Word Of The Day Is “Choppy:” Uncertainty Reigns Amid Earnings, Delta Variant, Jobs

 | Aug 04, 2021 02:35AM ET

(Tuesday Market Open) With quarterly earnings still coming in at a steady clip, along with a resurgence of COVID-related concerns (and an eye on what could be an interesting employment report to end the week), we’ve got all the makings of a choppy market. And that seems to be playing out over the first couple days of August.

Investors were looking for a Turnaround Tuesday with hope that yesterday, the market would hold on to its early gains on positive earnings reports following Monday’s declines and a failure to retain early trading momentum.

Concerns about the rate of growth for the economy and the Delta variant may have put a damper on any bullish aspirations investors harbored following a strong July. Stocks petered out on the first trading day in August as observers peeked over at the bond market and didn’t like what they saw.

The S&P 500 Index (SPX) and Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) closed lower and the NASDAQ Composite (COMP:GIDS) closed marginally higher. All three were trading comfortably above their 50-day moving averages.

The DJI did hit an all-time high in early trading but wasn’t able to hang on to it. Tuesday morning we were seeing some signs of hope as the market looked like it may give another try at hitting those highs—equity index futures were trading higher ahead of the close. Would the market be able to hold on to that morning bounce?

One space to watch is the semiconductors, which have been performing pretty well. If we see strength in this area, it could help fuel a rally in the NASDAQ. Let’s see if that momentum can continue.

The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) didn’t really give up a whole lot. It flirted with 20 Monday but was off a little bit this yesterday morning. While not necessarily indicative of too much fear, it’s still something to keep an eye on during the week. The VIX had been trending up even before stocks turned south Tuesday—often an indicator that something’s amiss.

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The bond yield curve flattened as long-dated Treasury yields dipped among concerns that the rate of economic growth in the U.S. is poised to slow down. It bounced a little Tuesday morning, but was still relatively flat. Meantime, the I word—inflation—continued to cause investors to fret. Taken as a whole—choppy stocks, a firm VIX, and a flight to Treasuries—and it looked like a “risk-off” mood to start the month. We’ll see if Tuesday’s bounce turns the risk sentiment.

h2 New Month, Different Tune/h2

One culprit for Monday's action may have been the Institute for Supply Management’s July manufacturing index, which unexpectedly slipped in July compared to June, reflecting a slower pace of expansion in the U.S. goods-producing sector. The ISM manufacturing index came in at 59.5 in July from 60.6 in June—well below consensus expectations of 61.0. Readings above the neutral level of 50.0 indicate expansion in a sector. Survey respondents cited issues keeping up on the supply side for the overall deceleration in activity.

Another disappointing surprise followed. Construction spending recovered at a slower than expected pace in June, according to monthly data from the Census Bureau on Monday. Spending increased 0.1% in June following a 0.2% decrease in May, which was below estimates of a 0.4% rise.

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But there’s still reason for optimism. So far, 59% of S&P 500 companies have reported second-quarter earnings results, and 88% of these companies have beaten Wall Street’s earnings per share estimates, according to FactSet data. The expected earnings growth rate for S&P 500 companies is tracking toward 85.1%, which would be the biggest jump since Q4 2009.

This is the second busiest earnings week of the quarter. So far, earnings reports saw mixed results and we’re likely to see more of that today.

Before the open on Tuesday, Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) reported earnings that beat estimates but revenue fell short of expectations. It also announced it’s boosting its stock buyback program by 50%. Shares of Under Armour Inc C (NYSE:UA) rose after the athletic-wear maker topped second-quarter sales estimates and boosted its full-year earnings outlook.

In a hopeful foreshadowing for the commercial real estate sector, Simon Property Group (NYSE:SPG) reported earnings that beat expectations. It was the second time in the past four quarters that the company’s funds from operations surpassed consensus estimates. Simon’s share price has gained almost 50% this year, compared to 17% for the SPX.

In other before-market news, PepsiCo (NASDAQ:PEP) announced that it is selling its Tropicana, Naked, and other juice brands to French private equity firm PAI Partners for about $3.3 billion. The balance-sheet weight loss is part of its plan to focus on healthier snacks and zero-calorie drinks.

Tuesday was another busy day on the earnings front with Lyft (NASDAQ:LYFT), Avis (NASDAQ:CAR), and Nikola (NASDAQ:NKLA), among many others reporting.

You may want to watch the crude market closely this week. WTI crude futures (/CL) fell $2.56—and another dollar-and-change overnight—to fall back below the $70 mark, on low global demand and weaker than expected manufacturing activity in the U.S. and China. These are two of the largest economies of the world and a reduction in demand from both these countries could put a damper on the price of crude. Further concerns of the Delta variant as it continues to gain traction in the U.S. could have also put a dent in crude.

Looking ahead—and we don’t know if this will take days, weeks or months—the Senate spent the weekend in session hammering out details of the proposed $1 trillion infrastructure bill. Lawmakers are attempting to pass it through the chamber by the end of the week and send it to the House, though neither side of the aisle is declaring assurances of when the bill could be delivered after it arrives in the House.

h2 Chart of the day: growth gauges turned lower /h2

Crude oil and Treasury yields are considered yardsticks for economic growth. So when both go through a more than modest fall—something both have been doing on big down days—it may be time to pay attention. The 10-year Treasury yield (TNX—purple line) went as low as 1.15%, closing at 1.17% Monday, a low it hadn’t seen since February. And crude oil futures (/CL—candlestick) closed at $71.31 per barrel—a one-week low—and kept dropping overnight to fall below $70 Tuesday morning.

Data source: CME Group (NASDAQ:CME), Cboe Global Markets (NYSE:CBOE).