By Nicholas Jasinski |
Monday, July 19
Pullback. Investors
got defensive today, with stocks down, bond prices up, and commodities trading as if there is another
Covid-induced recession coming.
Fears over the Delta variant of Covid-19 were the trigger for
today's selloff, but they were also a chance for markets to blow off some steam
after a long rally without a correction. The declines could open up buying
opportunities for investors willing to fade those concerns and scoop up some
suddenly discounted names
Stocks of more cyclical and economically exposed
companies bore the brunt of the declines today. The Dow
Jones Industrial Average closed down 2.1%—its worst day since
October—while the S&P 500 lost 1.6% and the
technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite
fell 1.1%. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note dipped
below 1.2%, its lowest level since February. U.S. oil prices tumbled 7.5%.
The Delta variant, a more contagious mutation of
the coronavirus, has quickly become the dominant strain in the U.S., accounting
for the majority of infections in recent weeks. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention director Dr. Rochelle
Walensky said Friday that the spread was concentrated in
areas where vaccination rates were relatively low. Walensky added that although
new daily cases were up 70% in a week, hospitalization and death rates were
climbing less quickly.
Another surge of Covid-19 infections raises the
specter of a fresh wave of lockdowns and restrictions that would hamper the
economic recovery under way. And with inflation pressures firmly in place and
commodity prices on the rise as supply chains struggle to keep up with demand,
an ugly word comes to mind: "stagflation," or surging inflation
despite sluggish economic growth.
“The global economy is barely surviving on life
support, and another wave of infections may spur lockdowns that could signal
the death knell for the tenuous recovery,” says Peter
Essele, head of investment management for Commonwealth
Financial Network. “Fear of stagflation
will be a major concern for investors if a resurgence in Covid infections
causes economies to slow while consumer prices continue an upward trajectory.”
The gloomy Covid news comes as market concerns had been building on several fronts.
The fastest rate of inflation in years, uncertainty about a coming shift in Federal
Reserve policy, and pricey valuations had already put stock
investors on edge. Expectations are also high for the second-quarter earnings
season currently under way.
A lot of good news had already been priced into
the market, with major indexes hitting new highs last week. The S&P 500 was
up 16% this year and hasn’t experienced a pullback of more than 5% since last fall,
an environment ripe for some correction in stock prices.
But that doesn’t mean it’s all doom and gloom for
stock investors from here. Periodic corrections can be healthy for a bull
market since they push valuations back in check, presenting buying opportunities
for newly discounted stocks.
“The [S&P 500] is below its 20-day [moving
average] this morning for the first time since mid-June, when a four-day
pullback took hold,” wrote Katie Stockton,
founder and managing partner at technical-analysis focused Fairlead
Strategies. “Short-term momentum is now to the
downside, but we think the pullback will be similarly short-lived."
For fundamental reasons as well, concerns about
new Covid-related lockdowns on the horizon might be overblown at this stage in
the pandemic. It’s safe to say there’s little appetite for continued or
reimposed restrictions among Americans, and the Delta variant hasn’t been shown
to cause severe infections in vaccinated individuals, keeping mortality low.
“We expect the reflation trade—cyclical stocks,
bond yields, high beta stocks, reflation and reopening themes—to bounce
imminently as Delta variant fears subside and inflation surprises persist, and
due to supports from above-trend growth, strong consumer fundamentals, and a
low earnings hurdle rate,” wrote J.P. Morgan’s chief global
markets strategist Marko Kolanovic.
In other words, buy the dip. A 2020-style Covid
lockdown in the U.S. shouldn’t be top of the list for investors with enough to
worry about already.
DJIA: -2.09% to 33,962.04
S&P 500: -1.59% to 4,258.49
Nasdaq: -1.06% to 14,274.98
The Hot Stock: Kroger +4.3%
The Biggest Loser: Kimco Realty -7.3%
Best Sector: Consumer Staples -0.3%
Worst Sector: Energy -3.5%
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