Week Ahead: Volatility On Tap As Earnings Season Starts; Tech Shares Higher

 | Jul 11, 2021 13:42

  • Investors shifted on Friday from growth stocks to cyclicals
  • Indices posted fresh records
  • All eyes on earnings season as hopes grow it will validate faith in recovery
  • Inflation concerns and Delta variant worries weigh on investors
  • After an uneven week of up and down trade, three of the four US major indices—the S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ—each closed on Friday at new record highs. Still, there doesn't seem to be a clear narrative driving traders, though that could change in the week ahead as earnings season ramps up.

    While stocks returned in force after their worst selloff in weeks, the Reflation Trade once again was the driver of Friday’s acceleration, overshadowing growth stocks, aka technology shares. Still, it was the Russell 2000, which lists small-cap domestic firms that stand to benefit the most from consumers returning to pre-pandemic spending habits, that outperformed. The index's 2.1% advance was twice that of the NASDAQ Composite, which didn’t even gain a full percentage point.

    Even the mega cap tech firms listed on the NASDAQ 100 underperformed the Russell, gaining only 0.7%, less than a third of the Russell's rally.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 1.3% of value on Friday, second only to the Russell 2000. The 30-component blue chip index's, mega-cap shares also represent value.

    h2 Sector Paradigm Shift/h2

    A similar paradigm shift was seen among the market's sectors. Financials, (+2.9%), outperformed, boosted by rising yields, for the first time in a while, and the prospect of rising interest rates, which would increase profit margins among lenders.

    Energy shares came in second, (+2.1%), which makes sense as the companies in this sector would fuel—literally and figuratively—the rebuilding of an expanding economy. To be fair, this sector is also benefitting from expectations of what could perhaps be record demand for oil as summer driving and vacation travel escalate, as economies re-open and consumers escape their homes when lockdowns are lifted.

    As well, the recent spat among OPEC+ members, which has curbed oil production for now, has been impacting pricing. Nevertheless, the cost of energy generally rises along with economic expansion.

    Materials was the third best sector performer last week, (+2%) with Industrials in fourth place, (+1.6%).

    On the other end of the Reflation spectrum, Technology and Communications Services, which both rose only 0.9%, didn't do much better than defensive stocks, which tend to underperform during expansion.

    Notwithstanding that the tech heavy-NASDAQ indices managed to join the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average in record closes, both of the tech indices fell short of joining the latter two benchmarks at all-time intraday highs.

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    In the final analysis though, as we have repeatedly demonstrated, technology stocks continue to dominate the market this year. This can be seen on a weekly, monthly, tri-monthly and YTD basis. It’s easily demonstrated visually when comparing the charts.

    The NASDAQ 100 is pointing higher: