Last week US equity markets sold off sharply on Friday after a strong jobs report sent Treasury yields sharply higher. The S&P 500 ended the week down just under 2%, its fourth weekly decline in the last five weeks. The weakness carried through coming out of the weekend as yields and oil prices continued to move higher and tech stocks were under pressure as President Biden announced additional restrictions on the export of AI technology. However, major indices tested some key technical levels after the open with the S&P 500 filling the election gap taking the index down just over 5% from its highs. While the equal-weight version of the index got within 10pts of its 200d moving average a level that has not been tested since it was reclaimed in November of 2023 after the initial Fed Pivot. This brought in some buying interest and despite the tech underperformance most major indices ended the day higher.
Tuesday brought the first of this week’s inflation data with PPI coming in slightly better than feared. There was only a minimal pullback in Treasury yields and while equity markets did end mostly higher you could see that traders were nervous ahead of the all-important CPI report and the start of earnings season on Wednesday with the VIX spending most of the day just under 20.
Wednesday got off to a good start with UK inflation data coming in better than expected and a 10yr Gilt auction going off without a hitch. Not your typical catalyst but the situation in the UK has been a source of some volatility over the last week. The bank earnings started to roll in and by all accounts were strong with companies beating on both the top and bottom line with management teams highlighting business optimism heading into 2025. This had futures modestly higher ahead of the open, but the real fireworks came after the CPI report.
The report itself was mixed with headline coming in slightly above expectations driven by a jump in energy prices which accounted for 40% of the monthly increase. However, the core reading came in a tenth better than expected showing some moderation from the previous month up 3.2% on an annual basis. This was by no means a perfect report but did help Treasury yields fall sharply reversing all of the post jobs report move higher and equity markets reacted in kind with the S&P 500 ending the day up nearly 2% with the index closing just below its 50d moving average.
On Thursday retail sales were solid pointing to a still resilient consumer and decent holiday shopping season confirming the commentary heard from retailers at the ICR conference earlier this week. It was a choppy session with the S&P 500 once again stalling out at its 50d moving average. Some dovish comments from Fed Governor Christopher Waller helped yields continue to pull back. Treasury Secretary nominee Scott Bessent seemed to do a good job during confirmation hearings. His talking points were in alignment with President Trump’s economic agenda highlighting the importance of extending tax cuts, downplaying the impact of tariffs on inflation, taking a hard stance on China and sanctions on Russia/Iran.
The week closed out on a positive note with the S&P 500 up 1% bringing gains to just under 3% for the week. There wasn’t one specific driver today for today’s strength it felt more like a continuation of the recent bounce with the VIX pulling back to under 16 and the S&P 500 breaking above its 50d ma. Today was options expiration and the index essentially got pinned to the 6k level.
If you’re searching for some headlines to point to for the strength there was a mix of better-than-expected China data, IMF global growth forecasts being revised up and Treasuries holding the bulk of the week’s rally. On the corporate front there were some more solid bank earnings but the numbers from industrials were more mixed. Today, tech stocks performed well after underperforming throughout the week.
For the week there here was broad based . Cyclical/value sectors were the best performing sectors led by energy, financials and materials. The tech heavy sectors did end the week with gains but underperformed. Healthcare continues to be stuck in the mud despite a heavy week of corporate updates at the JP Morgan Healthcare conference including some M&A. Within the space equipment and life science tools outperformed with underperformance in insurers, pharma and vaccine makers.