Week Ahead: Equities, Yields, Dollar Slump; Is Risk-Off Sentiment Back?

 | Nov 18, 2018 07:14

  • Most US stocks rose on Friday but finished the week lower
  • Yields set to top out, suggesting more equity selloffs; VIX rose as well
  • Dollar fell from 17-month high to bottom of rising channel
  • WTI on course for Death Cross
  • Renewed hopes of a resolution to the ongoing trade dispute pushed major US benchmarks—the S&P 500, Dow and Russell 2000—higher for a second day on Friday. However, the NASDAQ Composite slipped yet again. All US averages ended the week lower as well, as the retail picture soured and technology shares languished. Treasury yields dropped, dragging down the dollar, signaling the possibility of risk-off sentiment returning to markets.

    This is the opposite pattern seen in the previous two weeks, when stocks gained for the week but finished lower on Friday. We posited then that perhaps traders were losing their nerve and were unwilling to commit to weekend positions, yet were unable to forego investing when both the economy and earnings have been on fire. According to Gallup’s best earnings season since the financial crisis.

    h2 3 Reasons For Risk-Off's Return
    /h2

    So why is risk-off sentiment returning? A number of reasons:

    Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), which accounts for 12% of the NASDAQ's weighting and 5% of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, had its worst week in seven months last week, down 5%, 16% off its recent high. Concerns about disappointing iPhone sales and slower growth led shares to their seventh straight weekly loss, the longest negative stretch for the stock since 2012.

    Crude oil volatility also continued. While higher gasoline prices boosted inflation in October, the recent slump in prices will have the opposite effect. Overall, however, consumer prices rose as much as expected last month, easing fears of overheating inflation and faster interest rate hikes.

    On the Brexit front, a draft deal for the withdrawal of Britain from the European Union was reached, but that plan needs to survive vetting in Parliament and cabinet defections are pointing to continued uncertainty for a final deal.

    h3 Mega Caps Back On Top/h3

    In a rare occurrence, last seen in March, on Friday, both small caps and mega caps outperformed. Since the trade war broke out, the two indices have had a negative correlation, as traders rotated to domestic companies when trade risk increased, since growth for those companies was not reliant on exports; then rotated back to mega caps when headlines spurred hopes for a trade deal. Technically, however, they are on the opposite ends of the spectrum, with the Dow providing the strongest picture and the Russell the weakest.