Investors Continue To Bet On Equities, U.S. And Canada Data In Focus

 | Dec 23, 2021 04:36AM ET

Yesterday, it was another day when the equity indices across the globe were a sea of green. The best performing sectors were consumer cyclical, energy, and real estate in the US. The sectors that performed the least yesterday were the consumer defensive, utilities, and industrials. Thursday will be a relatively light day on the economic calendar.h2 Equities Continue to Recover Losses/h2

Yesterday, it was another day when the equity indices across the globe were a sea of green. Among the top indices, only the Chinese did not have a positive day, as they closed fractionally in the red. The positivity came from some major economies, whose leaders decided not to impose stricter measures before, during, and after the festive days.

Also, we received the country’s GDP growth rate from the US, which came out higher than the initial forecast. In the beginning, the expectation was for the US QoQ GDP rate for Q3 to show up at +2.1%, but the actual reading was at +2.3%. Investors saw all that as a positive and pushed equities higher, with Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 and NASDAQ gaining around a percent.

The best performing sectors were consumer cyclical, energy, and real estate in the US. Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) led the way by gaining a promising 7.50%. This came after Elon Musk’s comments that he was done with selling the company’s stock.

Investors took that opportunity to drive the stock back above the $1000 mark. In the energy sector, one of the best performers was Devon Energy (NYSE:DVN). In real estate, all companies managed to enjoy some modest gains, but the biggest gainer was CBRE Group (NYSE:CBRE).

The sectors that performed the least yesterday were the consumer defensive, utilities, and industrials. The worst performer among the consumer defensive companies was the Altria Group (NYSE:MO), showing a -1.86% result.

In the utility sector, AES Corp. (NYSE:AES) was the laggard, finishing the day with -0.59%. And among industrials, Emerson Electric (NYSE:EMR) was the biggest loser, ending the trading session with -1.27%.

h2 S&P 500 – Technical View/h2

After finding support near the 4530 hurdle at the beginning of this week, the S&P 500 index started advancing rapidly while trading above a short-term upside support line taken from the low of Dec. 20. As long as the price continues to trade above that trendline, we will stay positive, at least with the near-term outlook.

If the index still gets pushed higher and climbs above the 4702 barrier, marked by yesterday’s high, this will confirm a forthcoming higher high. The S&P 500 may then travel to the 4725 obstacle, a break of which could set the stage for a move towards the current all-time high, at 4752.

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

Alternatively, a break of the aforementioned upside line and a price drop below the 4653 hurdle, marked by the high of Dec. 21, could spook some buyers from the arena for a while. The index might fall to the 4631 obstacle, which if broken may clear the path to the 4582 level, marked by an intraday swing low of Dec. 21.