Week Ahead: Post-Inaugural Rally To Endure On Earnings Results; Bitcoin Higher

 | Jan 24, 2021 08:42AM ET

  • Tech sector makes a comeback on worsening economic outlook
  • Earnings releases could provide market boost in the week ahead
  • With the chances of political drama weighing on markets now less likely, after the peaceful transfer of power to newly inaugurated US President Joseph R. Biden, Wall Street wavered on Friday, turning in a mixed performance on the final day of last week's trade. US indices retreated from all-time highs on a bleaker COVID-19 outlook and the possibility the much-anticipated new stimulus is not necessarily a forgone conclusion.

    However, according to the Wall St. Journal, "analysts said they believe the market has potential to keep climbing as long as earnings continue to show companies are weathering the coronavirus pandemic." And with earnings season now in full tilt, markets could continue higher this coming week with quarterly reports from Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) and Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) among others, upcoming.

    h2 Strongest Post-Inaugeral Performance By US Indices /h2

    The S&P 500 Index declined on Friday, for the first time in four days, after news surfaced that the coronavirus variant first seen in the UK is both more dangerous and more contagious. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned the strain is 30% deadlier than the original virus and also expected to be 50-70% more contagious. Nevertheless, two top US health officials cautioned that "more data was needed."

    While the SPX fell 0.3% on Friday, it rose 1.9% for the week. What stood out over the course of last week's trade: stocks were boosted by technology firms, after they’d been underperforming amid previous rallies. Communication Services outperformed for the week, (+5.4%), followed by Technology shares (+4.25%).

    Last week’s gains were built on the ongoing rally over the past nine months. All four major benchmarks—the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000—each carved out new highs over the course of the week, culminating in the strongest post-inaugural performance for the US market since 1932. The S&P 500 Index added 14% of value that day.

    The second-best inauguration gains occurred when John F. Kenney took office January 1961, after his win against then-Vice President Richard Nixon in the 1960 election. The SPX gained a much lower 9% that day.

    Though the past week's gains appear to be primarily the result of the installation of a new administration, it's actually the confluence of a few triggers: the Trump administration ushering in vaccines that revived hopes of a reopening economy even amid the coronavirus fatalities and hospitalizations: and, since the January Senate runoff in Georgia, the anticipation of further stimulus, something that seems more possible with a Democrat-controlled Congress.

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    Adding to that optimism: those two specific drivers are also among the new administration’s first priorities.

    Still, there remains a lot of debate concerning the viability of a market that has been roaring ever higher, hitting record after record divorced from current economic realities. While we agree that valuations are high, recall that the situation was similar in 2005, yet it took the stock market three more years before it crashed.

    We were bearish in 2015-16, but Trump's victory reawakened the market’s animal spirits. We were also bearish in February, but despite the March dip, that view didn’t ultimately pan out either.

    The market, it appears, has been disconnected not only from the economy, but from market dynamics themselves. The one component introduced into the economy and the market since the 2008 crash has been quantitative easing, echoed since the start of COVID by financial aid checks in the mail. While they encourage spending, they also artificially inflate assets, as illustrated by the following S&P 500 chart.