Stocks Ignoring Consumer Angst

 | Aug 16, 2021 12:35PM ET

While surprising to some (mostly those dressed in their best bear garb), the stock market continues to work its way higher. Appearing to be climbing the proverbial "wall of worry," the S&P 500 just keeps on keepin' on – to the tune of record high closes, that is.

In case you've been living in a cave or away at the beach with the family without cell service, the primary reason for all the new records appears to be pretty simple: earnings. As in really good earnings. Surprisingly good earnings. No, make that really surprisingly good earnings. And while everybody on the planet expected this quarter's parade of corporate results to be strong, what wasn't expected was Corporate America's upbeat outlook about future earnings.

Remember, the stock market doesn't care about what is currently happening – especially when "everybody" knows why it is happening. Hence the phrase, "something everybody knows isn't worth knowing." No, as a "discounting mechanism of future expectations," the stock market cares about what the outlook going forward looks like.

From my perch, the chart below explains why stocks finished last week at record highs. This chart shows the Consensus Earnings Estimates (GAAP earnings, to be precise) for the S&P 500. Please take note of what has happened recently to the estimates for 2021 – the area I’ve circled in red.