Week Ahead: U.S. Stocks End Higher, Ignore Trade Turmoil; Rally Ahead?

 | Jun 10, 2018 07:28AM ET

  • US equities finish both Friday and the week strongly while wiping out trade-war losses, suggesting investors are no longer concerned.
  • G7 headlines describe event as disastrous; will traders return to risk-off?
  • US yield curve flattens, recession signaled? Investors are more focused on economic fundamentals and geopolitics.
  • FOMC and ECB rate decisions on tap
  • US stocks finished last week on a strong note with most shares ending Friday near their highs for the day. Of the four US major indices, on Friday the S&P 500 closed up 0.31% followed closely by the Dow, up 0.30%; the Russell 2000 gained 0.28% on the day, while the NASDAQ Composite 'trailed,' up just 0.14%.

    Clearly, investors once again chose to focus on positive economic data—including a near-50 year low unemployment rate, higher consumer confidence and an expansion of business investment—sweeping aside a slew of risky geopolitical issues, in particular the ongoing global trade dispute being fueled by US President Donald Trump, ahead of what had promised to be a contentious G7 summit that began on Friday in Quebec. Indeed it was already becoming clear before the summit even started that the US president was potentially setting up to be the least popular guest at that party.

    Notwithstanding, for the first time during the past two months, since the trade disagreement has become the strongest headwind to equities, the SPX and Dow outperformed the tech heavy NASDAQ Composite and the small cap Russell 2000. This superior performance of large caps may be a sign that investors regard this two month lag period, along with any consolidation that resulted, as enough time to render large caps, with their multi-national business models, as value stocks. In other words, the boost seen in both these benchmarks might just indicate that investors may be over their trade jitters.

    h2 Equity Show Of Force; Additional Rallies Ahead?/h2

    For the week, the S&P 500 advanced 1.62 percent, led by the Consumer Discretionary sector (+3.17 percent), followed by Materials (+2.98 percent), signaling that the sector, which was at the heart of the trade spat, has moved past the issue.

    Friday’s 0.31 percent advance for the benchmark index was led by Consumer Staples (+1.23 percent), which far outperformed all other sectors, by two to three times. Its outstanding demand was not due to a desire by investors for a defensive sector, but rather was motivated by it lagging other sectors, providing a buying opportunity.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 2.77 percent for the week, posting its best weekly gain since the beginning of March, outperforming among major US indices. The NASDAQ Composite climbed 1.2 percent on the week while the Russell 2000 gained 1.45 percent over the same period.

    Get The News You Want
    Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
    Get The App