Week Ahead: Equity Highs In Question Amid Slowing Recovery, COVID Spread

 | Aug 16, 2020 21:47

  • Is there enough optimism left to carry stocks higher
  • How sustainable is the current economic recovery narrative
  • Which will give in – equities or gold and Treasuries?
  • Amid thin trading and signs the economic recovery is losing momentum, most stocks closed lower on Friday. Adding to the gloom: Congressional negotiations over additional pandemic relief have gone nowhere and likely won't start again for weeks, now that US legislators have gone on holiday through the end of August. We expect this conviction to endure into the upcoming trading week.

    Treasurys rose on Friday, for the first time last week; the dollar fell for a third day. Gold ended its rally and oil dropped for a second day.

    h2 Any Steam Left To Take Stocks Higher?/h2

    On Friday, the S&P 500 slipped, albeit just 0.02%. Energy shares rose almost a full percent, despite a decline in oil prices, as demand faces a bigger coronavirus shock than expected. In addition, natural gas soared almost 8% after a heat wave hit large parts of the US, offsetting a sell-off of Utilities shares, (-0.9%).

    The NASDAQ fell 0.2%, the Russell 2000 dropped 0.3%, but the mega cap Dow Jones bucked the trend, eking out a 0.1% gain.

    Trading volume was roughly 10% below the 30-day average during the final trading day of the week, which also marks the halfway point of August.

    Still, for the week, all four major US indices advanced.

    The S&P 500 rose 0.6% on a weekly basis after touching its record close on an intraday basis on both Thursday and Friday. Nevertheless, it still finished the week 0.4% from its highest close ever.

    After Technology shares fueled the unbelievable 50.51% rally from the March lows, amid the worst pandemic in 100 years, the tech sector was flat for the week. Three old school sectors—Industrials (+3.2%), Energy (+2.7%), and Consumer Discretionary (+2.3%), led stocks higher instead, bringing equities to within a whisper of their previous record.