EU Stock Markets Set Tone As Investors Shrug Off Pandemic Restrictions

 | Nov 22, 2021 10:34AM ET

Stocks appear to be shrugging off increased pandemic restrictions in Europe because the equity index futures are pointing to higher opens sparked by the positive tone set in European markets. It appears to be a positive tone on a holiday week. As usual, the market will be closed on Thursday for the Thanksgiving holiday and then open for a half day on Friday. This commonly results in lighter volume throughout the week so investors should be careful trading and consider smaller position sizes.

This morning President Joe Biden renominated Fed Chair Jerome Powell to maintain his position at the Federal Reserve. While a few Democrats have already spoke out against the nomination, it’s likely that Powell will see bi-partisan support because of Powell’s Republican background.

Speaking of the Fed, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said in a speech last week that the Fed may need to taper faster. The comments appear be strengthening the U.S. dollar. A quicker taper could result in an interest rate hike sooner than expected.

EV makers continue to make news. Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) was up 2.4% in premarket trading after CEO Elon Musk tweeted about the possibility of the Model S Plaid being available to customers in China this spring. Tesla has boasted that the luxury model is the fastest production car they have ever built but hasn’t been available for customers in China. Competitors Rivian Autootive (NASDAQ:RIVN) and Lucid (NASDAQ:LCID) were down 5% and 3%, respectively, before the bell.

Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ:ATVI) is down 1.23% in premarket trading on news that the CEO Bobby Kotick would consider leaving the company if he can’t fix corporate culture issues. Last week, The Wall Street Journal reported that Kotick didn’t inform the board’s directors about misconduct reports that included one rape accusation.

h2 Potential Tax Troubles/h2

This year’s stock market losers could see additional volatility because it’s tax-loss harvesting season. This is the time when many investors choose to sell their losers to recognize the loss for tax purposes and then, if they so choose, they can buy the stocks back 30 days later. The losses have the potential to offset some capital gains taxes, up to $3,000, and potentially reduce a person’s tax burden. Of course, TD Ameritrade does not provide tax advice, but, if you think this is a strategy you’d like to consider learning more about, talk to your tax advisor to determine if tax-loss harvesting would work for you and your portfolio.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

One other potential volatility contributor is that many folks may want to take profits where they can as we go into year end. The reason why is because of potential changes in tax laws. Some investors may want to sell their investment at the current known tax rate in order to avoid any unknown tax rates going forward.

h2 Housing Hope Or Hysteria?/h2

The existing home sales report will be released, and later this week, the new home sales report comes out. Last week, we saw building permit rise, but housing starts came in lower than expected. However, the housing market continues to rise. The average home sale price rose 13.9% from September 2020 to September 2021, while the average monthly rents rose 10.7%. Despite rising home prices across the United States, weakness in certain areas have caused Zillow (NASDAQ:Z) to try and sell much of its house flipping inventory to private equity funds.

Last week, real estate platform and brokerage Redfin (NASDAQ:RDFN) reported that a record 18% of homes bought in the United States were purchased by investors in the third quarter. Investors spent $64 billion worth on homes, three-quarters of which were single-family homes, creating an all-time high.

Atlanta, Charlotte, Miami, Phoenix and Jacksonville have the highest share of investor ownership, which suggests investors appear to be willing to take on more risk because 65% of these homes are in areas with a high-heat risk and 64% had high-storm risk. This development has many real-estate analysts worried that housing is becoming a speculative bubble. Yale Economics Professor Robert Shiller said on CNBC that home prices have never been so high when adjusting for inflation.

According to a report by Clever Real Estate, a less speculative market is commonly built on typical homebuyers who will try to keep the price-to-income ratio around 2.6. The report used Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Oklahoma City, St. Louis, Cincinnati and Birmingham as examples of housing markets with “normal” price-to-income ratios. However, San Jose, San Francisco, San Diego, New York and Los Angeles have ratios as high as 9.8. Across the United States, a typical American needs an income of $144,192 to purchase an average home. Unfortunately, the average income is $69,178.

Despite the concerns, Redfin is forecasting a more balanced housing market in 2022. It believes that mortgage rates won’t rise as fast as they did in 2021, and inventories will increase to a new 10-year high. They also expect rents to continue to rise by 7%.