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“Having faith is believing in something you just know ain’t true.”– Mark Twain

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.  

Equity futures are mixed this morning with the Dow trading slightly lower while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures along with Treasury yields, crude oil, gold, and bitcoin are all modestly higher. In terms of economic news, NFIB’s index of small business optimism saw a monster surge and rose to a 3+ year high in the wake of November’s election. Unit Labor costs for Q3 came in much lower than expected (0.8% vs 1.9% forecast) and Q3 Productivity was inline with forecasts at 2.2%.

Yesterday was a rough day for US stocks relative to the post-election period. With a decline of 0.61%, the only day worse since the election was on 11/15 when the S&P 500 fell 1.32%. In a post yesterday, we noted that the biggest losers of the day were the stocks that had the biggest YTD gains, and that can be seen in the performance of the Momentum ETF (MTUM) which fell 2.13% for its worst one-day decline since the election.  Even after the relatively large drop yesterday, the MTUM ETF still managed to hang onto to its uptrend from the summer lows and also remains comfortably above its 50-DMA.

At the sector level yesterday, performance was essentially the opposite of sectors’ direction in the month after the election. As shown in the table and chart below, four of the five best-performing sectors from the election through Friday – Communication Services, Financials, Technology, and Industrials – were also four of the five worst-performing sectors yesterday.  Similarly, the only three sectors down in the post-election period through last Friday – Health Care, Materials, and Real Estate –  were the only three sectors to trade higher yesterday.  The only major exception to yesterday’s reversal theme was Consumer Discretionary (XLY). While it was the best-performing sector ETF after the election through Friday, it only saw a modest decline yesterday.

Turning to individual stocks, the table and chart show the 20 best-performing stocks in the S&P 500 from 11/5 through 12/6 along with their performance yesterday. In the post-election period, these 20 stocks were up an average of 30.3%, and all but one was up at least 20%. Yesterday, though, was not nearly as positive. As shown, 13 of the 20 stocks were down on the day, and the average performance of all 20 stocks for the day was a decline of 1.8% or three times the decline of the S&P 500.