Week Ahead: Stimulus, Better Data Vs. Accelerating COVID To Whipsaw Markets

 | Jun 21, 2020 21:35

  • WHO warns of coronavirus acceleration and US markets dive
  • Florida and North Carolina set new, single day records for COVID-19 outbreaks
  • Record US Retail Sales and upcoming US data may indicate that the worst of the economic contraction is behind us
  • Though US stocks gained for the week, driven largely by wildly better-than-expected economic data, three of the four major Wall Street indices—the Dow Jones, S&P 500 and Russell 2000—sold off on Friday; the NASDAQ barely scraped out an increase. Friday's selloff was the worst in over a week as the path to restarting the economy once again veered off course, and yet again seemed to curve out of view.

    Though the S&P 500 opened 0.8% higher on Friday, the broad benchmark gave back that advance—and then some—after the World Health Organization indicated that COVID-19 is still malignant and has accelerated. To date more than 8,770,000 cases have been reported worldwide, with 464,039 fatalities.

    h2 Key Oppositional Market Drivers, Looming Geopolitical Risks/h2

    Though the SPX closed down 0.6% ahead of the weekend, traders can at least attempt to find some consolation in the fact that most of the decline was driven by Utilities, (2.8%). At least that allows them to tell themselves the market may still be prone to risk.

    The second worst performing sector, Energy, (-1.5%), was pressured by Equitrans Midstream (NYSE:ETRN) whose shares slumped 7.37% on Friday, even after the Federal Regulatory Commission approved the company’s planned 75-mile extension of its Mountain Valley Pipeline between Chatham VA and Greensboro NC on Thursday. This looks to us like a case of buying the rumor and selling the news.

    Healthcare was the only sector in the green, (+1%). Investors anticipate healthcare firms will be increasing premiums once patients resume having elective medical procedures. The sector has transitioned from defensive to risk in the past six months.