Everyone knows about the Santa rally effect, and it’s particularly pronounced in a bull market. According to Bank of America, the November-to-January period is the strongest three-month period of the year for S&P 500 returns, and even more so when August-to-October is above-average, which it was this year with a 4.8% gain.
But the market isn’t showing a lot of festive cheer, particularly if you look at the bottom 495 stocks of the S&P 500 and small-caps. The S&P 500 equal weight index
SP500EW,
is down about 1% from its highs, and the small-cap Russell 2000
RUT,
is down 4%. That’s hardly terrible after the strong gains for the year, to be sure, but a sign that the market is at the very least consolidating.
Sean Darby, global equity strategist at Jefferies, says an extended period of flows into risky assets has crested as the dollar firms, LIBOR cuts through its moving average, currency volatility breaks out, and the yield curve is “unnervingly flat” while inflation expectations remain elevated.
Soon-to-be-outgoing Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida has opened the door to speeding up the tapering process in December, just as it’s commenced. “The dollar is beginning to reprice all global asset classes and this ought to be accompanied by higher volatility as expected returns become more uncertain,” said Darby in a note to clients.
Speaking to CNBC in an interview that aired Monday, he elaborated on that pessimism. “My fear is that you only have to have small changes in expectations of growth, or indeed policy tightening, and you could have quite a significant change in sentiment,” he said. That doesn’t mean there will be an unhappy fourth quarter, Darby said, but “a pretty difficult time for the first quarter 2022.”
The buzz
This could really be the week President Joe Biden determines whether Jerome Powell or Lael Brainard will be his nominee for Fed chair. The White House schedule has Biden talking about “the economy and lowering prices for the American people” on Tuesday, which sounds like a topical subject line for discussing the central bank’s leadership. The Washington Post reports Biden made positive comments about Powell in a meeting with centrist senators.
The People’s Bank of China removed several phrases about policy restraint in a report, which economists said could be a sign of easing steps to come.
Protests erupted throughout Europe in response to new coronavirus-related restrictions as infections spike.
At least five died and more than 40 were injured after a vehicle sped through a Christmas parade in suburban Milwaukee.
Zoom Video Communications
ZM,
is due to release results after the close of trading.
Telecom Italia
TIT,
rallied 28% in Milan after KKR made a €10.8 billion bid for the company. Ericsson
ERIC,
said it was buying Vonage
VG,
for $6.2 billion, or $21 a share.
The market
U.S. stock futures
ES00,
NQ00,
advanced, after a week in which the Dow industrials
DJIA,
fell while the Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
rose.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury
TMUBMUSD10Y,
was 1.59%.
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Random reads
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BTCUSD,
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Russia and the U.S. are planning a joint mission to Venus, says the CEO of the Russian state space agency.
An Australian TV host flew to London to interview Adele, but didn’t bother listening to her new album first.
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This post was originally published on Market Watch