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Here’s the most crowded trade on Wall Street, according to Bank of America

The mood is somewhat positive ahead of CPI data largely expected to behave and keep the Fed in its perceived no-more-hike box.

Should things go as planned, bond yields will keep easing off, and keep a small fire lit under that end-year equity rally theory.

Onto our call of the day, from Bank of America, which talks about where the majority of investors expect the 2024 “playbook” for investing to go — and much of that has to do with a Federal Reserve backing off interest rates.

In its global fund manager survey for November, strategist Michael Hartnett and his team explain that investors have turned cautious on the macro picture.

So most expect a soft landing for the economy — interest rate hikes that have worked to slow the economy just enough, but not into a recession — lower rates, a weaker dollar and a continued bull market for large-cap tech stocks.

Read: What’s driving Wall Street’s gloomiest interest-rate forecast

A net 76% of those surveyed believe the Federal Reserve hiking cycle is over, and 61% expect lower bond yields, which as the below chart shows, is the most on record:

And that’s despite the second highest number of investors ever saying fiscal policy was too stimulative, the survey finds.

The survey also shows investors have trimmed their cash levels to a two-year low of 4.7% from 5.3%, and moved to the biggest bond overweight since March 2009. And as part of that view the Fed is done hiking, investors flipped to their first equity overweight since April 2022.

Now, if the economy goes against the general thinking here and a “hard landing” or sharp slowdown kicks in, then a contrarian investor would want to be bullish on cash, short on U.S. growth stocks and Japan equities. they say. And in the case of “no landing” and higher interest rates, then long cash, dollar and commodities is the contrarian bet to make.

Hartnett and co. also laid out what they believe is the biggest contrarian play of 2024 — “long leverage, short quality.”

While he doesn’t quite break this down, leverage can refer to companies that need to borrow money, so this would imply a bullish bet on that group. Real estate investment trusts, banks, and small cap stocks can be viewed as companies that need to borrow. But a bullish bet on those would mean no fear of an imminent credit event, that Hartnett has discussed in recent months.

As for short quality? Those contrarian investors would bet against companies with healthy balance sheets that aren’t overborrowing or overleveraging.

Read: Here are the biggest clean-energy transition challenges and investment opportunities

And: The Dow industrials hit a death cross on Monday. That could be a bullish or bearish signal

The markets

Stock futures
ES00,
+0.07%

YM00,
+0.01%

NQ00,
+0.20%
are unsurprisingly flat ahead of CPI data, with bond yields
BX:TMUBMUSD10Y

BX:TMUBMUSD02Y
also going nowhere.

The buzz

Consumer prices for October are coming at 8:30 a.m., and are expected to ease — up 0.1% on the month and 3.3% annually. Core CPI, which strips out food and energy, is set to hold steady — up 0.3% and 4.1%, respectively.

A bunch of Fed speakers are on the docket as well — Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson at 5:30 a.m. spoke about monetary policy in uncertain times, Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr will testify to a Senate panel at 10 a.m. on supervisory and regulatory activities and Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee will speak at 12:45 p.m.

Home Depot
HD,
-1.21%
topped estimates for third-quarter earnings but in a cautious way, ahead of Target
TGT,
-0.96%,
TJX
TJX,
-0.07%
and Walmart
WMT,
+0.90%
results this week. One question? Is industry theft still a big problem?

Swiss-based miner and commodity trader Glencore
GLEN,
+3.15%
will pay $6.93 billion for a 77% stake in the steelmaking coal business of Canada’s Teck Resources
TECK,
+3.05%

TECK.A,
+3.67%.

Best of the web

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Jamie Dimon is selling his stock. So are these other Wall Street bankers (subscription required)

The chart

Top tickers

These were the top-searched stock-market tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m.:

TSLA,
+4.22%
Tesla

GME,
-3.19%
GameStop

NVDA,
+0.59%
Nvidia

AMC,
-1.37%
AMC Entertainment

AAPL,
-0.86%
Apple

NIO,
-0.28%
Nio

GME,
-3.19%
GameStop

AMZN,
-0.68%
Amazon

PLTR,
+0.20%
Palantir

PLUG,
-1.70%
Plug Power

MSFT,
-0.81%
Microsoft

Random reads

Some (don’t get too excited) good news for ultra-processed food fans.

Merry Swiftmas. Online stampede for Taylor Swift Christmas baubles.

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This article was written by Follow Beyond Saving is a professional in commercial real estate providing research on REITs with a focus on properties...

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