What’s The Deal? Investors Could Learn Lesson As 2 Mergers Scuttled

 | Aug 09, 2018 11:14AM ET

(Thursday Market Open) Sometimes the market is more about what’s not happening than what is. Two major corporate deals got called off in the last day, potentially giving investors a lesson about how easily expectations can be dashed.

Rite Aid Corporation (NYSE:RAD) shares plunged 8% in pre-market trading Thursday after the company’s $24 billion merger deal with grocery company Albertson’s fell through. The two companies evidently weren’t able to agree to a deal structure, news reports said.

In addition, Tribune Media (NYSE:TRCO) called off a $3.9 billion deal with Sinclair Broadcast Group (NASDAQ:SBGI). Shares of both firms actually climbed in pre-market trading, though this divorce didn’t appear particularly amicable. CNN reported that Tribune plans to sue Sinclair for “breach of contract.”

The details might be less important to the average investor than the lesson these blown deals can teach. Sometimes people get hyped up about rumors of deals, but until all the “i’s” are dotted and “t’s” are crossed, investors have to be careful. As we see with RAD today, shares can fall pretty hard if a deal doesn’t work out. Sometimes retail investors hear about possible deals and want to jump into these things, but it’s dangerous to take it for granted that the agreement will ultimately happen.

h3 Comparing Producer Prices/h3

Aside from the deal news, a fresh batch of U.S. inflation data kick off the trading day Thursday. The July producer price index (PPI) came in flat, the government said, below Wall Street analysts’ expectations for a 0.2% rise. However, a core PPI gauge that strips out food, energy, and trade rose 0.3%. The 12-month PPI change now stands at 3.3%, down from 3.4% a month ago. That still points toward price increases potentially having an impact, as producers might be tempted to eventually pass along their higher costs to consumers. The consumer price index for July is tomorrow (see more below).

Stocks had a mixed feel ahead of the opening bell after overseas markets pointed different directions. China’s sagging market popped back a bit earlier Thursday, but European indices mostly fell. On the earnings front, Roku (NASDAQ:ROKU) shares jumped more than 9% in pre-market trading after the technology company beat Wall Street analysts’ earnings expectations, and Yelp (NYSE:YELP) ran up 15% pre-market gains as results looked strong.

h3 Treading Water As Earnings Wind Down/h3

None of these developments really seems all that major, and the general market mood remains subdued a day after the SPX came within 1% of its all-time high of 2872. There doesn’t seem to be a lot of fresh bullish news to help carry the market over that particular hump, and stocks spent most of Wednesday treading water before giving ground as the closing bell approached.

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We’re in the final act of earnings season, so each day there’s probably going to be less and less corporate news to react to, perhaps making geopolitical issues like tariffs stand out a little more. This could be positive or negative for stocks, depending on the daily headlines.

None of this detracts from what’s been a solid earnings season for much of the market. Average earnings growth for S&P 500 companies so far has been well over 20% for Q2, surpassing pre-earnings estimates from Wall Street. That said, there don’t seem to be many meaningful catalysts right now pointing the direction as the season comes to an end. Over the next few months, the looming November U.S. midterm elections might eat up more and more of the headlines, and it’s still not certain how the market might react to that news flow.

In addition, the Treasury market’s direction seems unclear. After powering above 3% for a short time last week, 10-year yields couldn’t hold those gains and eased back to 2.95% by early Thursday. It’s possible that concern about the trade situation with China could be capping yields.

h3 One Streak Ends But Another Continues/h3

A four-day win streak for the S&P 500 Index (SPX) sputtered to an unremarkable end Wednesday as the SPX inched a little lower. Still, the day wasn’t a complete washout as the Nasdaq rose for the seventh-straight session amid an info tech boost from some of the FAANG stocks.

Otherwise, the sector scorecard looked mixed Wednesday, with industrials among the hardest hit groups amid more chatter about a possible trade war with China. This fear seems to ebb and flow based on the headlines of any given day, and when investors have bearish trade news to chew on it’s typically been hitting some of the multinationals in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Some industrials under pressure Wednesday included Boeing (NYSE:BA), Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) and Lockheed Martin (NYSE:LMT).

Another big stock, Walt Disney (NYSE:DIS), also took a beating Wednesday after the company posted weaker results than Wall Street analysts had expected. Just about all of the company’s key businesses fell short of Wall Street analysts’ expectations in Q2.