Week Ahead: Volatile Yields In Lead-Up To NFP Report Could Test Market Resolve

 | Feb 28, 2021 22:47

  • Counterintuitive rise of both tech and US small caps during final day of weekly trade
  • Narrative on rising yields has flipped from good thing to bad thing
  • Friday proved to be a day of contradictions for both the equity and bond markets, a situation that could extend into this coming week's trade as well.

    Most US stocks slumped for a second day on Friday, as well as for the second week in a row. However, the tech heavy NASDAQ 100 jumped 0.6%, and the small cap Russell 2000 climbed 0.3% to finish the trading week. It's ironic that these two indices were the only ones in the green at the same time as they represent opposing themes and therefore generally move in opposite directions.

    h2 Opposing Themes, Contradictory Market Message/h2

    The market message at this point is unclear. Since tech shares have outperformed during the pandemic and related lockdowns, the sector tended to lead when it seemed like COVID-related restrictions were returning. And since growth stocks performed poorly during the same period, they have had a tendency to outperform when a sense of returning to 'normal' dominated the market mood, when vaccines, a slowing number of virus cases, stimulus or data supported the view of a reemerging economy.

    However, now that both indices were gainers, albeit with tech even moreso, we’re not sure what it all means, if anything.

    Friday's other noteworthy phenomenon: 10-year Treasury yields, which had been surging, dropped back below 1.5%, erasing most of Thursday’s jump. The market narrative says this corresponds to the easing global tech rout.

    In truth, there's little continuity to these market narratives. Tech stocks—as well as the broader market—have dropped over the past two weeks, though they rallied during the two weeks prior, even as yields gained during all four weeks. So, while the rise during the earlier two weeks was attributed to reflation, which is expected to lead to a growing economy and translate into company profits and more jobs, the slump over the recent two weeks is attributed to fears of inflation, as yields gained, providing a headwind to a recovery.

    The short version: for the first two weeks yields rose on the outlook that rising inflation would help the economy grow, while the last two weeks saw climbing yields as a disruption to an expansion. It's unclear what the messages behind these contradictions are.

    However, here's what we do know: