Solid Earnings, But Still Awaiting End-Of-Week Jobs Report

 | Aug 04, 2021 10:16AM ET

We started the week with risk-off sentiment and choppy markets. The choppiness could remain until the payrolls number comes out on Friday. But the mood seems to have shifted back toward risk, for now.

Wednesday has started out pretty-much flat to slightly higher after stock indices were able to hold on to their gains and then some Tuesday. Stocks returned to their long-term trend of floating higher amid another quarter of solid earnings reports, with pauses for concerns about the Delta variant and rate of economic growth.

h2 Yesterday’s Rundown And Today’s Setup/h2

The broader indices closed on a positive note Tuesday with the S&P 500 Index up 0.8% and hitting a new all-time record close of 4,423.15. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was also up 0.8% while the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.55%. It’s almost as if investors shrugged off two main concerns—Delta variant and slowing economic growth.

The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) fell to 18 yesterday and is a little higher in early trading. We’ll see if it comes back today. Although bonds were relatively flat, they still ended up slightly higher yesterday with the yield on the 10-year Treasury up to 1.174% after settling Monday at 1.173%, its lowest closing level since February. They look to be trading a little lower this morning, which could take it to six-month lows.

On Wednesday, the markets may show interest in the two purchasing-managers surveys on U.S. services-sector activity in July. The IHS Markit’s final PMI will be and the ISM non-manufacturing index.

Before the bell, General Motors (NYSE:GM) reported earnings that missed quarterly analysts’ estimates, dragged down by warranty recall costs. The car company raised its full-year earnings guidance despite the well-publicized shortage of semiconductor chips needed for electronic car operations that has plagued the auto industry and caused plant shutdowns.

h2 COVID Restrictions, Part II: The Return/h2

The COVID numbers have been rising across the board, and companies—as well as policy-makers—seem to be responding. On Tuesday, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said proof of COVID vaccinations will be required for both staff and customers to enter restaurants, performances, gyms, and other establishments beginning Sept. 13.

The requirement is expected to impact everything from airlines and restaurants to ride-sharing and concerts, with people who don’t have a medical or religious reason for not getting vaccinated effectively being barred from entering buildings and spending money. The concern is that such measures could contribute to the economic recovery that’s already started to stall in place around the globe.

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But that doesn’t seem to stop shoppers, who are apparently determined to look good when they venture out of the house. Ralph Lauren (NYSE:RL) was up 6% on solid quarterly earnings and a fashionable outlook for 25% revenue growth over the next year. Also, ath-leisure brand Under Armour (NYSE:UA) (NYSE:UAA) reported earnings that beat estimates and swung to a profit. Notably, its revenue gains came from its brick-and-mortar stores. The stock closed up 7.5%.

h2 Earnings And Other Company News/h2

After the bell, ride-sharing company Lyft (NASDAQ:LYFT) reported second-quarter earnings that exceeded estimates, reportedly on improving mobility trends as vaccinations picked up in the spring. Shares rose more than 3% in late trading. Might we see a similar trend when Uber (NYSE:UBER) reports today after the close?

In China, the state media continued its crackdown on internet companies, this time placing online gaming in regulators’ crosshairs. The characterization of games played online as “spiritual opium” caught some investors off guard. Shares of Tencent Holdings (OTC:TCEHY) sank 7% on concerns that its popular online games could become persona non grata under a Chinese regulatory crackdown. This trickled down to gaming stocks such as Take-Two Interactive (NASDAQ:TTWO), Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ:ATVI) and Electronic Arts (NASDAQ:EA), all of which were trading lower.

We saw an interesting dynamic play out in the energy sector. Yesterday, we saw crude oil futures fall over 1% to $72.23 a barrel on concerns that the spread of the Delta variant will put a crimp in demand, energy stocks were up. Crude appears to be trending lower this morning and if the decline continues, we could head for a third day of declines.

While crude prices were declining, the energy sector was a strong performer yesterday, up by 1.7%. One reason for this may have been strong earnings from BP (NYSE:BP) and its dividend and share buyback announcement that could have added fuel to the rally in energy stocks.