Biding Time: Investors Take Breather As Market Remains Near Highs

 | Nov 06, 2019 12:33PM ET

(Wednesday Market Open) As hump day dawns, investors and traders seem to be looking for a catalyst now that earnings season is mostly behind us, the Fed’s rate cut is in the rear view, and we don’t have much in the way of trade war-related news this morning.

Early indications suggest that the market could have another flattish day today but remain around all-time highs unless headlines spark a move one way or the other.

The Financials sector could get some attention again today as bonds try to make a comeback. Yields are lower after moving higher yesterday, but that doesn’t appear to be because of market nervousness sparking safe-haven buying. Rather it could have to do with covering positions after yesterday’s selloff and some flattening going into today’s 10-year auction.

h3 Tariff Rollback In The Cards?/h3

Yesterday, U.S.-China trade news was in the headlines again, apparently prompting some optimism and helping shares in two of the three main U.S. indices to hit new closing highs.As the two sides work on hammering out a partial trade deal, the Wall Street Journal reported that officials from the world’s two largest economies have been considering rolling back some tariffs. A story in the Financial Times said the White House was thinking about rolling back duties on more than $1 billion in Chinese goods that went into effect at a 15% rate at the beginning of last month. While the news helped the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) and the Nasdaq Composite (COMP) to notch record closes, the S&P 500 Index (SPX) fell slightly. It’s notable that the first two indices were able to close at records even though the DJI rose just 0.11% and the COMP was up only 0.02%. The SPX dropped 0.12%. While trading volumes in the COMP and DJI were around average, volume was on the low side in the SPX. Perhaps some traders and investors took some time away from their screens to go vote.

h3 Looking For A Catalyst/h3

With all three of the indices relatively unchanged yesterday and shaping up that way today, it could be an indicator that investors and traders are taking a breather to consolidate some gains. After so much news last week, it seems that market participants want to see what happens next.

It’s probably a positive thing that we’re taking a break, and it doesn’t appear to be caused by fear. Rather, it just seems like the market is waiting for the next catalyst now that the earnings season is winding down and the Fed’s rate cut is in the rear view mirror. The central bank’s next meeting isn’t until December, and the futures market indicates most traders and investors are expecting central bankers to stand pat on interest rates. Not exactly fodder for a big market move.

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Earnings and the Fed have been big themes helping to propel the market higher. So while optimistic news on the trade front is nice, it will probably take more concrete trade headlines to kindle another round of meaningful moves to the upside.

Still, market participants seem fairly optimistic. Wall Street’s main fear gauge, the Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) finished yesterday around 13. Market participants also sold U.S. government debt and gold, apparently feeling less of a need for the safe-haven investments.

h3 Financials Ride Yields Higher/h3

As investors sold Treasuries, that moved yields higher, which helped the Financials sector turn in the second-best performance of the day. As longer-term yields rise compared to shorter term ones, that means banks can earn more on loan interest than they pay out on deposits.

It also appears that solid news from the U.S. services sector helped to pressure yields on U.S. government debt as well as the price of gold, which also faced headwinds from a rising U.S. dollar. As the greenback rises, dollar-denominated commodities like gold become more expensive for investors using other currencies.

With the decent economic news and the trade headlines stoking optimism, it’s perhaps not surprising that Real Estate and Utilities were yesterday’s worst performers. Even though investors weren’t in enough of a buying mood to send the market rallying sharply, they seemed to feel safe enough to sell some positions in these defensive sectors.

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