Platter Of Economic Announcements Served Up For Thanksgiving

 | Nov 24, 2021 11:14AM ET

First off, I want to wish a Happy Thanksgiving to all. Second, as you probably know, the market will be closed on Thursday for Thanksgiving and will only be open half a day on Friday. I’m going to be celebrating with my family, so there won’t be a Market Update on Friday, but I’ll be back again on Monday, Nov. 29.

It’s a heavy day for economic announcements. The Census Bureau released the durable goods orders, which came in at expectations, suggesting that business continues to grow. The U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) confirmed that the economy is growing with a rate of 2.1% in third quarter. However, it was lower than the 2.2% forecasted.

Inflation is also growing according the Core PCE Prices report that grew in line with expectations at 4.5%. When accounting for other products outside of the just the core items, prices grew 5.3% in the third quarter.

There was good news for the job market. Jobless claims came in better-than-expected and falling below 200,000, which is the first time it reached that level since the pandemic.

Retail inventories came in at a healthy 0.4%, which isn’t what investors found with two retailers that reported inventory problems yesterday. After the market closed, Nordstrom's (NYSE:JWN) fell 23% in after-hours trading after beating on revenue but missing on earnings. Additionally, the company said it had high inventories that were causing concerns among investors that the company had missed on its choice of product trends.

Gap (NYSE:GPS) also fell 15.7% in after-hours trading after missing on revenue and earnings estimates. The company also lowered its annual earnings forecast because of supply chain and inventory problems ahead of the holiday season.

A number of other retail stocks fell on Tuesday including, Abercrombie & Fitch (NYSE:ANF), which fell 12.59%, Best Buy (NYSE:BBY) declined 12.31%, Dick’s Sporting Goods (NYSE:DKS) dropped 4%, and Urban Outfitters (NASDAQ:URBN) was down 9.31%. However, it wasn’t all bad for retailers, Dollar Tree (NASDAQ:DLTR) and Burlington Stores (NYSE:BURL) both rallied on their earnings reports, climbing 9.17% and 8.57%, respectively.

When the big-box stores were announcing last week, retail stocks became a market darling. However, investors are now focusing on profit margins and inventories to sort through which retailers are set to grow and which are set to struggle. Overall, retailers are still positive with the Dow Jones Retailers) closing a little higher on Tuesday.

One non-retail stock that was also among the losers was Zoom (NASDAQ:ZM). It fell more than 14.71% on concerns that as the pandemic is easing, video conferencing demand will slow. The stock is down over 50% for the year, which has some analysts saying that concerns are overblown.

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Stocks were mixed on Tuesday as crude oil (/CL) rallied 2.28% despite an announcement that the White House was planning to release a record 50 million barrels from the country’s Strategic Petroleum Reserves. According to The New York Times, the move is meant to coincide with Britain, China, India, Japan, and South Korea who also plan on releasing reserves too. These countries are attempting to pressure OPEC+ to increase their output, but the announcements were immediately rebuffed.

The S&P Energy Select Sector Index (IXE) rallied 3% on the bounce in oil prices. The 10-year Treasury yield also rose in reaction to oil price adding another 2.58% to yesterday’s gain of 5.79%. The rise in rates pulled down the tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite that dropped more than 1.1%but rallied to close down 0.5%. Rising yields were good for the S&P Financial Select Sector Index (IXM), which rallied 1.55% with the rising rates.

h2 Sliced Breadth/h2

The stock market is struggling once again with breadth. The Russell 2000, which tracks 2,000 of the smallest publicly traded companies, broke above resistance in November and rallied higher. However, the index broke down throughout the month before breaking below the original resistance level. Technical analysts see the inability to maintain a breakout as a sign of weakness and a lack of conviction.

Similar weakness can also be seen in the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) advance/decline (A/D) line that moved higher at the same time the Russell 2000 did but is also retracing its recent move. You may recall that the A/D line measures the number of stocks that are advancing or rising on the NYSE to the number of stocks that are declining or falling. The rising line is bullish because it signals the majority of stocks are going up. A falling line is bearish because it signals the majority of stocks are going down.

A strong bull market is commonly broad-based with the majority of stock participating. Strong bullish sentiment is often characterized by risk-taking, which means that the waning interest in small-cap stocks suggests that investors aren’t willing to take risks on smaller and less-established companies. These developments suggest that sentiment is turning less bullish despite the major indices trading near record highs.