Week Ahead: Stalled Economic Rebound To Pressure Stocks, Drive More Volatility

 | Aug 02, 2020 12:04

  • Markets await breakthrough on US virus relief bill
  • Exceptionally volatile month ahead signaled
  • Equities continue to diverge from the VIX, yields and gold
  • While stocks ended slightly higher for the day, week and month on Friday, on strong Technology earnings and US GDP that was less negative than expected, signs the economic rebound is stalling will likely make any further equity gains an uphill battle during the coming week.

    Friday's late session rally was sparked by a report the adminstration and Congressional Democrats planned to meet Saturday to strike a deal on the next coronavirus aid package. Earlier, during Wall Street trade, equities slumped, as news broke that COVID-19 deaths in Florida reached a record for the fourth day in a row, new cases in Arizona had accelerated and the rate of contagion rose in New Jersey.

    h2 Longest Period Of Gains Since 2019; Sharpest QoQ GDP Plunge In History/h2

    On a monthly basis, equities have now risen for a fourth month, the longest period of gains since December—well before the coronavirus selloff in March.

    For July, the NASDAQ Composite outperformed (+1.49%). The tech-heavy index's performance was double that of runner-up the broader S&P 500 (+0.77%). Both were buoyed by strong earnings from mega cap behemoths like Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN).

    Though shares of another tech giant, Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) wavered on Friday, news that it was in negotitions to purchase TikTok's operations in the US from the video-sharing app's Chinese parent company ByteDance, helped boost the stock into the close. Ironically, later that day the US president told reporters he opposed the deal, putting a halt to negotiations till both sides could "get clarity on the White House's stance."

    Good equity news notwithstanding, hopes for a solution to the July 31 expiration of $600 a week unemployment benefits remain in limbo at the time of writing, along with any additional coronavirus-related fiscal assistance, as the administration and Democrats remain at an impasse.

    While GDP growth of -32.9% in the second quarter beat expectations, we would be remiss to ignore the fact it was still the sharpest quarterly downturn in history—double the 2008-2009 contraction—because of coronavirus shutdowns. As well, ratings agency Fitch posted a debt warning on the United States, downgrading the country's outlook to negative from stable because of continuous deterioration in public finances and no credible fiscal consolidation plan.

    Till now, stocks have been moving higher on earnings that have beaten low expectations and economic data that's been better than anticipated. The big question is what will happen now that unemployment has run out and new jobs remain difficult to find. Will investors now rely on companies actually becoming profitable?

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    Will the Fed do “whatever it takes” as promised? And if so, what might that include? Will the Federal Reserve buy stocks? Will the central bank allow rates to fall below zero?

    And if that doesn’t help, like it didn’t in Europe and Japan, what then? Here's the gist of our question: is there a breaking point, or will the Fed continually pump up the economy with cheap money that will succeed in pushing stocks higher and higher forever?

    With the knowledge that we’ve been mostly wrong about equities since they bounced off the March lows, we continue to warn of the potential for widespread selloffs that could overtake the March bottom.