Week Ahead: Expect Additional U.S. Equity Records, More USD Setbacks

 | Sep 23, 2018 06:16AM ET

  • Dow posts fresh record on Friday, capping off record-setting week for US major indices
  • Dollar reverses lower on rotation out of safe havens, into stocks
  • h2 Quadruple Witching Drives Volatility/h2

    Though Quadruple Witching took its toll on US equities this past Friday—with the S&P 500, NASDAQ Composite and Russell 2000 all declining—it was, nonetheless a record breaking week, with, in our view, more gains to come.

    On the third Friday of every March, June, September and December, market index futures, market index options, stock options and stock futures all expire. Referred to as Quadruple Witching, volatility usually increases significantly, as traders rebalance their holdings, driving some of the biggest trading days of the year. This past Friday was no exception. Not surprising, traders used the opportunity to take profits. Big tech stocks, such as Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) weighed on averages.

    This past Friday was also notable for another reason. The largest revision to date to the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS), took place. Put together in 1999 by MSCI and Standard and Poor's, the GICS divides financial market companies into sectors, industry groups, industries and sub-industries. Based on the new classification structure, Facebook and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) will shift out of information technology, the biggest industry classification, and be moved into communications, a category set to replace the telecom designation, by merging existing phone companies with some Internet and media stocks.

    h2 Target-Rich Environment/h2

    Large caps climbed for the second week, posting fresh records, despite rising interest rates and ongoing trade disputes. The S&P 500 Index gave up its record-breaking high, to close mostly flat, with a 0.04 percent decline, ending a three-day streak. For the week, Communication Services (-0.65 percent) overshadowed gains in the Energy sector (+0.63 percent). The most-watched US equity benchmark capped a weekly 0.85 percent advance with Materials (+1.94 percent) and Industrials (+1.18 percent) pushing higher, as trade concerns were brushed aside. Financials (+1.81 percent) advanced on a rising interest rate environment, further helping the SPX gain. Confirming the sense of overall confidence, defensive Utilities (-2.28 percent) dropped.

    More noteworthy, however, was the performance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Until recently it had been a laggard, signaling jittery investor sentiment on the US-Sino trade war, due to the mega cap companies listed on the index being highly export sensitive.

    This past week though, the Dow outperformed. It was the only major benchmark that advanced Friday, by 0.32 percent, posting a fresh record, the last major US index to do so since the late -January correction. It jumped a whopping 2.25 percent for the week, its fifth advance out of six.

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    The NASDAQ Composite declined on Friday, down 0.51 percent, off 0.29 percent for the week.