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By Nicholas Jasinski | Tuesday, April 20 Pullback. U.S. stocks continued to slide today, as global
Covid-19 cases hit record highs and first-quarter earnings season has become
a sell-the-news event. Many on Wall Street had been calling for a pullback
after four straight weeks of gains for major U.S. stock indexes, and this
week has delivered exactly that. The S&P 500 fell
0.7% today, Dow
Jones Industrial Average closed down 0.8%, and the Nasdaq
Composite lost
0.9%. The small-cap Russell 2000 dropped about 2%
on an overall poor day for stocks and sectors frequently viewed the greatest
post-pandemic, economic-reopening beneficiaries. Global Covid-19 cases have increased by more than 5.4
million over the past week, according to data from Johns
Hopkins University.
That’s a record for a seven-day period since the start of the pandemic, and
more than double the weekly rate of confirmed infections as recently as in
mid-February. India has become the global hot spot, but cases are
elevated in Germany, Turkey, Japan, Argentina, and several other countries as
well. News reports suggested that new restrictions or delayed reopenings
could be coming soon in several countries. Taken all together, it’s a reminder that despite the
rapid vaccine rollout in the U.S., the world remains far from an end to the
Covid-19 pandemic. It was another busy day of earnings reports today, with Netflix, Procter & Gamble, Johnson & Johnson, and Lockheed Martin among the major
companies releasing their numbers. Although still early in first-quarter earnings season,
the trend so far has been toward large beats. Through the end of last week,
S&P 500 companies had topped Wall Street earnings estimates by 36% on a
size-weighted basis, according to Credit
Suisse’s Jonathan
Golub. Roughly
four out of five companies have beaten analysts’ forecasts. But with robust economic data in the first quarter and
expectations of a strong earnings season no secret on Wall Street, stocks had
rallied in the lead-up to earnings season. The S&P 500 had closed at at
least two standard deviations above its 50-day moving average for nearly two
weeks straight coming into this week, according to Bespoke
Investment Group,
which it classifies as “extreme” overbought territory. A streak that long has
happened only a handful of times in the past two decades. And the S&P 500 was also at some 16% above its
200-day moving average on Friday, at the 97th percentile of its post-war
history. So there were both some short-term and longer-term
technical reasons for a pullback this week. Negative Covid news abroad and
good earnings news already being priced in just provided the trigger for
investors to take profits. “Investors struggled to find a catalyst that could
justify further gains, particularly amidst a global rise in Covid cases that
is one of the fastest since the pandemic began,” wroteJim
Reid, a
strategist at Deutsche Bank. That said, the Dow and S&P 500 are still up double
digits year to date and at their top-five highest closes in history. “So
let’s not get too carried away," Reid wrote. Barron's Ben
Levisohn has more on the market's pullback this week. |
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DJIA: -0.75% to
33,821.30 The Hot
Stock: Kansas
City Southern +15.3% Best Sector:
Utilities +1.3%
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