Week Ahead: What's Weighing On Investors As Equity Momentum Slows?

 | Mar 03, 2019 09:36AM ET

  • Tariff deadline extended, Kudlow promises historic agreement but stocks muted
  • Small caps continue to outperform large caps
  • Economic reports signal global slowing
  • Shares of technology firms jumped on Friday after positive news from Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and promises of new products from Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) made headlines. The news also built on the White House's announcement confirming that the March 1 tariff deadline for Chinese goods would be extended.

    All four major U.S. indices—the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrials, NASDAQ Composite and Russell 2000—gained, turning the week into a winner for two of the four main benchmarks. Yields broke upside of congestion, pulling the dollar higher as well.

    Still, all things considered, market reaction was muted, particularly to U.S. President Donald Trump’s cessation of trade war hostilities. Making this yet more surprising, White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow had said earlier that the world's two largest economies were on the brink of an historic agreement. Based on that, one would have assumed markets would soar.

    Though the expectation of a delayed deadline was likely already priced in, we reckon investors might be growing weary of big promises, especially when they have thus far been followed by conflicting reports on actual progress.

    h2 NASDAQ Outperforms; Small Caps Add To Gains
    /h2

    The NASDAQ's Friday surge, +0.83%, made it the outperformer among major U.S. benchmarks. Amazon's announcement that it would open new brick-and-mortar grocery stores under a new, as-yet-to-be-named supermarket brand, and remarks by Apple CEO Tim Cook at the company's annual general meeting, that the iPhone maker is working on new products to “blow you away,” triggered the jump.

    The tech-heavy index climbed 0.77% for the week, marking the 10th straight weekly gain for the index which is now up 20.05% since the December bottom. This magic number also puts it back in bull market territory, the longest since 1999, before the infamous tech-bubble crash in 2000. Technically, both Friday's daily candle, as well as the weekly candle, formed hanging men, bearish with confirmation of the following close below their real bodies, respectively.

    The Russell 2000 was the second-best performer, +0.71%. Why is the small cap index continuing to outdo large and mega cap indices if trade talks have come this far? As we've pointed out before, since the trade dispute began, the pattern for the Russell has been clear, albeit puzzling.

    When the trade war was at its height, investors stashed their capital in small caps, since domestic firms, which don't need international trade to thrive, would not be affected by tariffs. One would have therefore expected that when the saber-rattling cooled, investors would backpedal into larger cap shares. But this seemingly rational pattern hasn't occurred. We don't have a specific reason to point to, but a variety of options appears to be at play:

    1. It could be that the market narrative about the trade war is off mark: either traders don't believe a meaningful resolution will be reached, or it may never have been an actual headwind in the first place. Or something else is going on, which is not yet fully known.
    2. Or, investors are all over the place, having lost sight of market leadership.
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    Of course, something else entirely could be at play, thought it's not yet known. Whatever the actual reason, the uncertainty isn't comforting. On the week, the Russell snapped a nine-week run, its longest in sixteen months, with a 0.03% setback.

    The other primary benchmark to end a nine-week winning streak was the Dow. The mega-cap index underperformed on Friday, climbing just 0.43%. It slipped for the week, giving up 0.02%. Had investors been able to muster another 0.03%, the 30-component index would have matched its longest streak of weekly gains since 1995.