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Week Ahead: Equities Keep Rising Alongside COVID-19 Cases. Divergence Ahead?

Published 07/12/2020, 07:43 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM
  • The NASDAQ scores another record week, but momentum on the tech-heavy index slowed relative to the broader market
  • Stocks have been rising alongside spiking cases of coronavirus

Even as the US continues to hit new daily records for the still-escalating number of coronavirus cases across the country, and with a growing number of states considering lockdowns, markets blithely move higher, powered by improving economic data and robust stimulus funding. That is, until, something reaches a breaking point.

On the one hand, technology shares and growth stocks are leading the market acceleration, as economic data remains better-than-expected. Last week, ISM non-manufacturing PMI, a measure of business conditions, registered its largest monthly gain since data was recorded in 1997. And Initial Jobless and Continuing Claims both surprised to the upside.

Still, the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the US has crossed the 3.2 million threshold unabated, with close to 135,000 deaths and the figure keeps growing.

V-Shaped Recovery Or Rising Economic Risks?

Nonetheless, some see a string of economic data beats and even record results, as further evidence of a V-shaped economic recovery. Others remain dubious that any real recovery can be at hand when the number of global coronavirus cases continues to escalate, currently at 12.8 million and rising. Count us in the second category.

This current recession wasn’t caused by a bubble that burst. Rather, it's the result of a force majeure—the ongoing coronavirus pandemic that keeps spreading across the globe—pressuring countries, their workforces and economies into lockdown, shuttering businesses and creating massive layoffs and firings.

Without a vaccine or cure for COVID-19, and with many US states remaining open despite the health hazards, we expect that rising outbreak levels will continue hitting new records. As such, hospitals in hot spot locations will remain overwhelmed, forcing states to weigh new restrictions—including lockdowns—that would slow down the current rebound in economic data. We also expect that so much uncertainty ahead of this Fall's US elections will add an additional level of uncertainty to already erratic markets.

For now, it appears that rates near zero and the Fed’s “infinite QE” will continue to support near-record prices. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Robert Kaplan, speaking on Fox Business, said he sees the need for more fiscal outlays. This, just two days after Cleveland Federal Reserve President Loretta Mester warned economic activity is slowing in her area.

Both the IMF and Goldman Sachs recently cut their forecasts for US economic growth this year. The IMF is now forecasting a global contraction of -4.9%; Goldman analysts lowered their full year growth projection to -4.6% from -4.2%

Still, on Friday investors were optimistic enough to lock themselves into rising positions ahead of the weekend and four major US indices—the Dow Jones, S&P 500, Russell 2000 and NASDAQ—gained. Some of the positive sentiment was driven by renewed hopes of progress in finding a treatment for COVID-19.

Gilead Sciences (NASDAQ:GILD) announced that its coronavirus drug remdesivir can reduce deaths by 62%. Though shares of the biotech added more than 2% on the final day of trade, these claims must still be put to larger and more rigorous testing. It may still be a long road ahead before this company or any others are able to supply it to the public.

While the NASDAQ underperformed on Friday for the first time in nearly two weeks, the tech-heavy index still notched yet another all-time high along with its fifth record close in six days. Friday's finish was its 26th record for the year.

NASDAQ Weekly

From a technical perspective, the NASDAQs rising gap on Monday, which was intuitively bullish, puts it in a precarious state, as extremely thin volume and negative divergences for both the Rate of Change (ROC) and Advance Decline (AD) line provide a setup for an Island Reversal.

VIX Weekly

Despite US markets experiencing their most vociferous rally in years—including the best quarter for the S&P 500 in 22 years, and the strongest quarterly performance for the Dow Jones since 1987—the VIX is still more than three times higher than it was before COVID-19.

Conversely, yields, including for the 10-year Treasury note, are far below their pre-coronavirus, 1.5% levels, hovering now at near historical lows.

UST 10Y Daily

Technically, they may have completed a H&S continuation pattern, suggesting they could be revisiting the all time lows recorded on March 9.

The dollar retested the completed flag and retreated, confirming the pattern’s bearishness.

Dollar Daily

The 50 DMA crossed below the 200 DMA, triggering a Death Cross, before the downside breakout. Both the RSI and the MACD provided bearish signals.

Gold moved higher for a fifth straight week, its longest streak of weekly gains since 2011.

Gold Daily

We have been bullish on gold for some time now, since at least March 2, but certainly since the yellow metal completed a H&S continuation pattern on April 7.

However, the precious metal closed well off its weekly high on Friday, producing a weekly shooting star—a pattern demonstrating that after bulls gave it a run, the bears pushed them back. As we predicted on Thursday, gold retreated. It might deepen the dip in the week ahead, as both momentum indicators and price averages weakened, showing signs of reversals.

Crude oil prices rebounded on Friday. They're now back above $40 but off the trend line we’ve drawn since May 22 that we intended as a top.

Oil Daily

The price of WTI has found resistance by the falling gap March 9 that wiped out almost a quarter of crude’s value. The 200 DMA is falling toward the same level. Both the MACD and the RSI are bearish.

These technicals might reflect growing investor fears of a return to lockdowns. Should that occur, planes would once again be grounded as travel decreased and cars would return to driveways as workers once again were authorized to shelter-in-place.

The Week Ahead

All times listed are EDT

Tuesday

2:00: UK – Claimant Count Change: seen to drop to 400.0K from 528.9K.

2:00: UK – GDP: anticipated to rise to 5.0% QoQ from -20.4% previously.

2:00: UK – Manufacturing Production: expected to surge to 8.0% from -24.3%.

5:00: Germany – ZEW Economic Sentiment: probably edged lower, to 60.0 from 63.4.

8:30: US – Core CPI: forecast to rise to 0.1% for June from -0.1%.

8:52: China – Exports: predicted to have dropped to -1.5% YoY in June, from -3.3% in May.

Wednesday

2:00: UK – CPI: expected to remain flat at 0.5%.

8:30: US – NY Empire State Manufacturing Index: foreseen to 9.25 from -0.20.

10:00: Canada – BoC Interest Rate Decision: forecast to remain steady at 0.25%.

10:30: US – Crude Oil Inventories: seen to show a drawdown of -3.114M bbs, from a gain of 5.654M.

21:30: Australia – Employment Change: predicted to surge to 112.5K from -227.7K.

22:00: China – GDP: seen to soar to 2.1% YoY from -6.8%.

22:00: China – Industrial Production: expected to edge higher to 4.7% from 4.4%

Thursday

7:45: Eurozone – ECB Interest Rate Decision: predicted to remain flat at 0.00%.

8:30: US – Core Retail Sales: seen to fall to 5.0% from 12.4%.

8:30: US – Initial Jobless Claims: anticipated to shrink to 1,250K from last week's 1,314K.

8:30: US – Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index: expected to decline to 20.0 from 27.5.

8:30: US – Retail Sales: seen to plunge to 5.0% from 17.7%.

8:30: Eurozone – ECB Press Conference

Friday

5:00: Eurozone – CPI: probably remained stead at 0.3% YoY and rose to 0.3% from -0.1% MoM

8:30: US – Building Permits: expected to have risen to 1.280M from 1.216M.

Latest comments

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-07-12/new-york-city-reaches-milestone-with-no-reported-virus-deaths
Good news.
Nothing to worry. These sky high levels will eventually turn a boon to making huge money when these begin to crumple on the basis of fundamentals and the Fed has ultimately realised its blunder.It would also be a lesson for those who inspite of having been given more than enough time to exit the markets still remained invested or kept buying at unreasonable levels.Coz the employment situation is going to worsen far more in the near to medium term.
I fear of the same, while I hope I'm wrong.
Thanks again for a great write up Mr. Cohen! The data is right in front of our faces. I'm short as a Munchkin in the Wizard of Oz!! Hang loose Dude!!
Thanks, Donald. Good luck!
The correction is coming yes but the market had a massive correction already and came back like nothing. Perhaps there are fundamentals for the bull run even if we don't see them. or we might be in the top of the bubble where we think the market cannot go down but I don't think so. there are many beads still around. Bubbles burst when there are no Bears left
 sorry, I don't understand. When everyone's bullish, the price just keeps going up. The bubble bursts only when demand dissipates, when there are no bulls left, that is, only bears are left.
what I mean is that when the sentiment is fully bullish, when the Bears are silenced is when bubbles begin to explode. of course they need someone to sell. a small silent minority at that point. my sentence is figurative. in the sense that only when Bears are silenced and the full market noise is bullish the. is when bubbles burst. Right now there is still a lot of bear noise. like your article. hence why I think the bubble still has way to go. I hope I explained myself better now
 Perhaps, you mean that as long as there is bearish presence it will keep the market honest, providing profit-taking, keeping the uptrend sustainable.
I think markets are extremely overpriced, as we all know because of FED. You think market will revisit march low, how dou you think this will happen as we know that FED will do anything to "save the economy"?
When investors will realize monopoly belongs in a children's board game and can't sustain a real economy.
good article
Thanks, Jason.
I'm with Eddie. COVID is a farce. No hospitals are overwhelmed. The only people's dying would have died from something else anyway. Fat people, smokers, the sedentary. Who cares.
Over the long run, everybody dies ...
@Eric Hudnall i appreciate your opinion too
 I appreciate your opinion too, Jeremy.
10 articles on this site just in the past several hours or so saying how many "cases" there are. nobody cares. COVID-1984 game over. misleading and false information about initial death rates to fearmonger exposed. keep spamming this site with headlines showing how many asymptomatic immune people there are.
I hear you.
good analysis. Just some additional facts: the death rate is less than .5% and the infected average age is 32 (most are asymptomatic).
Thanks, Carlos. Check this out https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/after-months-of-decline-americas-coronavirus-death-rate-begins-to-rise/2020/07/10/261fb24a-c2cd-11ea-864a-0dd31b9d6917_story.html.
great article thank you. as the cases keep rising, the indexes are rising. with q2 out for major companies such as banks, dal or ericsson i feel the indexes will learn the reality and the severity of the virus. maybe plummet to 23k for dow. what do you think and how low might the index plummet? thanks!
Thanks, Ridge. Test March lows.
big sell off imminent
 If I've learned one think about markets, nothing is imminent.
First of all, thanks for the insights summary of the last week market. The 1 million question is, are going to see a V or W shape of the market considering all risks evolving around such rise?
not really the U but the L yes
 How come?
imagine the square root symbol... although I dislike any use of numbers/symbols to name the market, the simple minded might be able to wrap their mind around the “square root” in the market trends. The monetary and fiscal policy will pump until covid is gone. I’m not a Trump or FED supporter but the governments main responsibility is to provide its citizens with a sense of security. Covid is not a problem we brought upon ourselves. Why would we pay for it when we enact a government for this very kind of support? Unless the system is entirely corrupt but indont believe it is
It is sideways market around and it continue for few weeks already. Next market step depends on covid death rate dynamics. If it stays stable for couple weeks and resume decline after that then market is ok.
That's very global. My reply meant more specific, near-term point. Market had big rallies and drops since Jan 2018, lot of money could be made or lost in the meantime.
 The trend is not sideways but up in the short term, after establishing an ascending series of peaks and troughs since the March bottom.
I am not a market technician, more like a fundamentalist, though I check charts in general. Looking at broad market, aka s&p over last few weeks, since beginning of june let say, it looks to me like sideways. Maybe it looks differently for a chartist. Certainly, market was in uptrend before june, since recovery started in april. 2020 is a biological market so far, covid factor overwhelms anything else.
Great insight thanks. As i understood theres is nothing fundamentally wrong with the econmy. Sooner or later the viruis will go and Investors are acting based on that!
You're welcome, but that is not my opinion.
Thanks for the sound analysis into this next week. The kind of rise we've been seeing in markets is very reminiscent of a buble. If the virus gets bad enough and we see another meteoric fall like we saw in March, do you expect it to be even worse due to how euphoric the markets have been?
I have been expecting it to be getting worse, even as they kept rising against me. I have been humbled not to expect that the market dance to my fiddle, however confident I am in my opinion.
So Red week ahead !
I don't know. I can't know. I've thought so about previous weeks, and it didn't happen.
Great content thanks! One thing I don't understand is how the market reacts to earnings. Even if earnings have tanked, as long as actuals beat projections it seems like the reaction is positive. Any insight that might help me understand better?
When I'll understand it myself, I'll be happy to explain it to you.
Equitites are rising because investors are looking years ahead and see inflation
I hear you, but I don't think so. I think they are high on the Fed and are focusing on data which may not necessarily be Representative.
We could also be at risk of deflation.“Excluding the more volatile food and energy components, so-called core consumer prices fell 0.4% in April, marking only their second step backwards since January 2010 with their 0.1% dip in March being the first decline since that time.”
Thank you for your insight. Do you believe the gold run is over or might dip then come back? I Was unclear on that. Thanks.
You're Bullish on gold right? Stocks will obviously be opposite!
 Yes, in the long-term, while I recognize weakening in the short term. No, stocks are not obviously the opposite of gold.
Well, you are right.. But when stocks are in trouble, Gold is safe haven.. So Gold is even better!
Everyone knew there were hoing yo be spikes, and everyone kniws testimg is flawed. And death rate is low. No more stock market covid fear. Its back to business and other impacts. My opinion obviously.
And you're entitled to it, Gina.
Thanks for your clear thoughts
As clear as after rain from a cloud.
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