Week Ahead: Bullish Stocks Likely To Slow, Oil To Rise, Euro To Fall

 | Aug 19, 2018 08:40AM ET

  • Despite geopolitics US shares rise on earnings and the economy
  • However, failing to challenge records on the heels of robust revenues suggests a slowdown
  • Dow forms new peak, extends uptrend since April lows
  • WTI finds support at uptrend line since November
  • We've been speculating that this strong earnings season would help buoy indices to new records. But while prices did indeed rise to finish the week—both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Russell 2000 were up 0.43% on Friday while the S&P 500 gained 0.33% and the NASDAQ Composite eked out a 0.13% boost on the heels of a volatile week—we're concerned that the inability of major indices to achieve new records during this robust earnings season may be a red flag.

    If healthy corporate results, on top of an expanding economy and market uptrend, failed to push markets to new records, what do investors have left to hold on to now that earnings season is waning?

    Though most stocks advanced after a tumultuous week, geopolitics are returning to the forefront and will almost certainly become the central focus of investors, testing bullish sentiment. The Turkish economic crisis threatening to spread to global markets offset renewed trade negotiations between China and the US and positive earnings, and stocks swung between gains and losses according to what was in the spotlight from moment to moment.

    h2 Now All About The Economy
    /h2

    While the market may enjoy an additional boost as it makes history by becoming the longest-running bull market since WWII, unless the trade talks reach a decisive and somehow positive climax, we might see stocks retest the uptrend this late in the business cycle. Which means, in a nutshell, it’s all down to the economy’s continued growth.

    The S&P 500 Index advanced 0.59 percent for the week, bouncing off a 1.09 decline. This resumes the rally that was interrupted by last week's setback, bringing it to its sixth week. Technically, the week's trading failed to overcome the preceding, August 7 peak of 2,863.43, opening the possibility of an H&S top reversal, should prices cross below the neckline, the line connecting the lows since late July.