The Fed, Interest Rates and Jobs Sway the Markets.
Which Direction Are We Headed?

May 5, 2024

Weekly Market Outlook

By Donn Goodman


Welcome back readers, good to have you here.

It was a week filled with anxiety as the Federal Reserve was meeting and investors were awaiting their interest rate guidance.

Wednesday, Jerome Powell and Company announced that they were maintaining a “neutral” posture which for inflation hawks that meant no imminent hike in interest rates they had hoped would be the “next” action taken.

For optimists feeling that the Fed policy has been too restrictive, it provided hope that interest rate cuts would come in the near future.

Friday morning, the April jobs report was announced.  The numbers (165,000 jobs created versus the 264,000 that were expected) demonstrated a real cooling in the employment markets with the unemployment rate jumping to 3.9%.  This cooling off, coupled with the recently announced softer GDP growth (1.6% annual rate), was exactly what bullish investors wanted to hear.

Friday the stock market exploded higher making the bears retrench and cover their shorts and the bulls put more money to work.  Technology was one of the big winners on Friday helped along by Apple announcing an enormous buyback of their shares during their disappointing earnings call on Thursday evening (phone sales fell by 10% during the last quarter).

For the week, here is the scoreboard of different indices and specific sector ETFs:

I wanted to share the above with you because I thought that you might be shocked to see who the big winners were last week and the period since the start of 2024.  Asian stocks, specifically China, Japan and Hong Kong stocks have had a long overdue rally that has surprised many investors.

Those market have also been helping to lift Emerging Market performance (China and Hong Kong are part of the emerging market narrative along with India). The big winner among US sector specific markets this past week was Utilities.  I offer you a few charts indicating the strength of the Asian markets:

If you are a follower to Mish’s Daily, you know that she began to “talk up” Chinese stocks many months ago and gave her readers a Chinese stock to consider investing in.  While she was early (she often is), those subscribers who read her Daily may be up as much as 20-30% on that stock alone.  (Given that her Daily is free what is stopping you from subscribing if you are not already a follower?  Go here to subscribe)

Also, when will you learn that you need only read this Market Outlook and Mish’s Daily to get good actionable ideas that can produce good investment winners!

Given the rising interest rate environment this year, it is surprising to investors that Utilities are one of the leading sectors, especially given the sector’s sensitivity to interest rates.  Part of this is due to the expectations that interest rates will eventually come down along with the fact that we are experiencing warmer climates and higher energy consumption at the current moment.  Utility companies have become much more efficient and are seeing higher revenues and a better earnings growth trajectory.  This is certainly helped along by new sources of green energy, solar and wind power and innovative ways to deliver energy to high consumption businesses.

In MarketGauge individual strategies, we own a few of the Utility companies as these are in a growth phase and are also reaping the rewards of contributing to the blockchain marketplace as miners are consuming more energy than ever before.

If you would like additional information on these particular strategies that are benefiting from owning Utility stocks, mining companies, or if you would like information on our Bitcoin strategy (up over 50% year-to-date from using ETFs and Company stocks and not directly investing in bitcoin), reach out to Rob Quinn, our Chief Strategy Officer at [email protected].

If you also look closely at the table provided above you may be surprised to learn that technology stocks have not been the leaders in the market thus far in 2024, as they did in 2023.  The surprise is that financial stocks (not this past week), energy and industrials have been more of the drivers.

With interest rates staying higher for longer (something both Mish and I have repeated for the past 6 months), the Real Estate sector is continuing to lose ground as lofty valuations from a low interest rate environment are being repriced.

Speaking of interest rates.

The good news on the interest rate front is that with Friday’s cooling job report, investors plowed into fixed income securities and rates came down from a high of 4.7% on the 10-year Treasury (and over 5% on the 2-year Treasury) to around 4.5% at the end of the week.  That was part of the contributor to the big rally in stocks on Friday.

However, inflation hawks still believe that the Fed should raise rates one more time and that eventually, interest rates on the 10-year are headed over 5%.  We are not so sure as the economy is showing signs of weakening, and that should put a lid on interest rates going forward.  See chart of the rising trend of the 10-year Treasury rates below:

Given this rate rise over the past few months, April was very hard on fixed income investors.  See graph below:

Earnings Update

According to FactSet, 80% of the S&P 500 companies have reported their First Quarter 2024 results with 77% or 385 companies beating their earnings estimates and 61% or 305 companies reporting revenues with exceeding estimates.

This is a good, positive trend for earnings with average earnings growing 8-9%.  However, given the inflationary environment we continue to live through companies have and will continue to exercise pricing power to pass along additional wage, raw material input costs as well as rising transportation and energy costs.  Therefore, this type of earnings growth is to be expected.

As long as earnings continue to grow, we are unlikely to see a bear market in stocks.  Right now the S&P is valued at approximately 21x, down from its peak last year of around 24x.

Accordingly, we are at an S&P 500 valuation that is lofty given where interest rates sit currently.  In my opinion, to see a much higher valuation in the S&P 500 during 2024 we would need to see a more accommodative Fed and for interest rates to come down perhaps under 4% on the 10-year Treasury.  See quote below:

Another factor which could get the markets moving is for growth to reaccelerate.  Given higher than expected inflation along with a jump in wage costs from a fully employed economy and the Fed stuck in neutral, it is more likely we will see a CHOPPY market until something breaks (Fed then lowers rates) or we get through the fall Presidential election.

The S&P 500 and the NASDAQ 100 are sitting right below their 50-day moving averages.  This means for the moment that they are in a bearish phase and need to break above this important line to gain a positive bias.  See below:

As we have been sharing with you since the last edition of Market Outlook in December, 2023, we believe this year will be filled with additional volatility and choppiness.  Factor in the positive and negative factors along with geopolitical risk, especially in the Middle East, along with a divisive upcoming election and you have  the recipe for the markets to grind sideways until a clear trend is established.  See chart below:

We want to close by reiterating what we have shown in many of the previous Market Outlooks (If you want to review last week’s Market Outlook and did not get a chance to see the positive election year illustrations, you may click the link here).  After two positive >10% back-to-back quarters, the market has historically done very well going forward.  To demonstrate this, we provide an additional chart below that offers a positive bias on the markets for 2024.  We hope that they provide additional motivation for you to stick with your game plan and/or investment strategy.

If you need help or want another opinion, please reach out to me ([email protected] or [email protected]).  We would be happy to extend you an additional opinion on how you are invested and/or how you might be able to improve your overall portfolio.

We now turn it over to Keith and his team who compile the Big View bullets, provided below.  All of us at MarketGauge hope you have an enjoyable and profitable week ahead.  Thanks for reading.

 

 

 

Risk On

  • Utilities had an important breakout on increasing data center/AI demand and is trading at its highest levels since last summer (+)
  • Volume patterns improved marginally with the Russel 2000 showing the most improvement (+)
  • 12 of the 14 sectors were up on the week led by Utilities, Home Builders, and Technology (+)
  • Speculative sectors like Clean Energy and Solar were quite strong (+)
  • Market Internals, for both the Nasdaq and S&P, improved, led by the McClellan Oscillator and the cumulative Advance Decline line improved into positive territory. (+)
  • New High & New Low improved significantly back into bullish territory for both NYSE and Nasdaq (+)
  • Risk Gauge went back into a bullish reading with just the SPY/XLU ratio lagging (+)
  • Sentiment improved significantly with everything stacked and sloped positively (+)
  • Stocks above key moving averages improved significantly for the IWM with the stocks above their 200 Day Moving Average improving to over 50% (+)
  • As highlighted last week, Interest Rates seem ready to mean-revert from oversold levels. They did put in positive performance by week’s end as the result of a weaker-than-expected jobs report. (+)
  • By the close Friday, Growth had reclaimed its leadership positive relative to value (+)
  • Foreign equities, led by emerging markets, broke out to the upside and are now leading U.S. equities (+)

Neutral 

  • By the end of the week, U.S. equity indexes closed up between 0.6% and 1.8%, leaving the markets under their 50-Day Moving Averages and markets within a trading channel. A close above their 50-Day Moving Averages could flip the reading more positive (=)
  • Five out of the six modern family members remain in a warning phase with the one exception, KRE, which entered a bullish phase (=)
  • Soft Commodities sold off hard moving from a bull phase to a warning phase but still maintaining its leadership vs. the S&P on a longer-term basis (=)
  • Both Gold and Oil sold off from their overbought levels of a couple weeks ago. (=)

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Donn Goodman