Week Ahead: Georgia Senate Race Amps Up Market Volatility; Bitcoin Tops $34K

 | Jan 03, 2021 07:29

  • This week's Georgia election to add to market volatility
  • Vaccine rollout much slower than promised, while virus spreads
  • The interplay between escalating hopes of eradicting COVID-19 risk, as vaccinations are rolled out globally, and continuing despair fueled by rising cases of coronavirus worldwide will remain the key triggers for equity market volatility during the first week of the new trading year. As of time of writing, the global virus case count has surpassed 86,600,000, with more than 1,800,000 fatalities and climbing.

    An additional US market risk this week will be the January 5th, US Senate runoff in Georgia, which will determine the the balance of power in both the Senate and Congress overall.

    h2 Many New Records in 2020, Same Old Risks Into 2021/h2

    The S&P 500 Index scored a new all-time high on Thursday, on thin trading ahead of the holiday weekend. Residual positive sentiment on the final confirmation of the much-contested, second round of US stimulus—which was finally signed by President Donald Trump late last Sunday—helped boost the Dow Jones and NASDAQ at the end of the trading week as well, though the small cap Russell 2000 lagged.

    Even though we anticipate continued market volatility, we believe stocks can sustain the upheaval due to the historic levels of monetary and fiscal support currently available and will continue to gain momentum. If vaccines prove effective enough to allow economies to return to normal, we expect to see a powerful economic rebound. The question, which of course we can't answer at this point, is how much of the rebound from the March lows would already be priced in?

    On a negative note, New York became the fourth state to record 1 million COVID cases, with more than 20,400,000 and counting across the country, as well as 350,000 deaths nationwide. Plus the vaccine rollout across the US has been disorganized , reaching far fewer arms than the President had promised.

    Over the course of 2020, the S&P 500 gained 16% and recorded its 33rd new high as the trading year came to a close. According to the Wall Street Journal :

    "The three major indexes notched more than 100 record closes in 2020... The Dow rose 7.2% for 2020. The S&P 500 jumped 16%, the Russell 2000 index of smaller-cap stocks gained 18%, and the Nasdaq surged 44%."

    Given that most of 2020 also included the worst global pandemic in a century, and in the US a highly contentious election whose result has still not been accepted by the current, sitting President, those are incredible statistics.

    Nevertheless, even if the US economy returns to its former, full strength, it's likely US-China competition over trade and tech sector dominance will once again grab headlines.

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    On the final day of trade last week, yields, including for the 10-year Treasury, fell for a second day.