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CNBC Daily Open: Prices Are Low and Markets Are High

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This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

What you need to know today

Disinflation in process
U.S. headline inflation in June rose just 0.2% compared with May, and 3% from a year ago — the lowest level since March 2021. Both consumer price index figures were 0.1 percentage points lower than the Dow Jones estimate. Excluding food and energy prices, core CPI was 0.2% higher month on month and 4.8% higher on an annual basis.   

Highest close this year
U.S. stocks advanced Wednesday, with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite closing at their highest level since April 2022, after the cooler-than-expected inflation report. European markets traded higher too. The benchmark Stoxx 600 added 1.5%, led by the mining sector which rose 3.7%.

X, meet xAI
Elon Musk is already the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX as well as the owner of Twitter. Now, he'll have a new title to add to that list: leader of xAI, an artificial intelligence company that aims to "understand the true nature of the universe." xAI seems to be positioned as a rival to OpenAI, Google and Anthropic. Musk will share more information on the company during a Twitter Spaces chat Friday.

Longer stay at the Magic Kingdom
Bob Iger told CNBC in February that he had no intention of staying in his role as Disney CEO for more than two years, which would put the end of his tenure in 2024. But the company just renewed Iger's contract by two years, keeping him as CEO through 2026. Disney may be worried about succession plans — Bob Chapek, who was supposed to be Iger's successor, was ousted abruptly.

[PRO] C'mon Barbie let's go stock picking
Barbie, the Greta Gerwig-directed summer flick of 2023, will be released in theatres July 21. In addition to filling up cinemas, the movie could give shares of this retailer a boost of up to 13%, according to investment bank Roth MKM.

The bottom line

Yesterday's CPI report, when viewed with last Friday's jobs report, suggests that it's time to update a piece of economic orthodoxy.

The Philips Curve is an economic concept that claims inflation will fall only if unemployment rises. It seems to underpin the Federal Reserve's economic projections. In their quest to tame inflation through higher interest rates, the Federal Reserve expects unemployment will rise to 4.1% by the end of this year.

Let's take a look at the actual jobs and inflation numbers.

June's unemployment rate was 3.6%, and has hovered between 3.4% — a 53-year low — to 3.7% since March 2022. Meanwhile, June's headline inflation was 3% annualized — its lowest in two years and a third of its peak in June 2022.

Those numbers seem to indicate that inflation can continue dropping without causing a spike in unemployment. Can we, then, be living out the "dream scenario of monetary policy inducing lower inflation ... without a recession"? Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers, thinks so. "At least as of now, it's hard to dissuade the market from being enthusiastic."

And enthusiastic markets were. The S&P 500 gained 0.74%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.25% and the Nasdaq Composite popped 1.15%. Both the S&P and Nasdaq hit a 52-week high, buoyed by traders' optimism that only one rate hike's left.

Traders are betting that there's an 81.9% chance the Fed will keep rates steady after meeting this month, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. Just Tuesday, that figure was around 72%.

If the producer price index, which comes out later today, shows prices falling further, then we could indeed see the end of the Fed's hiking cycle soon.

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