Week Ahead: V-Shaped Recovery Hopes, New Highs To Continue After NFP Surprise

 | Jun 07, 2020 21:25

  • Nonfarm payrolls unexpectedly added 2.5 million jobs, with official unemployment rate falling
  • NASDAQ hits new all-time high, as Tech sector continues leading stocks—a troubling sign
  • Oil nears $40
  • Gold falls
  • U.S. equities surged on Friday—locking in a trifecta of weekly gains—after the monthly jobs report massively beat expectations. The results seemed to support the V-shaped, immediate economic recovery narrative.

    Yields reached an 11-week high and oil neared the $40 mark.

    h2 Miraculous Recovery Or Over-Stimulated Market?/h2

    May's nonfarm payrolls release surprised, showing 2.5 million jobs were added last month, while the unemployment rate fell to 13.3% from April’s all-time high. This buttresses the quick recovery argument by positing that even if it will take some time for growth to return to pre-COVID-19 levels, last week’s jobs data showed we're already on the right track.

    Here's what gives us pause however: it took more than three decades for U.S. stocks to return to the heights of the roaring 20’s after the 1929 crash. In 2020 it’s taking us just months.

    Of course, it's critical to understand that the 1929 crash and the recovery afterward occurred without a safety net. Now, markets are soaring because of unprecedented stimulus, which the Fed characterizes as unlimited.

    Though we certainly don't know the answer, we can't help but wonder: is this a market recovering from its worst decline in a decade, even as the most suboptimal economic data in seven decades continues to be released, or is this a market pumped up with steroids, heading at some point for a meltdown?

    As well, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the agency that collects the data and issues the nonfarm payrolls release included a note at the bottom of the report saying a “misclassification error” had occurred. Based on this note, the “overall unemployment rate would have been about 3 percentage points higher than reported,” or 16.3% rather than the 13.3% announced.

    That’s still less than the 19.7% forecast, but it illustrates how challenging it is to gauge even what is generally considered cold, hard data. Which thereby demonstrates just how much uncertainty we’re currently facing.

    Data error notwithstanding, this rapid equity rebound all but erased the worst crash in years, with one benchmark, the NASDAQ Composite, even notching a fresh record high on the final trading day of the week.

    Noted investor Warren Buffet (NYSE:BRKa) once famously said, “be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful.“ The Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) of Omaha just took his own advice, decreasing his exposure to equities from 55% to 25%. His rationale: “stocks are expensive and the economy is terrible.”

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    The S&P 500 Index added 2.6% of value on Friday, bringing the total rebound to 42.75% from the March 23 low. The benchmark index is now just 6% away from its Feb. 19 record close.

    In addition, on Friday, U.S. equities gave their best performance since May 18, when Cambridge, Massachusetts-based biotech Moderna (NASDAQ:MRNA) reported positive vaccine trial data. All four major U.S. indices climbed for the third straight week, their longest winning streak since December.