvcs PMI | 51.5 | 51.5 |
10/3 | 10AM | Aug F Durable Gds Orders | n/a | 0.0 |
MORNING INSIGHT
Good morning!
This week’s most “incremental” development, which therefore represents the most positive surprise for markets, is the drastically positive actions taken by China’s PBOC and government. We want our clients to take advantage of this upside breakout in China equities, most evident in broader China (FXI -0.71% )
Click HERE for more.
TECHNICAL
- Short-term bullish trend looks to be reasserting itself after Thursday’s gains.
- Consumer Discretionary and Materials have both begun to gain strength.
- Healthcare is being lowered to Neutral, technically given this week’s breakdown.
Click HERE for more.
CRYPTO
- Successful economic support from the PBOC and MOF could boost the broader Asian economy, providing a tailwind for APAC capital flows into crypto over the coming quarters.
- As year-end approaches, we remain optimistic about the crypto outlook, viewing the market’s lean toward a soft landing as constructive for prices.
Click HERE for more.
First News
Rondo Alla Turca. Turkey made prominent headlines in three separate stories yesterday, not all of them particularly flattering. In New York City, Mayor Eric Adams was indicted on fraud and bribery charges. Federal prosecutors described an alleged scheme that ran for 10 years, accusing Adams of – among other things – soliciting cash and luxury travel from Turkish government officials. In return, the indictment claims, Adams successfully pressured the Fire Department of New York to approve the opening of a new Turkish Mission to the United Nations despite safety concerns at the time that should have caused the 36-story skyscraper to fail inspection. Adams denied the charges, and Turkish officials did not respond to requests for comment.
The Republic of Turkey also notched its largest international bond sale ever, raising $3.5 billion by selling 10-year dollar bonds with a 6.75% yield. Investors swapped about $1.9 billion in debt maturing through 2025, and the country raised about $1.6 billion in fresh funds. It was the country’s fourth international bond sale of the year, and no doubt welcome news to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who is in New York for the United Nations General Assembly.
Perhaps in matter with more emotional resonance to the everyday Turk, it was reported that Turkey has sought authorization from the European Commission to regulate what can and cannot legally be called döner kebab, a widely popular street food that involves roasting spiced beef, lamb, and/or chicken on vertical spits. Turkey wants authority to set the standards as to what kinds of meat are used, what spices are used to marinate it, and how the meat is sliced. Germany objected strenuously to the proposal – döner kebab arrived there via Turkish immigrants in the 1970s, and in the years since it has evolved somewhat from its roots as it became popular with the broader German population. “The kebab is part of Germany,” the German Ministry of Food and Agriculture argued. “There’s no need for guidelines from Ankara.” The EC has given the two countries six months to come up with a compromise agreement before it makes a ruling. POL, EC, FT
Getting the message. Recent news regarding messaging platforms shows the continued difficulty in balancing civil rights and public safety. The Wall Street Journal recently reported on the disappearance of one of China’s most prominent economists after he criticized Xi Jinping’s economic policies in a private chat group on Tencent’s WeChat platform. Until his disappearance this spring, Zhu Hengpeng, was deputy director of the Institute of Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. It is unclear precisely what he wrote to displease authorities, though the WSJ described the content as “comments about China’s flagging economy and veiled criticism of Xi that referred to his mortality.”
Yet at the same time, online chat platforms that safeguard user privacy have also come under fire. Telegram has long been roundly criticized for its famous (or infamous) refusal to assist authorities with search warrants seeking to surveil its users. Telegram CEO Pavel Durov was arrested in France this August after authorities there accused him of failing to do enough to stop the spread of illegal content on his platform, content that allegedly included child pornography, extremist and terrorist content, and drug-trafficking communications. It was also the platform of choice for protesters organizing opposition efforts against authoritarian regimes, such as Russia and Iran.
Initially defiant after his arrest in France, Durov conveyed a more compliant message on Monday, telling users on his platform that Telegram had changed its user and content-moderation policies. He also wrote that Telegram would henceforth comply with “valid government requests” for user information.
It’s worth noting that last week, Ukraine made a contrasting assertion, accusing the platform of working with Russian authorities. In response, Ukraine banned all government and military personnel, as well as defense-sector and infrastructure employees, from installing or using Telegram on their official mobile devices. “Telegram is actively used by the enemy for cyber-attacks, the distribution of phishing and malicious software, user geolocation and missile strike correction,” Ukrainian intelligence officials asserted, claiming that Russian intelligence officials can even access deleted messages of Telegram users. (BBG, BBC, WSJ)