Week Ahead: Large Caps Fall, Small Caps Rise; Market Sending A Message?

 | Jan 13, 2019 06:35AM ET

  • Large caps ended a five-day rally; small caps posted sixth day pf gains
  • Oil ended nine-day advance, longest in nine years
  • General Motors (NYSE:GM) bucks soft guidance trend
  • Sectors suggest confusion
  • The five-day rally of US large cap indices—the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average and NASDAQ Composite—came to a halt on Friday, though the small cap Russell 2000 posted its sixth straight advance. Energy stocks tracked oil prices lower, ending nine days of gains, the longest winning streak for the sector in nine years.

    The possibility of strength among automobile manufacturers, after an optimistic earnings forecast from General Motors (NYSE:GM) catapulted the stock higher on Friday, offered investors some hope after last quarter’s across-the-board softer guidance which extended into Apple’s recent announcement of an revenue shortfall in the current quarter. However, mounting concerns over the now-longest government shutdown in history offset what investors may have considered a bottom for company outlooks.

    h2 No Logic to Friday's S&P 500 Sector Advancers and Decliners/h2

    The S&P 500 Index slipped by 0.01 percent ahead of the weekend, with sectors split between red and green. However, there didn’t seem to be a logical delineation among the winners and losers.

    Energy shares led the losses (-0.59%). That makes sense since oil tumbled below $52 a barrel on Friday. Otherwise, there wasn’t the classic divergence between cyclical and defensive sectors.

    For example, defensive sector Consumer Staples was up (+0.29%) while Utilities fell (-0.37%). On the other side of the spectrum, cyclical sector Financials was up (+0.25%), while Communication Services (-0.5%) was down.

    Another structural anomaly occurred between Financials (+0.25%) and Real Estate (+0.19%), both of which gained almost equally. However, Financial shares tend to rise when the outlook for higher interest rate increases, while Real Estate stocks typically fall with higher borrowing costs and relatively lower property income relative to higher fixed income yields. In other words, the negative correlation between the two sectors broke down on Friday.

    Another market structure breakdown: both cyclical Consumer Discretionary (+0.1) and defensive Consumer Staples (+0.29%) were up.

    A side note: it’s interesting that Materials (-0.4 percent) was among the bigger laggards, even as the president of the United States has consistently said he will not give up on his border wall, the biggest item among his campaign promises. One would expect that shares of Materials companies would rise in anticipation of the added business. After all, thus far, President Donald Trump has shown that he’s willing to go the distance for his promises, including the historic tax cut, the trade war and the border wall itself, as he faces off Democrats into the longest government shut down ever.

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

    Also, while he seemed to take a step back from calling a national emergency about the matter, he continues threatening to take advantage of his executive privilege, which, once again, would benefit Materials. Could it be markets aren't convinced a $5B allocation for Trump's border wall is imminent?

    On the other hand, Health Care shares, (+0.33%), may have gotten a boost from newly inaugurated California Governor Gavin Newsom, who, among other Democratic lawmakers at the state and city level , have proposed increased spending on healthcare among other items. Of course, given that California is the country's most populous state, this may have helped boost the sector.

    h2 All Sectors Green on Weekly Basis/h2

    For the week, the SPX advanced 2.54 percent, a third straight week of gains bringing the total upside to +7.43%, for the first time since August. All sectors were in the green. However, there's something to be learned about investor sentiment from how much they were willing to risk on various sectors.

    Real Estate (+4%) outperformed, as one would expect after the outlook for a slower path of interest rate hikes became apparent. Financials (+1%), accordingly made a much small advance.

    Cyclical sectors Industrials (+4.17%), Consumer Discretionary (3.72%) performed better.

    Defensive sectors Consumer Staples (+0.72%) and Utilities (+0.87%) underperformed. Why then did Consumer Discretionary (+3.72%), a sector that includes luxury purveyors, end up among the top performers?

    As well, Materials (+1.93%) were among the worst performers. Is this yet another signal investors may ultimately believe Trump will cave on this signature campaign promise?

    The Dow was down 0.02% on Friday, but gained 2.4% on the week, for a third straight week of increases, totaling 6.91% since the December bottom.

    The NASDAQ Composite's five day rally also ended, with the tech-heavy index falling -0.21% on the final day of trade. It gained 3.45% for the third consecutive week with a combined total of +10.08% across that timeframe.