Week Ahead: Inflation Fears, Earnings Results Could Collide, Adding Volatility

 | Apr 18, 2021 12:58

  • Bank earnings beats set up high bars for other, non-financial sector companies
  • Experts will continue to argue about the meaning and significance of inflation, but markets will whipsaw
  • Yields and the dollar are already falling, boosting gold, but we expect that to be a short-term event
  • Bitcoin failed to keep record gains, developing bearish pattern
  • The much heralded Reflation Trade provided a boost to both Friday's trading and the full equity market rally last week. Similar sentiment is likely to prevail into the upcoming trading week.

    All four major US indices—the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000—were buoyed by positive economic data during the course of the week, which lifted benchmarks to back-to-back all-time highs. The news was so bullish that bonds and commodities also rallied.

    h2 Long-Term Inflation Or A Return To The Mean?/h2

    The Dow shot past the 34,000 threshold for the first time, and the S&P 500 Index closed higher for the fourth week in a row after China’s economy soared, +18.3% in the first quarter, as consumer spending beat expectations, putting the Asian nation on track to join its bigger economic rival, the US, in leading the rest of the world into an economic recovery. This may be an appropriate time to note though, that this growth is in comparison to a year ago, when the global economy was shut down as the spread of COVID-19 became a pandemic.

    China’s data on Friday built on a series of strong US releases last week including CPI, Crude Inventories, Initial Jobless Claims and Retail Sales. All of which propelled the MSCI All-Country World Equity Index to a record high.

    In the US on Friday, the Materials (+1.2%) and Utilities (+0.8%) sectors gained the most, while Technology (-0.02%) and Communications Services (-0.1%) were in red.

    For the week, value sectors such as Utilities (+3.7%) and Materials (+3%) led, while growth sectors Tech (+1.1%) and Communication Services (-0.1%) lagged with Communications the sole sector in the red.

    We have often made comparisons between the NASDAQ 100—representing growth stocks that were the biggest beneficiaries from the stay-at-home pandemic environment—and the Russell 2000, whose domestic firms—representing value stocks which lost the most business during lockdowns—stand to gain the most from a reopening economy. While the NASDAQ 100 formed a hammer, bearish if Monday’s candle closes below the real body of Friday’s candle (open-to-close, excluding intraday highs and lows), the Russell 2000 continues along a potential top.