Week Ahead: Investor Optimism To Drive Stocks Up Even As Grim Data Continues

 | May 31, 2020 21:28

  • Stocks have been climbing on the hope of a V-shaped recovery amid the promise of infinite QE, even as the Fed itself said that wouldn’t be enough
  • Treasurys advanced Friday, together with equities–a potential sign of a pullback
  • The USD may rally before continuing lower, allowing gold to move higher
  • The only thing investors appear to be seeing is the light at the end of the lockdown tunnel, as economies around the world continue reopening and government regulators keep issuing unprecedented amounts of fiscal easing, even as equity bulls turn a blind eye toward ongoing, devastating economic data and the revival of US-China tensions.

    The S&P 500 Index climbed 0.5% on Friday, finishing the week 3% higher—a second consecutive weekly advance for a total of +6.3%. It also marked a monthly acceleration for the SPX just a hair under 5% and the second straight monthly gain for a total of 17.8%, the best two-month performance for the index since 2009.

    Still, not all the news last week was encouraging. US GDP dropped at an annualized rate of -5.0% in the first quarter, the worst performance for this metric since the last quarter of 2008, when the US was in the midst of the great recessionary storm, during which six years of continuous growth collapsed. And some version of history could be repeating now. Fed Chair Jerome Powell, in a televised interview, told "60 Minutes," growth could shrink another 30%.

    As well, in early April, the IMF expect "more shocking economic data in the week ahead," with many anticipating the US unemployment rate will have neared 20% in May.

    All told, the S&P 500 catapulted a whopping 36% higher since the March 23 bottom, even with the month-long lethargy shown in the sideways move from mid-April to mid-May.