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Fundamentals expected to continue driving U.S. equities higher


Investing.com —  A rally in U.S. stock markets has been underpinned by fundamental drivers that could spur shares even higher, according to analysts at UBS.

On Tuesday, the benchmark and tech-heavy both registered fresh record high closes, boosted by a surge in Nvidia (NASDAQ:) shares that pushed the market capitalization of the artificial intelligence chipmaker above software group Microsoft (NASDAQ:) to become the world’s most valuable company.

Also aiding sentiment was softer-than-anticipated U.S. retail sales data for May, which pointed to slackening momentum in consumer spending. Traders subsequently bolstered bets that the Federal Reserve will roll out two interest rate cuts this year despite the central bank recently signaling it only expects one.

In a note to clients on Wednesday, the analysts argued the retail sales numbers were the latest sign the U.S. economy is on course for a so-called “soft landing,” a scenario in which elevated inflation is cooled without causing a broader meltdown in activity.

“These figures are consistent with the gradual deceleration that is taking place in domestic demand and should contribute to the disinflation process,” they wrote. “In our view, while the U.S. economy is slowing, we don’t see evidence that suggests a hard landing. This means the outlook for equities is positive, supported by resilient growth and solid earnings.”

Market pricing for two rate cuts in 2024, meanwhile, indicates a potential easing cycle from the Fed in the months ahead that could “provide a tailwind for both growth and small-cap stocks,” the UBS analysts said.

They added that the spike in enthusiasm around AI which has powered Nvidia’s rise should continue to drive broader gains in equities. Nvidia’s massive share increase — including about a 170% skyrocketing so far this year — has already lifted stock markets, accounting for roughly a third of the 14% jump in the S&P 500 in 2024.

“We anticipate the semiconductor-led AI rally will broaden in the second half of this year and beyond, and we continue to like big tech and key AI segments such as [graphics processing units], custom chips and foundries, and semi-cap equipment,” they said.



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