Week Off To Rough Start Amid Political Tension, Virus Concerns

 | Jan 11, 2021 10:11AM ET

Mondays might get a bad reputation on Wall Street if they keep starting out like this.

For the second week in a row, stocks begin in a slump. Last week they recovered to hit new record highs by Friday, so there’s that. Rising cases of coronavirus and the swirl of events around President Donald Trump could be contributing to this early weakness. Also, the employment report last Friday didn’t look all that bad when you drill down into it, but over the weekend some analysts were questioning the data and worrying about what it might reflect.

Additionally, there seems to be a bit more of a “risk-off” sentiment taking shape today. Volatility is on the rise, bitcoin is down, and gold is edging higher. Bonds are holding in place, however.

With earnings and data a bit thin today and tomorrow, it wouldn’t be too surprising if the market keeps taking its cue from politics. Earnings season ignites later this week, but another big question hanging over Wall Street is whether Congress can push through another stimulus and if any stimulus effort conceivably could get slowed down by the current tension on Capitol Hill.

Major indices continue to be driven partly by comments from senators and President-elect Joe Biden on the prospect of another payment to Americans. Biden is expected to reveal more details of his economic package this week and wants to make it a top priority early on in his administration, media reports say. Any new information is worth watching, though it feels like Wall Street has already built in a lot of the stimulus hopes. There’s also concern that the possible reverberation of last week’s events in Washington might muddy the waters as the new administration tries to gain momentum on stimulus and infrastructure initiatives.

One feature last week was volatility trending down after a spike to begin 2021. The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) flirted with 30 a week ago but finished Friday below 22. By early Monday, it was heading back up. Investors still wait to see if VIX can get back below the historic average of 20, which it hasn’t done in almost a year. If you look further out at the VIX futures complex into the February and March timeframe, it’s trading in many cases above 25. So at least a lot of investors don’t expect VIX to calm anytime soon.

h2 'Buy The Dip' Sees Carryover Popularity From 2020/h2

Lower volatility last week might have given some investors more confidence to keep “buying the dip,” a trend that took hold last fall and seemed to be the case on just about every pullback the first week of the year. Take Tuesday’s quick recovery from Monday’s drop, and think about how quickly the major indices rebounded Friday after slipping below unchanged around midday. Nothing goes straight up forever, the saying goes. Another saying is “the trend is your friend,” and few seem to be trying to fight the upward trend lately. Those who did probably got bloody noses.

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Last week, nothing seemed to move upward more quickly than bitcoin and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA). More on TSLA below, but remember this about bitcoin: Before diving in, make sure you understand the investment. The fundamentals that drive bitcoin are a bit mysterious, so you might want to be cautious if you’re considering trading it.

Overall, the first week of 2021 saw decent performance from most of the less “defensive” sectors. Energy, Materials and Financials got out of the gate nicely, though Tech slipped just a bit in what may have been profit taking after its December rally.

The sectors that underperformed last week included Utilities, Real Estate, and Consumer Staples. In general, Utilities and Staples are places investors tend to park their money when they’re looking for dividend yields.

At the same time, the 10-year Treasury yield climbed roughly 20 basis points last week from around 91 to 111. That’s a really significant move that helped Financial stocks and the Russell 2000 small-cap index, and is really starting to change the tenor of the market. Rising yields tend to put pressure on dividend-generating stocks because investors who want yields can find them in the fixed income market. However, even at 1.11% the benchmark 10-year remains near historic lows, so it’s early to read too much into this weakness in Utilities and Staples.

A couple of individual stocks are on the move ahead of the open. Eli Lilly (NYSE:LLY) jumped 15% on news of positive Alzheimer’s trial data. And Chinese electric vehicle maker Nio (NYSE:NIO) climbed 11% after it introduced a new model over the weekend.

h2 Jobs Report Redux/h2

Looking back one more time at last Friday’s disappointing jobs report, it seems to have been shrugged off by Wall Street because it mostly reflected the impact of shutdowns on the leisure sector. The thinking could be that if vaccinations really get going, a lot of those jobs might come back.

Also, the recent stimulus package passed by Congress didn’t take effect until well after the jobs data got collected, so Washington’s help for small business might have an impact starting this month. Any further stimulus could also have investors thinking December might have been a “one-timer,” to use an old hockey term. We’ll see.

Beyond that, there was actually a bunch of stuff to like about the report, including upward revisions to October and November, along with solid growth in manufacturing, construction, transportation, and business and professional services jobs. The unemployment rate of 6.7% also was unchanged, though that can be a tricky number because it doesn’t reflect people who’ve given up job hunting and left the workforce. In a rapidly growing economy, those people often start venturing back in, and that’s why long-term unemployment remains a key number to watch if and when the virus gets under control. Most of the long-term numbers didn’t change much in December, according to the Labor Department.