Week Ahead: Stronger Corporate Guidance Could Boost U.S. Stocks; USD Lower

 | Jan 27, 2019 08:07AM ET

  • Earnings results plus guidance renews hopes on growth, offsetting some of IMF’s outlook-cut
  • Dow, NASDAQ, Russell all gain for fifth straight week
  • Oil remains flat, caught between conflicting forces
  • Though major U.S. equity indices, including the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ Composite, all closed higher on Friday, boosted by President Donald Trump agreeing to end the partial government shutdown that had been in affect for 35 days, weekly market performance painted a much more nuanced—and mixed—picture. It appears corporate results may actually be buoying shares during this earnings season, though we maintain it's the better forward guidance that's doing the heavy lifting after last quarter's dismal forecasts.

    Still, even if it’s understandable and healthy for investors to take a breather in the wake of the equity market's bullish performance since Christmas, that doesn’t explain the repeated breakdown in market structure, displayed by the total lack of coherence between defensive and cyclical stocks. As such we view these retreats as signaling a lack of leadership rather than an orderly correction.

    h2 Stronger Corporate Guidance Boosts Stocks
    /h2

    Without doubt, however, the bright spot on Friday was the president agreeing to open the government for three weeks as Congress continues to negotiate for border wall funds. It was a dramatic turnaround after five weeks of political infighting while furloughed government employees remained unpaid.

    Nonetheless, we're convinced the longer-term market driver will continue to be corporate guidance. Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) provides a case in point. Despite releasing modestly stronger-than-expected earnings when it reported Q2 2019 results on Wednesday, January 23, its stock climbed 4.87 percent as the firm raised its full-year sales guidance.

    This becomes more significant when recalling that the IMF reduced its global growth outlook for the next two years, citing the trade war as the central culprit for its assessment. As well, recent numbers out of China, and declining PMIs in Europe and Japan support that perspective.

    h2 Risk-On Returns/h2

    U.S. equities advanced for a second day on Friday, as positive earnings reports spurred risk-on appetite. Treasuries dropped, and the dollar plunged.

    The S&P 500 Index opened the final day of trade last week 0.57 percent higher, extending the day's gains as much as 1.14 percent, before trimming that to +0.85 percent at the close. Materials outperformed (+1.9 percent) and Industrials rose (+1.27 percent) on speculation the arrival of a Chinese delegation in Washington this coming week may help pave the way for a trade deal.

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

    Adding to overall optimism were reports that the Federal Reserve is weighing an end to reducing its balance sheet sooner than previously expected, a move that could ease regulatory measures of financial conditions. However, persistent quantitative easing weighed on Financial shares (+0.81 percent), resulting in mediocre returns. Defensive sectors Utilities (-1.37 percent) and Consumer Staples (-0.4 percent) were the laggards during Friday’s risk-on day.

    However, on a weekly basis, the SPX's performance was much choppier. Thursday, for example, trade was weak at the open, with stocks languishing till the final hour. At that point, volume rebounded as did prices. The previous day, Wednesday, was particularly volatile, with prices both falling and rising about 0.75 percent, to ultimately eke out gains of just 0.22 percent at the end of the day.

    All told, the SPX dropped 0.22 percent for the week, the first weekly loss for the benchmark index in 2019, ending a four-week winning streak. Real Estate shares outperformed (+1.44 percent), as FINRA released data showing that shorts for the XLRE index decreased to 2.48 million shares from 2.97 million shares, down 16.56 percent. We assume that the Fed's recent dovish shift may be at the heart of a change in outlook for property investments; the post-Christmas rally did the rest.

    At the opposite end of the spectrum, Energy shares languished (-1.43 percent) amid a volatile week for oil prices.

    The more telling aspect, however, is that it was another week in which market structure broke down, with no apparent leadership path, providing an incoherent message to investors.