Week Ahead: Stocks To Continue Climbing On Ongoing Easing; USD At Crossroads

 | May 09, 2021 07:53

  • Investors are back to cheering for a bad economy, as it enables additional stimulus
  • Gold gains on dollar weakness, safe haven
  • The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average hit new all-time highs on Friday, while the NASDAQ and Russell 2000 both pushed higher after the April Nonfarm Payrolls release printed considerably below expectations, allaying inflation concerns and signaling that Fed easing will likely remain in play. As such, we expect stocks to continue moving higher, as traders cheer ongoing stimulus.

    However, we also anticipate considerable whipsawing in the medium-term, as potentially conflicting data will remain a factor, causing experts to continue arguing about the possibility of rapidly rising inflation and the economy overheating.

    The dollar plunged and gold moved higher, penetrating more deeply into the $1800 level.

    h2 Bad Economy, Positive For Investors?/h2

    Ten of the S&P 500's 11 sectors finished in green territory, while Consumer Staples ended flat. Energy, (+1.8%), Real Estate, (+1.2%) and Industrials, (+1.1%), outperformed.

    Energy, in fact, opened -1.2% lower in early trading, while the Tech sector opened 0.8% higher, after the much-lower-than-expected employment numbers shocked markets. The payrolls increase of 266,000 was significantly below the 1 million new jobs forecast. President Joseph Biden's reacted to the release by saying of a full US economic recovery, "the climb is steep and we still have a long way to go."

    After the report, investors quickly shifted funds into areas that provided superior performance during the pandemic while dumping shares that outperform during an economic recovery, including energy stocks. However, after falling sharply at the open, Energy went on to have a stellar day, finishing up almost twice as much as the next-best performer. Technology stocks, on the other hand proceeded to trim gains as the day wore on, or even slump into the red.

    The market narrative is that the disappointing employment data supports the view that inflation is transient and therefore not expected to impede the recovery. It also boosts the notion that a slow economic recovery will merit continued fiscal and monetary support from government agencies. With that in mind, investors backtracked and returned to the Reflation Trade.

    As we've pointed out repeatedly, in an alternate, QE-driven environment (such as the one we're currently experiencing), a bad economy is viewed as positive for investors, since they'll continue to enjoy a market with easy pickings as stimulus keeps stocks bouyant, while positive data, which sounds the alarm for tightening, is met with disdain.

    By advancing on Friday, the S&P 500 may have reversed a bearish pattern.

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