Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 8/26/24 – Stronger Durable Goods Orders

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“Forget about style; worry about results. ” – Bobby Orr

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

If you missed Friday’s CNBC segment, you can catch it by clicking the image below.

While futures are higher versus fair value this morning, the magnitude of the gains is minimal at best for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures are indicated lower, so listless would be a good description of how things are looking to start the week, and it is the last week of August heading into Labor Day weekend after all. The key events to watch this week are PCE data on Friday and earnings from Nvidia (NVDA) after the close on Wednesday.

Durable Goods orders just hit the tape, and the headline number came in at more than double expectations (9.9% vs 4.0%), but ex Transportation, the report was slightly weaker than expected (-0.2% vs 0.1%).

The snapshot below from our Trend Analyzer shows the performance of various international equity markets on a dollar-adjusted basis. At the top of the list, US stocks have maintained their leadership role despite modest underperformance last week. With a gain of 18.7% YTD, SPY is outperforming the next closest ETF on the list – the MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI) – by nearly 300 basis points, and a primary reason that ETF is the second-best performing ETF on the list is because of the large weighting of US stocks! At the other end of the list, the only ETF on the list that was down last week was the Latin American 40 (ILF), and it is also the only one that’s down YTD. In other words, North and South America account for the best and worst-performing stocks this year. Sandwiched in between the US and Latin America, returns for the rest of the world are remarkably similar with YTD gains in the range of 12.1% (Europe) to 9.2% (Asia Pacific).

Looking more closely at the performance of the best (US) and the worst (Latin American) stocks this year, the chart below shows the YTD performance of both ETFs. While ILF underperformed SPY right out of the gate this year, the bulk of the divergence came in late May through June when SPY saw its YTD gain climb from around 5% to 15% while ILF moved entirely in the opposite direction.

As anyone paying attention knows, though, this year’s underperformance of ILF relative to SPY is simply a continuation of a trend that has been in place for several years. Looking at a 10-year comparison of the performance of the two ETFs, SPY has rallied nearly 240% while ILF has been worse than dead money with a decline of 9.5%.

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Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 8/23/24 – Positive Vibrations

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“We will keep at it until we are confident the job is done.”– Jerome Powell, 8/26/22

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

The word of the week has been vibes. This morning, positive vibes steer the market as S&P 500 futures are up over 50 bps and the Nasdaq is poised to open 1% higher.  There hasn’t been much in the way of headlines to support the rally, and while earnings results after the bell yesterday were positive, we can’t remember a time when stocks like Intuit (INTU), Workday (WDAY), Cava (CAVA), and Ross Stores (ROST) were considered market movers.  For now, bulls will take the gains, especially after yesterday’s pullback which was also based on not much else besides some negative vibes heading into today’s Jackson Hole speech from Fed Chair Powell.  That speech comes at 10 AM Eastern, and if Powell does anything less than lay the groundwork for a rate cut at the September meeting, look out.

Although August has historically been a weak month, it hasn’t lived up to its reputation as the S&P 500 has a MTD gain of 0.88%.  With August and September traditionally being such weak months, you would think that the last week of August would be especially negative, but historically, that has not been the case. The chart below shows the S&P 500’s performance during the last week of August dating back to 1953 (when the five-day trading week in its current form went into effect).

Overall, the S&P 500’s median performance to close out August has been a gain of 0.53% with positive returns 58% of the time. In the last ten years, performance has been even stronger with a median gain of 1.14%, or more than double the long-term average. Within those last ten years, there have been some big swings. In 2015, the S&P 500 had its best final week to August with a gain of 4.17%, although that followed what had been a MTD decline of 10.0%. At the other extreme, in 2022, the S&P 500 had its second worst-ever final week to August when it fell 4.49% after Powell was direct and to the point at Jackson Hole saying that the fed was “committed” to doing the job of bringing inflation down and that higher interest rates would cause “pain”.  Bulls still have the scars from that one, but as he said in that speech, “Restoring price stability will take some time”. In the two years since that speech, has Powell finally seen enough?

As mentioned above, the S&P 500 is up 0.88% so far this month, but historically speaking, there hasn’t been much of a relationship between how the market performs leading up to the last week of August and how it does in the final week. The only time there has been any connection is after a rough start to the month. As shown in the chart below, in the six years when the S&P 500 was down more than 6% MTD heading into the final week of the month, it was up in the final week all six times. Ironically, in the last 71 years, there have only been four other years where the S&P 500 has been up between 0% and 1% heading into the last week of August. Just another example of how “boring” August has been so far. Right?

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Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – Divergent Sectors

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“Common sense is very uncommon.” –  Horace Greeley

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

It was a positive tone heading into weekly jobless claims, and futures have remained higher following an inline report. Initial claims were in line with forecasts at 232K while continuing claims were slightly lower than expected (1.863 mln vs 1.870 mln). In Europe this morning, equities are also trading higher following a stronger-than-expected composite PMI report which was goosed mainly by the Paris Olympics.

Outside of Energy (XLE), large-cap sectors have performed admirably over the last five trading days. Of the eleven sector ETFs shown below, only Energy has declined and Real Estate (XLRE) is the only other sector failing to rally more than 1%. At the top of the list are Consumer Discretionary (XLY) and Technology (XLK) which have both rallied nearly 5% or more. Behind those two leaders, four other sectors have rallied more than 2% while three sectors have gained more than 1%. Ten out of eleven sectors are above their 50-day moving averages with six in overbought territory (1+ standard deviations above their 50-DMA) and another two sectors – Consumer Staples (XLP) and Health Care (XLV)– trading in extreme overbought territory (2+ standard deviations above 50-DMA).

From the highs in late March through now, the S&P 500 has experienced a V-formation where the magnitude and speed of the bounce was a mirror image of the decline, and the charts of both Consumer Discretionary (XLY) and Technology (XLK) illustrate that pattern.

While Consumer Discretionary (XLY) and Technology (XLK) have followed the pattern of the broader market, most other sectors have followed their own unique paths.  Energy (XLE), for example, has missed out on most of the rally, remaining well off of its late July highs.

At the other end of the spectrum, if you look at the charts of the Consumer Staples (XLP) and Utilities (XLU) you would never even know that there was a decline in the first place. In the years coming out of the Financial Crisis right up until Covid, investors became used to sectors moving closer in unison to each other, but as the last several weeks have illustrated, it’s not always a tide that lifts and sinks all boats.

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Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – Target Hits the Bullseye

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“He who moulds public sentiment goes deeper than he who enacts statutes or pronounces decisions.” – Abraham Lincoln

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

Between the 10%+ rally in shares of TGT and last week’s 6%+ rally in Walmart (WMT) in reaction to its earnings report, it’s hard to get too concerned about the health of the US consumer.  Yes, these are more anecdotal observations than quantitative, but they’re also two of the largest retailers in the country,

Let’s start with TGT. The chart below shows TGT’s historical performance on its earnings reaction days since 2002. With the stock trading up over 10% in the pre-market, today would be the third time in the last four quarters that the stock had a double-digit positive reaction to earnings. Since 2002, there have only been seven times when the stock had an earnings day reaction of more than 10%.

Regarding TGT’s stock performance, it had been ‘on sale’ for months heading into this morning’s report, but based on where the stock surged to in the pre-market, the downtrend from the spring high has been broken.

Looking back to WMT’s report last week, the stock’s 6%+ rally was the first time in at least 20 years that it experienced back-to-back earnings reaction day rallies of over 5%, and those two one-day rallies were the fourth and fifth best earnings reaction day performances since at least 2002.

Unlike TGT, which had been under pressure heading into today’s report, WMT’s chart has been more of a one-way move to new all-time highs. WMT’s strength could be construed as a sign that consumers are trading down due to a tough economic environment, but the company made no such comments in its conference call last week. CEO Doug McMillon flat-out rejected that idea when he said “So far, we aren’t experiencing a weaker consumer overall.”  CFO John David Rainey reiterated that point when he said, “Each of the months of the second quarter were relatively consistent… Even in the first couple weeks of August here, things have been remarkably consistent.”

Turning to retail stocks in general, it’s been a rangebound summer for the sector. The chart below shows the performance of the SPDR S&P Retail ETF (XRT) which tracks the performance of retailers on an equal-weighted basis. After a strong rally of over 30% off last fall’s lows, the ETT stalled out just under $80 before the broader market corrected in the spring. Since then, XRT has made four additional attempts at breaking through the $80 level but has been stymied each time. TGT’s rally this morning will provide a boost to the sector, but it’s going to take more than that to get it over the hump.

On a longer-term basis, that $80 level in XRT represents an important level, and if and when it can finally break through that resistance, a run to the post-COVID stimulus-fueled highs would be the next level to watch for.

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Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 8/20/24 – 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8…

See what’s driving market performance around the world in today’s Morning Lineup. Bespoke’s Morning Lineup is the best way to start your trading day. Read it now by starting a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium.  CLICK HERE to learn more and start your trial.

“Capitalism does live by crises and booms, just as a human being lives by inhaling and exhaling.” – Leon Trotsky

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

There’s no data on the economic calendar today, and there wasn’t a lot in the way of earnings reports overnight or this morning, and that has resulted in a relatively quiet (but slightly positive) tone in equity futures. Likewise, crude oil and treasury yields have seen little movement.  The most exciting area of financial markets this morning could be in the gold and crypto markets where bullion is well over $2,500 per ounce and bitcoin is trading back above $60K.

Overnight in Asia, equity indices were all over the place with Japan up nearly 2% and China down about 1%. In China, the PBoC left 1 and 5-year prime rates unchanged. European stocks have seen little movement as the STOXX 600 is little changed as July CPI came in unchanged on a m/m basis which was right in line with forecasts. On the interest rate picture, ECB member Olli Rehn was on the wires saying that risks to the growth outlook have raised the odds of a rate cut in September.

Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq composite have finished the day higher for eight straight days now, and if the current level of the futures holds, the streak for both indices will extend to a 9th straight day today. Since its inception in 1971, the Nasdaq composite has now had 89 different streaks of eight or more daily gains in a row which works out to about three streaks every two years. For the S&P 500, these streaks have been much less common with just 30 since 1971 or about one every two years.  Concurrent streaks of eight or more days in a row have been even less common with just 15 since 1971, or about one every four years.

The charts of the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq below (both on a log scale) show where every concurrent streak of eight or more days of gains occurred, and while the average works out to about one every four years, they haven’t been evenly distributed. The current streak is the second in less than a year and the third in less than three years.  Before that, the prior two were about four years apart (2017 and then 2013), but before the 2013 streak, there were more than 21 years without a single occurrence and that included the late 1990s dot-com bubble- a period that people look back on as thinking the market did nothing but go up! In last night’s Closer report, we included an analysis of the performance of both indices following those prior streaks, and performance was mixed with forward returns that were generally weaker than the average forward returns for all periods since 1971.

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Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 8/19/24 – Lucky Sevens

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“We’re using modern technology to revert to primitive kinds of human relations.” – Bill Clinton

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

It’s late August, so it shouldn’t come as a surprise that the market tone is quiet to start the week, especially with earnings season winding down. The only report on the calendar this morning is leading Indicators at 10 AM, and for the rest of the week, the only other notable reports are initial claims (Thursday), new (Friday) and existing (Thursday) home sales, and flash PMI readings (Thursday) from S&P being the only other reports to look forward to. Besides these data points, though, the market will also be focused on Wednesday’s Fed Minutes, benchmark revisions to Non-Farm Payrolls, and Fed Chair Powell’s speech from Jackson Hole on Friday.

Overnight in Asia, Japan was down over 2% as the yen strengthened, and in Europe, the STOXX 600 is looking at modest gains of around 0.3%.

The week looks to be getting off to a quiet start, but if the S&P 500 can finish higher today it will stretch the current streak of daily gains to eight. That would be the longest winning streak since last November and tied with six other periods for the longest winning streak since 2009. At seven days now through last Friday, the current streak ranks as the 16th streak of seven or more days, and each of those streaks is indicated with red dots in the chart below. Four of the prior 7-day streaks occurred in 2013, another three were in 2017, and another five were clustered during the post-Covid bull market.

In today’s Morning Lineup, we looked at how the S&P 500 performed in the week and month following seven-day winning streaks since the Financial Crisis. To see the results of that analysis, sign up for a trial today.

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