After Debt Deal, Crude Cuts, and Jobs Report, Stocks Seek Fresh Direction

 | Jun 05, 2023 09:31AM ET

(Monday market open) With the drama of earnings season, the debt ceiling battle, and last Friday’s crucial jobs report in the rear-view mirror, Wall Street enters the week seeking new catalysts.

Major indexes posted new 2023 highs Friday following the May jobs data, but much of this year’s performance was driven by a handful of info tech and communication services stocks that all boast dramatic gains. The rest of the market basically has treaded water. And this week’s light data and earnings calendar doesn’t offer much direction.

The S&P 500 (SPX) starts this week on the cusp of a new bull market. A close of 4,292 or above would represent approximately a 20% gain from the 2022 low close of 3,577 posted last October 12. A 20% gain from the bottom represents a new bull market. That said, the SPX is still down about 11% from its all-time high close of 4,796 posted January 3, 2022.

You may recall a strong rally last summer. But the 17% rally that lasted from mid-June 2022 through mid-August 2022 lifted the SPX just 17%—not enough to put it into bull market territory.

After being outperformed so far this year by every other S&P sector, energy sector shares got a boost this morning when Saudi Arabia decided to cut crude production again over the weekend. That sent WTI crude (/CL) up more than 2% and gave some of the major energy firms a boost in premarket trading. The sector came into the week down 9% for the year. Two months ago when OPEC announced a surprise production cut, it helped ignite a 20% rally in energy shares—all of which they gave back by early June.

h2 Morning rush/h2
  • The 10 Year Treasury Yield (TNX) rose 6 basis points to 3.75%.
  • The U.S. Dollar Index ($DXY) climbed to 104.29.
  • The Cboe Volatility Index® (VIX) futures traded near three-year lows at 15.15.
  • WTI Crude Oil (/CL) jumped to $73.22 per barrel after Saudi Arabia said it would cut production.

Saudi Arabia’s production cut of 1 million barrels of crude a day is a voluntary one. OPEC and its allies left overall production quotas unchanged at their weekend meeting. The Saudi decision came as a surprise to some analysts and reinforced ideas that the country is determined to defend the price of oil.

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Volatility fell to its lowest levels since before the pandemic late last week, below 15 for the VIX. Sometimes a very low VIX can be a contrarian indicator of overbought conditions in the stock market. Today’s rise in the dollar and Treasury yields is also slightly concerning, and bearish sentiment remains elevated.

h2 What to Watch/h2

The S&P 500 is now up 11% year to date and has broken out of a trading range it had been stuck in for some time between 3,800 and 4,200 on the charts. For a long time, 4,200 represented a tough technical resistance level, but that’s now been taken out.

From a sectors standpoint, Friday’s rally saw traditional “cyclical” sectors like materials, energy, and industrials take the lead instead of the usual suspects, info tech and communication services. The PHLX Semiconductor Index (SOX), which had been on a tear late last month, dipped slightly on Friday as most of the market skyrocketed on what was the best trading day of the year. This could be a healthy development, indicating that perhaps investors aren’t so fearful of recession. Cyclical sectors tend to perform better when the economy is firing on all cylinders.

It was also refreshing to see financial companies among the strongest performers Friday, with the KBW Regional Banking Index (KRX) rising more than 6%. There’s an old saying that it’s hard to rally without the financial sector participating, and it’s been a real drag on the market so far this year. One day doesn’t change that, of course, but it’s progress.

h2 Stocks in the Spotlight/h2

Stay tuned for Apple’s (AAPL) Worldwide Developers Conference, which begins today. The highlight of this annual conference is usually product announcements, and this year the company’s “mixed reality” headset introduction could take center stage.

Q1 earnings season was 99% over through the end of last week and the overall S&P 500 earnings per share (EPS) decline came in at 2.1%, Factset notes. It was the second straight quarter of declining year-over-year EPS, which is often defined as an “earnings recession.” Still, things turned out much better than the 6% losses analysts had initially expected. We’re almost certainly not out of the woods yet, as analysts predict a 6.4% year-over-year earnings decline in the current quarter. However, that could set up the market for positive earnings surprises, considering the bar is rather low.

What’s not low is the SPX’s forward price-earnings (P/E) ratio, which FactSet pegged at 18 before Friday’s rally. That’s above the 10-year average of 17.3, which suggests stocks might have a challenge keeping this rally going if earnings estimates don’t start to improve. One area to watch for potential resistance on the SPX chart is 4,325, which represents last summer’s intraday high.

h2 Eye on the Fed/h2

Chances of an interest rate pause at the June meeting stand at 77% as of this morning, according to the CME FedWatch tool, which also prices in a nearly 70% chance that rates will rise by July. The May jobs report didn’t end up influencing June rate expectations too much, perhaps a sign that recent dovish remarks by Fed officials got heard loud and clear by market participants.

The Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC) meeting is June 13–14, beginning on the very day of the critical May Consumer Price Index (CPI) report. However, unless the CPI is absolutely off the charts hot, a pause might not surprise many.

The term “pause” doesn’t mean “end.” Fed officials have been telegraphing more of a “skip” that would allow them an extra month to contemplate the impact of more than a year of rate hikes on the economy. There’s now a 68% chance built into the futures market that rates will be 25 to 50 basis points higher after the July meeting than they are today, according to the FedWatch tool.

May’s monster 339,000 jobs growth initially fueled concerns the Federal Reserve might see the data as inflationary. However, there were some caveats that tempered those worries, including wages rising just 0.3%, down from 0.5% in April and in line with analysts’ expectations.

Robust jobs growth keeps the potential for a Fed rate hike at the June meeting alive and reduces the likelihood of rate cuts later this year, notes Kathy Jones, chief fixed income strategist at Schwab. We’ll have to see how the inflation data turn out, she adds. That’s the next hurdle for the market.