Santa Claus Rally Is The Strongest In 20 Years

 | Dec 28, 2021 10:29AM ET

Investors appear to be little affected by rising cases of the COVID-19 Delta and Omicron variants. Despite the negative news, airline stocks rallied back on Monday, and many leisure stocks were positive. Yesterday, investors appeared to be most interested in large-cap growth stocks, so we’ll see if investors look to diversify.

Like I said on Monday, the time between Christmas and New Year’s are lighter volume days, so be careful because they can turn quickly. Smaller position sizes and short-term opportunities may be more sensible approaches this week.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the majority of cases, 96.7%, are still Delta variants. Omicron makes up about 2.9% of cases, but it was only 0.4% last week, which is more than a 600% increase. The CDC has also shortened the recommended COVID-19 isolation and quarantine time from 10 days to 5 days. However, investors seem unconcerned with any changes as the S&P 500 are rallying for the fifth day in a row and creating the possibility of yet another all-time high.

Santa Claus delivered on Monday as stocks kicked off the Santa Claus rally by rising 1.38% on the S&P 500, which closed at a new all-time high. According to CNBC, this is the strongest start to the Santa Claus rally in 20 years. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.98% and is about half a percent off its all-time high. The Nasdaq Composite rose 1.39% and is about one and a half percent off its high. Each index saw buying right into the close, which many traders often see as a sign that buying could continue into the next day.

Despite the major indices all closing higher, the buying wasn’t especially broad in that the NYSE advancers outnumbered decliners by about 2 to 1. Investor fear appears to have subsided some as the Cboe Market Volatility Index (VIX) fell 1.56% and is now below the 18 level.

Santa seemed to favor large-cap stocks as the Russell 1000 rose 1.30% compared to the Russell 2000 small-cap index that climbed just 0.89%. Growth stocks found themselves on the nice list, with the S&P 5000 Pure Growth Index ($SP500PG) climbing 1.99% while the S&P 500 Pure Value Index ($SP500PV) rose just 0.97%.

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Each sector appeared on the nice list, with all of them finishing the day in the green. Energy, technology, and real estate were the top three. Energy stocks rallied as crude oil rallied 2.89% and is testing resistance around the $75 level. On Tuesday morning, oil is trying to leave that resistance level behind as it rallied another 1.31% in premarket trading. Despite the rise in oil, the 10-year Treasury yield was slightly lower on the day for Monday and is just 0.07% higher in premarket trading on Tuesday.

Airline stocks traded lower on the news that over 2,000 U.S. flight cancellations have taken place since Christmas Eve due to airline workers calling in sick due to Omicron. The effects differed from airline to airline, with some having few cancellations while others reported up to 10% cancellations. However, the AMEX Airline Index was only 0.75% lower. In fact, many airlines started the day much lower but found buyers to help them significantly trim their losses. The Dow Jones U.S. Travel & Leisure Index ($DJUSCG) actually closed 0.23% higher on Monday and added to its 5-day win streak.

h2 Big Growth/h2

When investors appear to focus on large-cap growth, the natural reaction may be to check out the old favorites. Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:FB) had the biggest day of the popular large-cap growth stocks, rising 3.26%. Apple(NASDAQ:AAPL) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) grew 2.30% and 2.32% respectively. Apple closed at a new all-time high and is closer to reaching a $3 trillion market cap. The “magic” number is $182.86, and Apple is trading below $181. Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) is trading near its highs too, but it only climbed about 0.67% on the day. Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) is also trading well off of its highs and fell 0.16% on Monday. Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) broke from the group by trading 0.82% lower and is nearing its 2021 starting price.

In recent months, value stocks have made their move because investors are increasingly concerned about stock valuations. It’s important to remember that the driving force behind value investing is the prospect of rising interest rates. While it’s likely that interest rates will rise in 2022, as of today, the Fed has not made any rate hikes and has not announced any definite rate hikes in the immediate future.

Of course, the money markets have driven longer yields higher, which are affecting valuation. But Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that the Fed would target a federal funds rate of 0.90%. We can get some context by spot-checking a little history. In 2019 the average rate was 2.16%. In 2000 the average rate was 6.24%. Going clear back to the early ’80s, it was above 20%. The historical rate from the 50s to today averages about 5%. With that perspective, there could still be room for growth stocks with rising interest rates.