Week Ahead: Expect Chop, Volatility As Fed, Distressed Earnings Drive Markets

 | Sep 19, 2021 22:47

  • Equities in September could get even more volatile than they've historically been
  • Fed expected to try to calm nervous investors
  • Earnings may cause additional choppiness
  • With September already acknowledged to be a seasonally weaker month for equities, stocks are now also anticipated to be entering a period of potential volatility ahead of this week's FOMC meeting where the Fed is expected to provide more clarity on its next tapering moves. As well, investors have been growing jittery as "an alarming number of companies have warned that profits won’t meet expectations when they report in a month," noted Bloomberg on Saturday.

    All of which could become the next group of triggers for more downside activity for the S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ, which all closed lower on Friday.

    h2 Clues Awaited From Fed On Tightening Plans; Companies Aim To Soften Profit Warnings/h2

    Our natural inclination is to characterize the upcoming Federal Reserve meeting as “eagerly awaited.” However, it's dawned on us that that's exactly how we have been identifying each of the recent Fed meetings over the past few months.

    It’s hard to signify just how 'eagerly awaited' every one of the recent Federal Reserve meetings have been, since, after years of QE, the Fed has been indicating it's ready to trim back stimulus and consider raising interest rates. Both actions are a big deal after such a lengthy period of easy money, and each announcement by itself could be dramatic enough to generate serious waves in financial markets—perhaps especially in September.

    With all that in mind, a significant number of companies sought to soften the blow by preparing shareholders for the probability that profits could disappoint during upcoming earnings reports. Most of these companies are materials producers such as PPG Industries (NYSE:PPG) and Sherwin-Williams (NYSE:SHW).

    The warnings come amid ongoing supply chain disruptions caused by the bottle necks resulting from COVID restrictions made worse by the escalating case count of the Delta variant. Though materials sector companies are just a small part of the broader S&P 500, according to Bank of America analysts, their results have a high, positive correlation to the other 10 SPX sectors.

    For starters, these companies are sensitive to the economic growth. Their failings are a poor mark for the recovery which is already fragile as pandemic breakouts continue. Indeed, both Materials and Industrials underperformed on Friday, falling 2.1% and 1.1% respectively.

    More worrying though, was the weekly view. Materials dropped 3.2% and Industrials slumped 1.6%. Moreover, on a monthly basis, Materials plummeted 4.4%, followed by Industrials’ 3.75% tumble. Over the course of three months, Materials fell 0.9%, with Industrials dipping 0.6%. The only other sector in the red across the same timeframes was Energy.

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    Materials and Industrials performed poorly even across a six-month wind down, each rising only 3%. Only Energy provided worse results.

    On Friday, the S&P 500 Index dropped 0.9% as quarterly options and futures expired. Notwithstanding, the benchmark dropped below its 50-day moving average for the first time since June.