Positive economic data gives investors reasons to be optimistic

After months of doom and gloom in the markets, investors have found reasons to be optimistic — sending the S&P 500 up 12% over the past month.
Supply chain issues are a problem we’re all too familiar with. After nearly two years of non-stop surprises (i.e., COVID, Russia) — shipping times and delivery costs have come down significantly.
This brings good news for nearly all players:
China’s economy has slowed dramatically due to a major property crisis and a zero-COVID policy. Chinese retail sales grew 2.7% in July — far short of the 5% expected.
But we’re giving positive vibes today, so let’s spin the narrative. Per The Overshoot’s Matthew Klein, China’s problems provide an upside for the rest of the world: Deflationary pressures.
Rising prices of these commodities were major contributors to high inflation. But now that demand is falling, so are prices.
Rest of the world: China, just don’t slow too much to cause a global crisis, k?
The Fed has indicated that they won’t pull back on interest rate hikes until inflation falls substantially. But signs of slowing inflation have made some analysts optimistic:
The pessimist: Still, many economists argue that inflation hasn’t come down nearly enough to change the pace of rate hikes. Many noting that July’s 8.5% inflation is still too far above the Fed’s 2% target.
The optimist: Slowing inflation is the first step to sustainable market recovery, and in the long run, the S&P 500 never disappoints.