Stocks Make Comeback at End of Dizzying Week: Markets Wrap
(Bloomberg) -- A rebound in stocks in the final stretch of a wild week drove the market to its biggest back-to-back advance in 2024.
That semblance of calm stands in stark contrast to the recent gyrations that rattled the global financial world. After the many ups and downs — including Monday’s panic selling — the S&P 500 nearly wiped out its losses for the week.
There’s been no shortage of drama in August, hitting a market that was showing signs of exhaustion. Worries about the Federal Reserve being behind the curve after some weak economic numbers left traders on edge. Conflicting views around Japan’s policy path have worsened the convulsions, with the battered carry trade ricocheting across asset classes.
“Even if that nerve-racking event is over, we learned how sensitive markets now are to cooler US economic data, how broad-reaching the impact of the yen carry trade can be, and how conditioned investors are to expect rate cuts as the salve for every scrape,” said Liz Young Thomas at SoFi.
At Lazard, Ronald Temple noted that the severity of the slide was a reminder the market has appreciated materially, reaching valuations that most would agree were extended. Still, he views the selloff as “excessive.”
“For investors who measure performance in years, indiscriminate drawdowns like that seen in the last week can represent great opportunities if the fundamentals have not materially changed,” he said.
The S&P 500 rose 0.5%, while finishing down for a fourth straight week — its longest losing streak since September 2023. Expedia Group Inc. climbed on better-than-expected results. Cisco Systems Inc. plans to eliminate thousands more jobs in a second round of layoffs this year, Reuters reported.
Treasury 10-year yields fell five basis points to 3.94%. After pricing aggressive Fed cuts this week, traders pared bets to about 100 basis points of easing for the year. Most economists surveyed by Bloomberg see only a quarter-point decrease in September. That’s at odds with calls from some big banks for a jumbo cut.
To John Stoltzfus at Oppenheimer Asset Management, the bull market has room to run.
“We’re still bullish on stocks, he said. “US economic fundamentals remain on solid footing despite the drag of tight monetary policy, which we believe will soon be reduced.”
Wall Street’s “fear gauge” — the VIX — subsided further on Friday, hovering around 20. That’s after an unprecedented spike that took the gauge above 65 on Monday, a rare level normally signaling utter panic. That unusual surge has raised some questions on whether the index was actually “overstating” all that stress in the US stock market.
The old saying that “volatility is the price you pay for equity market returns” is absolutely true, but deciphering what volatile markets say about the future is a valuable exercise nonetheless, according to Nicholas Colas at DataTrek Research.
“Current market conditions are not comfortable, to say the least,” Colas said. “But they are neither flashing a robust recession warning nor condemning the current bull market to a premature end. After a rough week, we take comfort in that message.”
Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers urged the Securities and Exchange Commission and relevant exchanges to look into the historic surge in the most-watched gauge of US financial volatility on Monday.
“My understanding is that because there are some illiquid instruments that go into the calculation of the VIX, the VIX had a somewhat artificial move on Monday,” Summers said on Bloomberg Television’s with David Westin on Friday. “Since that is so widely watched an indicator, issues of liquidity, issues around how it settles, I think should be studied by the relevant parties in the industry and the regulator — the SEC.”
As broad-based selling gripped equity markets early this week, a sentiment signal sank to one of its lowest points in history.
The stock-bond ratio — which compares the S&P 500 against a long-dated Treasury to test whether equities are cheap or expensive compared to bonds — also serves as a measure for market sentiment, said Dean Christians at SentimenTrader.
And similar periods of panic-driven fear in the past were followed by excellent returns. Since 1962, the ratio dipped this far only 13 other times, and in more than 90% of those instances, the S&P 500 rallied a year later.
‘Frazzled’
At Bank of America Corp., Michael Hartnett says the turbulence has yet to reach proportions that would signal worries about a hard economic landing.
“Technical levels that would flip Wall Street’s narrative from soft to hard landing have not been broken,” Hartnett said. “Investor feedback is ‘frazzled’,” but expectations of Fed rate cuts mean that preference for stocks over bonds hasn’t been ended by the market rout, he added.
For now, the absence of any major economic news until next Wednesday’s consumer price index will likely lead to subsiding market volatility, according to Mark Luschini at Janney Montgomery Scott.
Still, he notes that August and September are seasonally weak for equities — so volatility might expect to be present, especially in the midst of a contested presidential election.
Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
- The S&P 500 rose 0.5% as of 4 p.m. New York time
- The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.5%
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.1%
- The MSCI World Index rose 0.6%
Currencies
- The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.2%
- The euro was unchanged at $1.0919
- The British pound rose 0.1% to $1.2762
- The Japanese yen rose 0.4% to 146.64 per dollar
Cryptocurrencies
- Bitcoin rose 1.9% to $60,668.49
- Ether rose 0.8% to $2,591.07
Bonds
- The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined five basis points to 3.94%
- Germany’s 10-year yield declined four basis points to 2.22%
- Britain’s 10-year yield declined three basis points to 3.94%
Commodities
- West Texas Intermediate crude rose 1% to $76.98 a barrel
- Spot gold rose 0.1% to $2,430.32 an ounce
This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
©2024 Bloomberg L.P.
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