Post-Holiday Buffet: Lots To Gnaw On Including Cyber Monday Sales, Zoom Earnings

 | Nov 30, 2020 10:03AM ET

A little end-of-the-month profit-taking appears to be taking its toll early Monday, but November is still the first month since August with gains for the major indices and remains on track to be the best for the Dow Jones Industrial Average in 33 years. The question is, what can Wall Street do for a follow-up?

Considering how November’s scorching advance came against a backdrop of rising COVID-19 cases and softening economic data, it might be difficult to keep up this pace. However, it’s been tough most of the year for investors who chose to doubt the rally. Ask anyone who sold in March and didn’t come back into the market.

It’s Cyber Monday, and word from weekend and Black Friday shopping is that traffic was down about 50% from normal. But anecdotally, people are saying sales weren’t down that much. Why not? Because the people who actually ventured out to stores were there to buy. They didn’t go just to look or to enjoy the holiday atmosphere. Online sales also looked pretty solid. More statistics could start to roll in soon and give us a better picture.

The last three Mondays began with positive vaccine news and today was no different as Moderna (NASDAQ:MRNA) said its product is more than 94% effective. As far as the effect on the market, though, we’re reaching a point of diminishing returns when it comes to news like this until there’s an actual distribution plan and the vaccines start getting delivered. The news is fantastic, but investors might be asking, “OK, but what now?”

The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) made new post-pandemic lows below 21 on Friday, though this might just reflect holiday trading. If you look further out into January, VIX futures are 10% above spot levels, so it’s not like VIX is telling us everything looks great going forward. VIX is another place to monitor if geopolitical tensions start to climb. It started out the week with a pretty decent move higher and is back to nearly 22 early Monday. It’s not like it’s rocketing, but it does suggest maybe it got a little too far off to the downside last week. Crude is still holding $45 a barrel as OPEC meets today and is expected to leave production cuts unchanged, and the dollar is near its lowest point since last summer.

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The new week began with some decent economic news from Asia. China’s November manufacturing activity expanded for the ninth straight month as the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) came in at 52.1, above 51.4 in October. This is the sort of news that tends to help the U.S. Tech sector since it has so much exposure to the Chinese economy.

h2 Back To Work With Lots Of Data/h2

Surveying the days ahead, it’s back to work with plenty of fresh data to digest now that the holiday is over. Nothing stands out more than Friday’s monthly payrolls report. The last two weeks both saw rising jobless claims, suggesting the recovery has slowed. October recorded 638,000 new jobs, but the headline figure is down several months in a row, and some analysts even wonder if eventually it could go negative. We’ll talk more later this week about what kind of numbers analysts expect payrolls to bring and what might be significant to watch.

Other key reports this week include Chicago PMI this morning and monthly ISM manufacturing on Tuesday. The ISM could be interesting, considering how strong it was in October at a headline figure of 59.3%—the best in two years. Analysts expect a slight drop to 58% in November, according to research firm Briefing.com. Any sign of a more dramatic pullback might raise concerns that lack of government stimulus and rising virus cases have started a negative blowback. Weakness there could get reflected in some of the same cyclical sectors that helped lead the recent rally. We’re talking Industrials, Materials, and Energy. Sometimes ISM can have an immediate impact on the market, so be ready at 10 a.m. ET Tuesday.

And speaking of data, two market data powerhouses—S&P Global (SPGI) and IHS Markit (INFO)—look to be joining under one roof, with SPGI agreeing to acquire INFO in a deal worth $44 billion, according to media reports. Data has become big business in recent years, particularly in licensing, data storage, regulatory filings, and other data management services.

h2 Earnings Still Trickling In/h2

On the earnings front, look for results from Dow Jones Industrial Average component Salesforce.com (NYSE:CRM) on Tuesday after the close. Aside from the standard scrutiny of the numbers, analysts will also have their ears perked for any comments regarding recent talks to buy business messaging mainstay Slack Technologies (NYSE:WORK). In addition, Carnival (NYSE:CCL), Dollar General (NYSE:DG) and Kroger (NYSE:KR) are expected to report later this week.

Did you spend a lot of time in Zoom (NASDAQ:ZM) meetings during the quarter? This afternoon you get a chance to find out how much money they made off of you and everyone else who adopted the technology. They report after the close. Shares of ZM are already up more than 500% this year. It’s quite likely no one expected that going into 2020. The question is how do they build on that in 2021. Some analysts forecast a slowdown, but remember, once new habits are formed in the technology space, it’s often hard to convince people to stop what they’re doing.

There’s even a bit of Fed news mixed in. Tomorrow, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell is scheduled to testify before the Senate Banking Committee on the topic of March’s $2.2 trillion Cares Act. The Fed also releases its beige book on Wednesday to provide an update on how various U.S. regional economies are coming along.