Week Ahead: After Earnings Fail To Lift Markets, Hopes Hinge On Softer Fed Hikes

 | May 01, 2022 21:22

  • Overall, mega-cap earnings don't lift markets
  • S&P 500 sees worst daily drop on Friday since June 2020; worst monthly decline since pandemic start
  • NASDAQ sees worst month since 2008
  • Equity bulls are waiting anxiously for the expected interest rate increase this coming week from the US Federal Reserve along with additional hoped for insight into the central bank's plans on monetary tightening in order to tame spiking inflation.

    Last week we wrote that hopes for getting the market 'back on track' were riding on strong earnings results from marquee mega-cap tech giants which all reported last week. We posited, correctly it turned out, that wouldn't occur since in our view the crux of the matter is the highest inflation in four decades and the fastest tightening rate since 2006. As such, earnings, even if they beat, are beside the point.

    And indeed, on Friday, all four major US indices—the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000—finished significantly lower to close out a volatile week. The tech-heavy NASDAQ 100 underperformed among US benchmarks, dropping 4.47%, with the SPX following, down 3.63% pressured by the technology sector. It was the broad index's most significant single-day decline since June 2020.

    The S&P 500 rout extended as April came to a close, making it the worst month for the SPX since the pandemic began. The NASDAQ saw its worst monthly performance in April since the 2008 financial crisis.

    The selloffs were triggered by underwhelming guidance from the tech giants. Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) lost 14% of value on Friday after its quarterly results, released Thursday after the close, showed that the company's eCommerce revenue dropped 3% for the quarter, underscoring that the Seattle-based company's recent hiring and warehouse building push has added unnecessary expenses as sales growth slows.

    Based on S&P sector comparisons, it's clear that inflation and interest rates remained the dominant themes on Friday.

    Technology was the third worst performer, mirroring the NASDAQ Composite's performance on Friday. Communication Services, a tech adjunct, followed right behind. However, Consumer Discretionary shares—non-essentials goods and services, which suffer when consumers tighten their purse strings—were the leaders among the losers, plunging 5.08%.

    The Real Estate sector was the second-worst performer on Friday, with a 4.82% slump. This would seem like an anomaly, however, in a rising inflation environment. Investors have long considered the real estate sector an inflation hedge, since it tends to rise along with higher prices. However, that's not necessarily the case when the jump in housing is explosive.

    For all the tech sector turmoil, on a weekly basis Technology was the second best performer, dropping just 1.16%. The week's best and third best sector performers were Materials which retreated just 0.83%, and Energy, which slumped 1.38%. Given that these last two are cyclicals, value sectors negatively correlated with tech growth stocks, the weekly performance comparison isn't a useful gauge since value sectors tend to escalate amid economic acceleration, siphoning investments away from growth shares.

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    Of interest, with the NASDAQ 100 dropping 13.5% on a monthly basis, making it the worst performing major index followed by the inflation-sensitive Russell 2000 whose smaller, domestic firms are at a disadvantage compared to large caps and multinationals when it comes to weathering higher borrowing costs. The small-cap gauge fell 2.81% on Friday, 4.07% for the week, and 9.95% for the month.

    These two indices are also the only major benchmarks currently in a bear market.

    The Russell 2000 is down 23.79% from its Nov. 8 record high, currently at its lowest level since December 2020.