Week Ahead: Equity Rout To Continue Or Holiday Rally Ahead?

 | Nov 26, 2018 00:32

  • Major indices fall; S&P 500 enters official correction territory
  • Treasuries rise, boosting dollar, further pressuring oil and commodities
  • Bitcoin falls below $4,000
  • Oil's slide toward $50 weighed on equities last week. Friday's stock market losses for the Dow and NASDAQ Composite capped a tough week for both major indices. However, the most significant losses were for the S&P 500, which after its 0.66% decline on the final day of trade during the holiday shortened week, slipped into an official correction as it hit cumulative losses of 10 percent.

    The benchmark was pulled down by energy companies tracking oil’s fall to its lowest level in a year. Crude’s oversupply also pressured commodity prices. The dollar climbed in tandem with Treasuries, adding to the pressure.

    h2 Weekly Selloff Leaves Every Sector In the Red
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    The S&P 500 Index declined 0.66 percent Friday, dragged down by Energy sector shares (-3.14 percent), with companies like Devon Energy (NYSE:DVN) and Marathon Oil (NYSE:MRO) losing at least 4 percent each. Communication Services (-1.31 percent) was the second-worst performer, though it lagged Energy by almost two percent.

    On a weekly basis, the benchmark extended the selloff by 3.79 percent, or 5.34 percent for the second straight week, completing the 10 percent dip required for the index to be considered in a correction. The price reached the lowest level since May 3, over half a year ago.

    The weekly decline over the 3-and-a-half-day trading week, was its third worst Thanksgiving week performance since 1939. Technology underperformed (- 6.05 percent). The tech selloff was more significant than falling oil prices—Energy dropped (-4.87 percent).

    Every sector was in the red with losses of at least 1 percent. Utilities were the best relative performers with losses of just 1.4 percent.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Index underperformed on Friday, falling 0.73 percent. However, with a 9.54 percent decline from its October 3 record close, it is the only benchmark not yet in correction. While this may be seen as a sign of strength, it’s important note that it was already at a lower level before the most recent selloff since trade war fears had already depressed the mega-cap index.

    Multinational companies listed in the benchmark rely heavily on exports for growth. Also, despite the Dow being the only major index not in an official correction, it underperformed both for the week (-4.44 percent) and for the last two weeks (-6.62 percent).