Week Ahead: Equities Eye Records As Mixed Signals Send Confused Message

 | Apr 14, 2019 08:18AM ET

  • G-20 leaders see growth rising in second half of year, after IMF cut growth forecasts on trade tariffs
  • Dovish central banks could keep equities pushing higher
  • Dollar, Treasurys, gold drop
  • Though the International Monetary Fund (IMF) announced midweek it had cut its 2019 global growth outlook to 3.3% from 3.5%, G-20 financial leaders on Friday stated they see growth increasing during the second half of the year, the result of monetary accommodation. Nonetheless, the IMF forecast called for the slowest pace of expansion since the 2008 financial crisis, a result of ongoing U.S.-driven trade wars. Still, most U.S. stocks ended higher to finish the week, but were mixed on a weekly basis.

    The U.K.'s Brexit deadline was postponed to Oct. 31 and Chinese exports and bank-lending showed a rebound in economic activity from the world's second largest economy. All told, the week ended on a positive note, triggered by hopes that the upside surprise in bank earnings—from Friday's Q1 2019 reports released by JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) and Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC)—will extend to the broader earnings season results.

    h2 Confusing Mix of Divergent Signals/h2

    This confusing mix of outlooks, negative because of higher tariffs, but positive because of dovish central banks, left stocks flat, as investors attempt to wade their way through this elaborate labyrinth of divergent signals. To be honest, we too find it difficult to untangle the fundamentals. The technicals have been getting snarled as well.

    The S&P 500 jumped on Friday, gaining 0.66%. Perhaps more significantly though, it pushed through the 2,900 psychological level for the first time in six months—saving gains for the week, with only Healthcare in the red (-0.92%), as the sector continued to lose ground as Republicans and Democrats continue sparring over the future of Obamacare and any possible Republican-backed replacement.

    But it’s not just politics that are buffeting pharmaceuticals. So are free-market forces.

    Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) has overcome his animosity toward the e-tail giant's CEO Jeff Bezos, in order to get this piece of his agenda done? We don’t know but the answer to that but it could be interesting to watch how things play out.

    Financials led all ten remaining sectors higher, (+1.84%), after JPMorgan and Wells Fargo beat. Since both financial institutions reported before Friday's open, the sector boosted prices across the broader market which opened higher, producing an upside gap, closing a mere 0.8% from the Sep. 20 close.

    Separately, entertainment giant Disney (NYSE:DIS) posted a fresh record, after it announced its new, Disney+ streaming service which will go live in November. The stock jumped 11.54% after the news broke. Conversely, shares of its competitor, Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) sank more than 4% to close out the week.

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    The SPX climbed for a third week, but just by a mere 0.51%, less than Friday’s gains. Healthcare was once again the laggard, -2.38%. Energy (-0.07%) slipped, as oil prices closed well off their daily highs and Chevron (NYSE:CVX) slumped after agreeing to buy Anadarko Petroleum (NYSE:APC).

    Financials (+2.03%) were the week's best performers.