Barron's - USA (2020-10-12)

(Antfer) #1

M2 BARRON’S October 12, 2020


More-promising Covid treatments might


be a better way to explain the market’s


gains. The week, after all, saw further evi-


dence that Gilead Sciences ’ (ticker: GILD)


remdesivir helps treat Covid, while Eli


Lilly (LLY) announced its coronavirus


cocktail had begun Phase 2 trials. Then


there was Regeneron Pharmaceuticals’


(REGN) experimental treatment, which


apparently helped the president recover


and was being considered for an emer-


gency-use exemption by the Food and Drug


Administration. “If the trajectory seen by


President Trump (from at risk of serious


illness to all better in less than a week) be-


comes standard of care in, say, four to six


months, then life can get back much closer


to normal,” writes Stephen Stanley, chief


economist at Amherst Pierpont Securities.


Why the market is going higher might be


less important than how it’s rising. It


wasn’t that long ago that everyone was


worried because big tech stocks like Apple


(AAPL) and the other FAANGs were lead-


ing the market higher, while everything


else sat out. Megacap strength was taken as


a sign of that investors were playing de-


fense, making the rally suspect in the pro-


cess. Now, most stocks are participating.


Need proof? The Invesco S&P 500 Equal


Weight exchange-traded fund (RSP) has


risen more than 13% during the past three


months, outpacing the SPDR S&P 500


ETF’s (SPY) 10% rise during the same pe-


riod. It isn’t just Apple.


In fact, the market rally has broadened


out so much that future gains look likely, if


history is a judge. The reason? The S&P


500 just experienced a “breadth thrust,” the


term used to describe a 10-day period in


which advancing stocks outnumbered de-


cliners by at least 2-to-1. That doesn’t hap-


pen very often—just 29 times since 1990—


and it signals massive buying pressure in


the market, according to Keith Lerner, chief


market strategist at SunTrust Advisory


Services. When a breadth thrust occurs, the


S&P 500 has been higher 12 months later


96% of the time for an average gain of 13%.


Of course, higher in a year is very differ-


ent than higher next week. While breadth


thrusts point to a higher market in the fu-


ture, they’re often followed by short-term


drops. The last one, for instance, occurred


on June 5, when May’s payrolls data


showed a massive increase in the number


of jobs that the U.S. economy had added.


The market peaked one day later, and then


the S&P 500 dropped 7% over just three


days. Still, even including that drop, the


index has gained 8.8% since then.


The takeaway: Dips are to be bought.


“The market is not going straight up,” Ler-


ner says. “But bull market rules apply.”


Handicapping Earnings Season


JPMorgan Chase (JPM) is scheduled to


report earnings on Tuesday, marking the


unofficial start to earnings season—even if


you wouldn’t know it given all the attention


being paid to the Biden-Trump election


face-off and a Covid stimulus plan.


It’s supposed to be a dreadful quarter if


we simply look at the year-over-year num-


bers. S&P 500 companies are expected to


report earnings of $32.97 a share, down


22% from the same quarter a year ago.


Still, that’s smaller than the 32% drop


reported in the second quarter, and it almost


certainly underestimates actual earnings.


Companies have gotten very good at guiding


the analyst community, to the point that a


miss is a much bigger surprise than a beat.


About three-fourths of S&P 500 companies


beat earnings forecasts during the past four


quarters, according to Refinitiv data. Some


85% beat during the second quarter, and


they did it by 20%, far more than usual.


The third quarter should provide more


of the same, when companies like Bank of


America (BAC), Delta Air Lines (DAL),


and UnitedHealth Group (UNH) report.


Deutsche Bank strategist Binky Chadha


notes that the increases in earnings esti-


Vital Signs


Friday's Week's Week's
Close Change % Chg.

DJ Industrials 28586.90 +904.09 +3.27

DJ Transportation 11861.95 +564.85 +5.00

DJ Utilities 875.81 +43.32 +5.20

DJ 65 Stocks 9588.90 +371.00 +4.02

DJ US Market 867.82 +33.32 +3.99

NYSE Comp. 13252.62 +502.83 +3.94

NYSE Amer Comp. 1997.03 +86.66 +4.54

S&P 500 3477.13 +128.69 +3.84

S&P MidCap 1996.36 +93.57 +4.92

S&P SmallCap 926.19 +49.61 +5.66

Nasdaq 11579.94 +504.93 +4.56

Value Line (arith.) 6671.22 +334.42 +5.28

Russell 2000 1637.55 +98.25 +6.38

DJ US TSM Float 35696.38 +1412.98 +4.12

Last Week Week Earlier

NYSEAdvances 2,407 2,348

Declines 723 766

Unchanged 55 43

New Highs 325 190

New Lows 78 69

Av Daily Vol (mil) 3,991.7 4,112.5

Dollar(Finex spot index) 93.01 93.84

T-Bond(CBT nearby futures) 174-010 175-290

Crude Oil(NYM light sweet crude) 40.60 37.05

Inflation KR-CRB(Futures Price Index) 151.74 144.12

Gold(CMX nearby futures) 1919.50 1900.20

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