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By Matthew
Klein | Friday, December 4 Bad
Is Good Now? The big news of the day
was that the U.S. economy just finished its worst month for new jobs
since the recovery began in May, with many sectors experiencing
outright employment declines. That’s not obviously bullish, but nobody seemed
to care. The S&P 500 large-cap index, the tech-heavy Nasdaq
Composite, and the Russell
2000 small-cap index all breached new highs
today. The latest
data show the economy slowing sharply into the winter thanks to
the resurgence of the virus and the exhaustion of income support. Employment
fell at restaurants, retailers, public schools, nursing homes, and much of
the white collar workforce. And the viral outbreak has only gotten worse
since the Bureau of Labor Statistics did its November survey several weeks ago. The
optimistic view is that the end of the crisis is in sight. Most people should
be vaccinated by the end of 2021, which should allow a swift return to
normalcy. Investors are willing to ignore whatever happens in the short term
to get a piece of the longer-term upside. As for what
happened today to prompt the run-up in stocks and other risky assets,
there isn’t an obvious answer. One possibility is that investors may
believe that the bad news on the jobs figures could be enough to push
Congress and the White House to agree to a deal to provide Americans with
additional income support and extend forbearance programs. Energy
stocks dominated the leaderboard, with the top 12 gainers all in oil and gas,
led by Occidental Petroleum (up 13.4%), Diamondback
Energy (up 12.7%), Marathon
Oil (up 10.7%), Apache (up 10.5%),
and EOG Resources (up 10%).
Within the S&P 500, only 89 components were down, while 7 of the index’s
11 sectors were up more than 1%, led by the cyclical sectors of energy,
materials, real estate, financials, and industrials. The bullish
sentiment extended across other asset classes. Oil prices are almost back to
$50/barrel, and the copper price just hit its highest level since March 2013.
Stocks in much of the rest of the world were also up, with Korea’s Kospi
Composite hitting a new all-time high. Watch our TV
show Fridays at 10 p.m. or 11:30 p.m. ET; Saturdays at 10 a.m. or 11:30 a.m.;
or Sundays at 7 a.m., 10 a.m., or 11:30 a.m. This week, see an interview with
Shopify President Harley
Finkelstein on the outlook for the holiday shopping
season and the future of retail. |
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DJIA: +0.83% to 30,218.26 The Hot
Stock: Occidental
Petroleum +13.4% Best Sector:
Energy +5.5% Barron's
Executive Briefing on Investing and Money Business and
investing leaders are invited to attend the Barron's Executive Briefing
on Investing and Money on Monday, Dec. 7, at noon ET. Examine the
business climate, disruption, investing opportunities and the outlook for
2021, with journalists in conversation with Abigail
Johnson, CEO of Fidelity
Investments, and Jim
Chanos, founder of Kynikos
Associates. |
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