Stocks Near Pre-COVID Highs – 5/13/22

Two days ago, we outlined the percentage of stocks in each S&P 500 sector that were below their pre-COVID highs to show that many of the stocks that surged due to pandemic effects have significantly fallen off, netting long-term holders a negative return since the onslaught of the pandemic. Over the course of the next few weeks, we will be outlining the S&P 500 stocks that are breaking below/above their pre-COVID highs, as we did yesterday. Yesterday, the S&P 500 fell by 10 basis points to close at a new 52-week low, but the index is still up over 15% relative to pre-COVID highs. As of yesterday’s close, 40.4% of S&P 500 stocks were below this critical level, an 80 basis point improvement relative to the close on 5/11. 71.4% of utilities and 66.7% of communication services stocks were below their respective pre-COVID highs as of yesterday’s close. On the other hand, only 18.5% and 23.8% of S&P 500 stocks in the materials and energy sectors were below their respective highs between the start of 2019 and the end of February 2020. Additionally, 7.8% of S&P 500 stocks were between 0-5% above their pre-COVID highs (39 members).

Stocks below pre-COVID highs

Only one stock crossed below its pre-COVID highs for the first time since breaking above that level: MGM Resorts (MGM). However, the stock gapped higher by over 3% today, thus returning above this level. The weak performance as of late is due to a variety of factors including China’s zero-Covid policy, the broader market drawdown, and a weak reaction to the latest earnings report, even though the company beat on the top and bottom line.

MGM chart

One stock traded lower to enter a +2% channel relative to pre-COVID highs for the first time in a couple of months: Jack Henry (JKHY). JKHY is a payment processing and lending firm and competes with the likes of Block (SQ) and Toast (TOST). To gain access to our chart scanner tool, click here to become a Bespoke premium member today!

JKHY Chart

Over 40% of S&P 500 Stocks Below Pre-COVID Highs

The world changed dramatically with the onslaught of the COVID pandemic in early 2020. Businesses were forced to digitize, consumers saved at historic rates, the Federal Government and Federal Reserve flooded the economy with cash, new hobbies were picked up faster than a dropped hundred dollar bill, and consumers emerged from the lockdowns financially stronger than ever. Long story short, COVID appeared to permanently alter the ways in which consumers and businesses interact, and companies that stood to benefit from the new way of life saw their stocks surge while the old-economy stalwarts were crushed. That was then.

This is now. As the economy has emerged from COVID, the cost of inputs has skyrocketed, real buying power has diminished, supply chains have become strained, and geopolitical tensions are hot.  Not only that, but whereas the rate of fiscal and monetary stimulus was stronger than ever during the pandemic, the headwind from their removal is as intense as it gets.

Given the shifts, a number of stocks that originally surged in the COVID world have been hit hard in the post-Covid environment, and some of the biggest COVID losers during the lockdowns have turned into market leaders.  As things currently stand, 40.6% of S&P 500 members are below their pre-COVID highs (closing high price from the start of 2019 through the end of February 2020), even as the index is up 18.0% from its pre-COVID closing high on 2/19/20. Besides the fact that four out of every ten S&P 500 stocks are below their pre-COVID highs, 8.1% of the index members are within 5% of their pre-COVID high and another 7.1% are within 10% of their pre-COVID highs.

At the sector level, three sectors – Communication Services, Real Estate, and Utilities- have more than half of their components trading below their pre-COVID highs.  In addition to those three sectors, in both the Consumer Discretionary and Financials sectors, more than 40% of components are below their pre-COVID highs, and another 10% of each sector’s components are within 10% of those former highs. At the other end of the spectrum, the original ‘losers’ from COVID like Energy and Materials have fewer than a quarter of their components trading below their pre-COVID highs. While it seems some days like COVID will never go away, the rallies that a large number of stocks experienced are now nothing more than memories.   Click here to view Bespoke’s premium membership options.

S&P 500 VS Pre-COVID Highs

Stocks vs pre COVID levels