Week Ahead: Cryptos Could Weigh On Equity Markets As Inflation Worries Flare

 | May 23, 2021 20:09

  • Investors cautious after mixed equities, China crypto crackdown, Bitcoin collapse
  • Inflation worries look to remain major market, economic driver over medium- to long-term
  • Stocks on Wall Street closed mixed for the day on Friday, after a volatile session fueled in part by cryptocurrency declines. The major US benchmarks—the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000—also finished mixed for the week, with the broad benchmark down 0.4%, the 30-component Dow down 0.5% over the same period, while the tech-heavy NASDAQ ended a four-week streak of losses, gaining 0.3%. The trajectory of the Reflation Trade remains unclear into the new trading week.

    Indeed, the major indices provided a murky picture of the stock market’s health on Friday. While the Russell 2000 was up for the second day, it was still down for the week. The NASDAQ 100 dropped Friday but rose slightly for the week. The S&P 500 was the only gauge that showed any consistency: it snapped a two-day rally, falling on Friday, as well as for the week.

    The broad stock market whipsawed during the final day of the trading week, buffeted by retail traders on worries about digital currency assets. Still, the dominant theme remains inflation.

    While the fate of the Reflation Trade isn’t obvious from the varied performances of the main benchmarks, drilling down to the sector level provides a bit more clarity. Cyclical stocks were the obvious winners on Friday: Financials, (+1%), Industrials, (+0.5%), Materials, (+0.2%) and  Energy, (+0.2%), all moved higher. On the other hand, stocks that outperformed during the pandemic were the obvious losers: Technology, (-0.5%), and Communications Services, (-0.3%), were both down.

    From a weekly perspective, however, growth stocks had the edge. Technology was up (+0.15%), while Energy (-2.5%), Materials (-1.6%, Industrials (-1.5%), and Financials (-0.8%) underperformed.

    After Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker said on Friday the central bank should speak about reducing bond buying sooner rather than later, the Reflation Trade was back in the spotlight, along with the outlook for inflation. Since the US economy is expected to gather steam as the country opens up, increasing corporate profits which are, of course, the foundation for stock market returns, will a spike in inflation ruin the party?

    Though Treasury yields, including for the 10-year benchmark, are higher, rates aren't actually high. In fact, they're still near the lowest on record.