Crude Whirls Baton As Earnings Parade Keeps Marching Along

 | May 06, 2020 04:06PM ET

If the stock market has a catalyst right now, it’s arguably crude.

That volatile commodity rose for the sixth-straight day, raising hopes of improving demand as economies reopen. Meanwhile, major overseas indices are mostly higher again, and bond yields firmed but aren’t migrating much from where they’ve camped out for weeks.

Economic reopenings continue to raise hopes in both the stock and crude markets. This could be a fickle metric because the virus doesn’t seem to be taking a break, judging from recent statistics. The ADP survey of private businesses out today showed April job losses of more than 20 million, which could steer attention toward the government’s payrolls report this Friday. However, it might not give too much insight into Friday’s data since that includes government jobs, too.

Earnings season shifted into high gear this morning with General Motors (NYSE:GM) checking in following reports after the close yesterday from Disney (NYSE:DIS) and Beyond Meat (NASDAQ:BYND).

GM beat analysts’ estimates on earnings and revenue despite a previously reported 7.1% drop in vehicle sales during Q1. It could be interesting to monitor that company’s call for word on how business is doing in China as that country reopens.

Magic Missing as Disney Theme Park Business Hit

Earnings from Disney were kind of a mixed bag. The earnings-per-share number missed the Street’s average estimate, while revenue was pretty much what analysts had expected. The company said it’s confident it can get through this crisis. What’s incredible is how the stock came back overnight after falling 2%. This recovery suggests the market is amazingly strong.

Probably to the shock of few, the theme park and cruise businesses really suffered in Q1, though that doesn’t tell the full story because theme parks in most of the world were open in January and February. It’s the current quarter where Disney might see things get worse, with questions still surrounding when its signature U.S. theme parks and hotels might reopen. The company has started taking online reservations for its theme parks for dates beginning June 1.

Continued subscriber adds to streaming service Disney+ represented a positive side of the quarter. The company reported 54.5 million paid subscribers as of early May. The timing of that launch last fall seems impeccable when you look back, though obviously Disney didn’t know what was about to come.

Disney’s cruise business is really a separate story from theme parks, because it’s hard to believe many people would necessarily want to board a cruise ship right away even if the virus situation improves. The exception might be millennials, who have been buying cruise ship stocks in recent months, according to TD Ameritrade’s Investor Movement Index® (IMXSM). The IMX is TD Ameritrade’s proprietary, behavior-based index.

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Some cruise lines have said they’re going to launch boats again in August if the government gives permission, and millennials might hop back on if the price is right. They seem to be the population that’s most likely to come back, while elderly cruisers might be more hesitant. Travel companies might have to cut their margins to get people to come back on board, and that could be tough for the industry — and the airlines in particular — because their cost structure is so high.

Another part of the travel business, hotels, showed a little more strength Tuesday with Marriott (NASDAQ:MAR) leading the way. That came after Marriott raised $920 million by amending its co-branding credit card agreements with JP Morgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) and American Express (NYSE:AXP), according to MarketWatch.

The revised agreements helped scoop up some much-needed cash for Marriott, and the Street seemed to like it. Shares rose more than 1%. It’s a good story because you’re seeing companies get creative to find financing that doesn’t raise debt. Creativity really can pay off at times like these, and this could help Marriott until hotel rooms start filling up again.

T-Mobile (NASDAQ:TMUS) reports after the close, with subscriber numbers in focus.

Fuelling A Rally

Crude had an amazing day on Tuesday, rising double-digits again as signs of demand continued to show up and investors anticipated more traffic as states start to reopen. It’s also a bullish sign to see that many futures market participants are already rolling from the June into the July contract. That hopefully means there’s no repeat later this month of that supply glut that helped send futures into negative territory as the May contract expired. The weekly supply and production report this morning could get a close look from many investors.

With demand starting to re-emerge, some of those stockpiles can move out of storage and free up more room for future supplies. And let's not forget, U.S. oil rig counts — as measured by Baker Hughes —have been in steady decline for the past six weeks, so storage space is getting a little breathing room from the supply side as well.

Why did stocks give up a lot of their gains late Tuesday? Part of it could have been technical disappointment among traders seeing the S&P 500 Index unable to break above 2900. It ended the day in the middle of a technical resistance band that stretches from 2856 to 2882. The area up around 2940 might be another tough resistance spot because the SPX couldn’t close above it last week and it represents the old autumn 2018 high from right before all the air went out of the market that year.

It’s also possible the SPX is hitting its head a little at these levels with the price-to-earnings ratio now near 20, a historically high number. Some economists said Tuesday that many of the major tech stocks, which led once again Tuesday, look like they’re priced for perfection.

Most of the big tech stocks, including Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) rose 1% or more yesterday, and these companies have a heavy influence on the SPX and NASDAQ Composite due to their huge market caps. Meanwhile, influential sectors like Financials continue to struggle, and the key Industrial and Material sectors also lagged the overall market yesterday. It would be better if there were more coordination and less dependence on any one sector.

This impressive performance from Information Technology and also from biotech, which both have huge representation in the COMP, help explain why that index is nearly back to where it started the year. The COMP is only down about 1.8% year-to-date, and is actually up 7% from a year ago. Back on March 22, the COMP hit an intraday low of 6631, putting it down 26% from the end of 2019. It’s been an incredible comeback.

Checking With Fed as Payrolls Report Looms

Fed Vice-Chairman Richard Clarida, interviewed on CNBC yesterday, said he thinks a recovery can begin in the second half, but it’s contingent on the virus situation. He also warned that the unemployment rate is going to surge to levels not seen since the 1940s.

That’s likely to be the focus over the next day or two heading into Friday’s April payrolls report, and concern over that, along with some negative headlines about the virus, might also have helped trim the market’s big gains by the end of Tuesday’s session.

There won’t be anywhere to hide from the economic horror show Friday when the government delivers a payrolls report unlike any that people have ever seen. Analysts expect April job losses of 21 million, according to research firm Briefing.com.

That’s like taking last year’s approximately 180,000 jobs a month average growth and subtracting it from the economy 116 times. That means even if jobs immediately picked up next month (not likely) and averaged 180,000 a month from then on, it would take nearly 10 years to get back all the positions lost in April alone.