Recapping Last Week
As I said in this section of the last ERPE Excerpts, the stock market is resilient. U.S. equities fended off notable semiconductor weakness to finish last week positive, with small caps outperforming due to financial sector strength. The Russell 2000 index rallied nearly 2%, while the S&P500 and Nasdaq Composite each gained less than 1%. Nine of eleven S&P500 sectors posted gains, and while utilities were the best performer, factor performance was far from defensive. The PHLX Semiconductor index plunged more than 5% early last week after reports emerged that U.S. officials may further limit the sale of advance AI chips to designated countries. Also weighing on the sector was a negative earnings report from Dutch chip equipment maker ASML Holding. However, some analysts downplayed fears of a demand slowdown, citing temporary overcapacity at chip factories. The energy sector struggled after crude oil futures tumbled 8.8%. A looming global oil surplus and concerns over China’s waning growth prospects overshadowed potential supply disruption risks from Middle East conflicts. While other commodities seemed unfazed, the strength of the U.S. dollar acted as a headwind to crude. Gold futures jumped more than 2% to reach a fresh record high near $2,735 per ounce. U.S. Treasury yields were slightly lower, rebounding from steeper declines after stronger-than-expected retail sales data and a drop in jobless claims. Manufacturing activity was mixed—industrial production fell in September, while the Philly Fed survey revealed expansion in that region. U.S. homebuilder confidence edged higher this month, while housing starts and building permits fell despite a pickup in single-family home construction. Overall, the U.S. economy’s resilience reinforced expectations for only a 25-basis point rate cut from the Federal Reserve in November.
On the international front, China’s equity markets saw a nauseating amount of volatility as investors tried to make sense of the latest economic data and government stimulus proposals. The country’s trade data for September missed the mark, while tame inflation pointed to continued weak domestic demand. China’s central bank moved to support markets after GDP came in at the lower end of its annual growth goal—at 4.8% for the first nine months of 2024. The bank announced plans to inject 800 billion yuan ($112.38b) for companies to buy back shares, among other measures. Elsewhere, the European Central Bank lowered interest rates for the third time this year, with another quarter-point cut expected by year-end. The UK’s annual headline inflation rate dropped sharply last month, to 1.7% from 2.2%, supporting expectations for a November rate cut. Lastly, Japan’s core inflation slowed in September but remained above the central bank’s 2% target, indicating that further interest rate hikes are on track.
Current View
Yesterday’s major market indices climbed to new record highs. I’m calling the stock market’s gains today the Trump Bump. Stocks soared after Donald Trump’s decisive victory as investors contemplated the potential impact of Republican policies. There was great strength in financials, consumer discretionary, energy, and industrials sectors. The charge higher in today’s stock market was led by small cap companies. Stocks surge came on the hope that the new administration could help businesses and the economy grow more quickly. Stocks that performed best tended to be ones closely tied to potential U.S. economic power that could potentially be unleashed with less regulation and a more protectionist stance. But, the post-election enthusiasm didn’t extend to fixed income. So, bonds fell. Yields, which move the opposite direction of Treasury notes, set new four-month highs on worries that Trump’s tariff and tax agenda could spark inflation. Trump’s tariff-driven policy plans gave the U.S. dollar a lift against other currencies. The greenback enjoyed its biggest one-day gain since June 2016.
Though today’s 3.57% gain in the Dow Jones Industrial Average was no where near a record move up, the indexes’ 1,508 point jump was the the 4th biggest in history. For perspective, see the table below.
|