Equity Markets Mostly Flat, But Bonds On The Move

 | Dec 29, 2021 10:42AM ET

It was a mostly flat start to the market today as the S&P 500 was down .04%, the Nasdaq 100was down .03%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down .03%, while the Russell 2000 offered some strength, up .08%.

There is little in the way of economic news this week, and the earnings calendar is sparse as well, so that will likely lead to lighter trading volumes today and tomorrow. Traditionally, however, the last trading day of the year does see increased activity as investors turn to last-minute tax harvesting.

While the equity markets aren’t moving much today, the bond markets are a different story. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note is up 2.63% today, pushing the yield to 1.52%. Keep an eye on financial stocks today to see how they react to the bond sell off.

While crude oil is down a little today, off .32%, gold is moving more strongly, down 1.01%, and is now sitting at $1,792.8 an ounce.

One of the big names moving this morning is Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), up .50%. According to regulatory filings, Tesla CEO Elon Musk sold another billion dollars’ worth of shares, which means he has now sold nearly $16 billion of TSLA stocks since November, according to MarketWatch.

Heading the other direction is Alibaba (NYSE:BABA), which is down .95%, after Bloomberg News reported Alibaba is in discussions to sell its entire stake in Weibo (NASDAQ:WB), a Chinese social network company.

Yesterday, a very narrow group of stocks in the Dow 30 closed 0.26% higher, while the SPX ended a four-day win streak. Large-cap stocks led on Monday, but it looks like the mega-cap stocks in the Dow 30 were Tuesday’s winner. However, not all mega-caps stocks rose. The CRSP US Mega Cap index closed 0.17% lower on the day.

Technology stocks were the worst-performing sector and weighed down the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite, which closed 0.56% lower. Instead, investors appeared a little more defensive as utilities, consumer staples, and real estate were all in the top five. Of course, trading volumes were lower than normal because the week is sandwiched between major holidays.

One consumer staple stock that rallied was Cal-Maine Foods (NASDAQ:CALM). It rallied 3.79% ahead of announcing earnings after the close. However, investors weren’t impressed with the announcement because the stock fell 6.95% in after-hours trading. The company reported lower-than-expected earnings despite an increase in sales. The company cited higher labor costs cutting into profits.

Vista Outdoor (NYSE:VSTO) rose on news that the company would acquire Stone Glacier hunting gear. The stock rallied 4% after the announcement. Vista has risen more than 500% in the last two years as sportsmen have dealt with an ammo shortage.

h2 Caring About Health Care/h2
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As a person who spends a lot of time consuming and participating in financial media, I’ve noticed that the health-care sector has become a favorite of many financial media analysts for 2022. Outside of a few pharmaceutical companies making vaccines and therapeutics to battle COVID-19, health care stocks have underperformed nearly all sectors in 2021. However, the sector moved to the top of the pack in December with the Health Care Select Sector returning 6.35% for the month.

One reason investors are looking at health care is it is a defensive sector, and defensive sectors have been popular lately. Many investors rotate sectors , depending on how sectors perform during economic cycles. In 2021, energy and materials sectors performed well because of rising inflation. These sectors often outperform in the late stage of an economic expansion. As the expansion moves forward, many investors prepare for a potential recession or economic weakness by purchasing health care stocks because health care is one of those products everyone needs no matter what the economy is doing.

Health-care stocks also have low valuations compared with many other sectors. According to Yardeni Research, the health-care sector has a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 16.2. The S&P 500 has a forward P/E of 20.5. Technology is at 26.9, and consumer discretionary is 31.1. The lower valuation could be attracting more investors.