M2 BARRON’S April 6, 2020
focused on companies that can withstand
the disruption, or whose terminal values are
little affected by a recession in 2020. Shares
of staples-oriented Dollar General (DG),
McCormick (MKC), and General Mills
(GIS) all rose at least 9.7%.
That could be a sign that the stock mar-
ket has already reached an “internal low,”
according to Keith Lerner, chief market
strategist at SunTrust Advisory Services.
“An internal low occurs when the inten-
sity of the selling pressure as well as fear
and indiscriminate selling reach a cre-
scendo,” Lerner wrote this past week.
“While the overall market index may con-
tinue to decline, the movement of stocks
within the index becomes less synchro-
nized. Once the internal low is passed,
there tends to be greater differentiation
among stocks within the market. Investors
start to separate the wheat from the chaff.”
While anyone predicting with certainty
whether the Dow or S&P 500 has already
bottomed out is likely overconfident, it’s a
fair bet that many individual stocks have
already achieved their lows. During the
financial-crisis bear market, the S&P 500
didn’t hit its 666-point trough until March
- But many individual stocks didn’t go
below theirNovember2008 lows after the
most indiscriminate phase of the selloff
eased. The same pattern occurred after the
dot-com bubble burst.
Investors should continue looking for
opportunities in individual stocks, with less
worry about the kind of no-safe-haven,
sea-of-red days when no company’s shares
are spared from steep losses. If a twice-as-
high-as-forecast 6.6 million jobless claim
number on Thursday didn’t spook inves-
tors, the data need to get a whole lot worse
than expected to see another swoon like
that. And it’s fair to say the market is al-
ready expecting several weeks, if not
months, of grim economic news.
And with first-quarter earnings season
right around the corner, it will be a chance
for the winners to differentiate themselves
from the losers in the coronavirus market’s
next phase. Investors will get a three-day
weekend to prepare for that, with stock and
bond markets closed for Good Friday.
We could all use the break.
Don’t Get Burned by Oil
Oil began the week by falling to its lowest
level in nearly 20 years. It ended it with
perhaps the least-predictable outcome of
all—with prices rising 32% as world leaders
discussed a global pact to bring energy
markets back into balance. But for inves-
tors wondering if it’s time to jump back in
to the beleaguered sector, the answer re-
mains a firm no.
The rescue plan now being hatched in-
volves an unprecedented degree of govern-
ment involvement in an area that has been
ruled by free—or at least semi-free—markets
for decades, with oil producers around the
world collectively cutting production by at
least 10 million barrels a day, out of the cur-
rent production rate of about 100 million
barrels. President Donald Trump wrote on
Twitter that he had spoken with Saudi
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and
Russian President Vladimir Putin has sig-
naled he’s on board, too. The Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries is meet-
ing next week to hash out more details.
Some commentators see a deal as likely,
given that talks have already occurred. But
divvying up cuts could get tricky—OPEC
hasn’t even been able to get its own members
and allies to adhere fully to agreements in
the past year. “An agreement is on balance
likely given the progress that has already
been made, but the risk of collapse is high
given the challenges of curtailment in the
U.S. and of dividing up the effort among
OPEC+ members,” wrote Eurasia Group’s
Ayham Kamel.
The wild card is likely to be the U.S., the
world’s largest producer but also the most
unruly and fragmented. U.S. producers run
Vital Signs
Friday's Week's Week's
Close Change % Chg.
DJ Industrials 21052.53 -584.25 -2.70
DJ Transportation 7305.31 -393.87 -5.12
DJ Utilities 706.01 -52.92 -6.97
DJ 65 Stocks 6828.18 -337.44 -4.71
DJ US Market 607.60 -16.53 -2.65
NYSE Comp. 9880.63 -306.58 -3.01
NYSE Amer Comp. 1520.31 +33.08 +2.22
S&P 500 2488.65 -52.82 -2.08
S&P MidCap 1337.95 -84.97 -5.97
S&P SmallCap 622.35 -47.53 -7.10
Nasdaq 7373.08 -129.29 -1.72
Value Line (arith.) 4220.28 -282.58 -6.28
Russell 2000 1052.05 -79.94 -7.06
DJ US TSM Float 24860.74 -724.73 -2.83
LastWeek WeekEarlier
NYSEAdvances 680 2,646
Declines 2,371 427
Unchanged 23 12
New Highs 15 13
New Lows 284 894
Av Daily Vol (mil) 6,201.8 7,408.9
Dollar(Finex spot index) 100.68 98.37
T-Bond(CBT nearby futures) 182-180 179-020
CrudeOil(NYM light sweet crude) 28.34 21.51
Inflation KR-CRB(Futures Price Index) 127.96 123.88
Gold(CMX nearby futures) 1633.70 1623.90
IntroducingBarron’sRoundtable
Providingalookatthetradingweekaheadto
helpyouanticipatemarketshifts,takeinformed
risks,andmakesmarterinvestmentdecisions.
SPONSOREDBY
Fox Business
Fridays at
10 PM ET
April 6, 2020 BARRON’S M3
the gamut from high-tech rigs operated by
big corporations to small “stripper wells”
that have been pumping in people’s back-
yards for decades. Making those wells stop
on a dime is no easy feat.
And U.S. officials involved in the negoti-
ations are reticent to make a deal that ex-
tends beyond the current crisis. Ryan Sit-
ton, a commissioner with the Texas
Railroad Commission, is part of the inter-
national talks to collectively reduce produc-
tion. The commission can force production
cuts in the state. Sitton said in an interview
with Barron’s that “a large portion of the
leadership of oil companies in Texas are in
favor of being a part of an international
deal.” But he sees government intervention
as a temporary tactic that will go away
when the Covid-19 crisis does.
“As soon as this is over, I think the U.S.
government gets out, we go back into market
competition both within the U.S. and exter-
nally, and people get back to work,” he said.
Either way, that is not good for U.S. oil
explorers. As a group, they were unable to
prove they can produce free cash flow even
at prices much higher than today. And even
if prices do get a larger bump from this deal,
it’s too early to tell how the industry will
change in the aftermath, or whether any of
them will be prepared for when the produc-
tion floodgates open again. In other words,
the price bump may have saved some pro-
ducers from the brink of distress—Whiting
Petroleum was the only producer to file for
bankruptcy last week—but the larger struc-
tural problems aren’t going anywhere.
For investors who want some exposure
to oil and gas, Chevron (CVX) is the most
attractive stock on a relative basis. Its bal-
ance sheet is strong enough to protect its
7% dividend yield and the company has
made commitments to slow drilling and
preserve cash. Should oil prices shudder
again—a likely outcome—Chevron can con-
tinue on its current path. If other producers
start looking to sell, the company should
have enough capital to take advantage and
possibly buy valuable acreage at a discount.
“We’re focused on fortress balance
sheets at companies that will survive,” says
Jeff Wyll, an energy analyst at Neuberger
Berman. “Chevron is one name—a survivor
with a fortress balance sheet.”
And that looks a lot better than counting
on feuding oil producers to stay the course.
—Avi Salzman
The Long and the Short
Here’s what else caught our attention:
Ma Bell. Forty years ago, AT&T (T)
would have been the stock to own during the
coronavirus crisis, it being the only option to
reach out and touch someone and all. Not
anymore. These days we’re using Zoom
Video Communications (ZM), Microsoft ’s
(MSFT) Skype, and Alphabet ’s (GOOGL)
Google Hangouts. AT&T is now just one of
three major carriers and is as much an en-
tertainment company as a telecom. The lat-
ter was one reason that J.P. Morgan analyst
Philip Cusick cut his rating on it to Neutral
from Overweight this past week. AT&T
stock is down 30% in 2020, but it may not
be done falling yet.
Buffett Crunch. Airline stocks, nearly
as much as cruise lines, have been among
the hardest hit by the coronavirus—and
they look as if they could get hit even
harder in the coming days. After Friday’s
close, Delta Air Lines (DAL) disclosed
that its second-quarter revenue would fall
90%. The news broke that Warren Buffett’s
Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) had
dumped huge portions of its stakes in Delta
and Southwest Airlines (LUV)—the two
airlines with the strongest balance sheets,
causing both stocks to tumble in after-
hours trading. If Buffett’s selling, who’s
buying?—Ben Levisohn
Industry Action
Performance of the Dow Jones U.S. Industrials, ranked by weekly percent change.*
Oil & Gas 5.12%
Health Care 1.82
Consumer Goods 0.23
–1.77 Technology
–1.99 Telecommunications
–3.34 Basic Materials
–3.39 Consumer Services
–4.63 Industrials
–6.89 Utilities
–7.21 Financials
* For breakdown see page M28. Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices
Upgrade
youradvisor.
Get advice on managing your wealth
and connect with a top advisor at
barrons.com/directory
©2020 DowJones & Company.All Rights Reserved. 2E205
Visitwww.sectorspdrs.com
orcall1-866-SECTOR-ETF
An investor should consider investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. To
obtain a prospectus, which contains this and other information, call 1-866-SECTOR-ETF or visit http://www.sectorspdrs.
com. Read the prospectus carefully before investing.
AllETFsaresubjecttorisk,includingpossiblelossofprincipal.SectorETFproductsarealsosubjecttosectorrisksandnon-diversificationrisks,
whichgenerallyresultsingreaterpricefluctuationsthantheoverallstockmarket.Ordinarybrokeragecommissionsapply.
ALPS Portfolio Solutions Distributor, Inc., a registered broker-dealer, is distributor for the Select Sector SPDR Trust.
THE S&P 500 DIVIDED INTO 11 SECTOR ETFS