The benchmark S&P 500 scaled a fresh record high on Monday, extending a bull-market run into a new week on a boost from some megacap and chip stocks, while corporate earnings and clues on interest-rate cuts continued to top investors’ radar.
Quick Read
- Wall Street Rises on Monday: The S&P 500, Dow Jones, and Nasdaq all saw gains, building on last week’s all-time high.
- Macy’s Rejects Buyout Offer: Macy’s shares climbed 3.7% after rejecting a buyout offer for not providing “compelling value.”
- SolarEdge and NuStar Energy Gains: SolarEdge Technologies rose 4.1% after announcing workforce cuts, and NuStar Energy surged 18.1% following Sunoco’s acquisition announcement.
- Drop for Archer Daniels Midland: ADM’s shares fell 21.8% as the company put its CFO on leave amid a regulatory inquiry and warned of lower-than-expected profits.
- Earnings Report Rush Expected: About 70 S&P 500 companies, including American Airlines, Intel, Procter & Gamble, and Tesla, are set to report fourth-quarter results.
- S&P 500 Earnings Dip Anticipated: Analysts predict a nearly 2% drop in S&P 500 earnings for the fourth quarter, the fourth decline in the last five quarters.
- Market Reaction to Earnings Reports: Companies exceeding forecasts are seeing smaller stock price boosts, while those missing expectations face harsher penalties.
- Federal Reserve Interest Rate Expectations: Hopes for rate cuts have fueled the market rally, but recent economic data suggests a delay in Fed rate cuts.
- Upcoming Economic Reports: Reports on the U.S. economy’s growth and the preferred Fed inflation gauge are due this week, expected to show continued growth and steady inflation.
- Treasury Yields Decline: The 10-year and 2-year Treasury yields dropped, easing pressure on the stock market.
- China’s Stock Market Falls: Chinese stocks fell due to concerns about the country’s economic recovery, with unchanged loan rates from commercial banks disappointing investors.
- Japan’s Nikkei 225 Rises: The Nikkei 225 gained, with expectations that the Bank of Japan will maintain low interest rates.
The Associated Press has the story:
Wall Street ticks higher and S&P 500 hits fresh record high
Newslooks- NEW YORK (AP) —
Wall Street is rising again Monday to build on its all-time high reached last week. The S&P 500 was 0.3% higher in afternoon trading. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 132 points, or 0.4%, and the Nasdaq composite was 0.4% higher.
Macy’s climbed 3.7% after the retailer said it rejected a buyout offer from two investment companies, in part because it didn’t offer “compelling value.” SolarEdge Technologies rose 4.1% after it said it would cut 16% of its workforce, and NuStar Energy jumped 18.1% after Sunoco said it would buy the pipeline and storage company in a deal valued at $7.3 billion, including debt.
They helped offset a 21.8% drop for Archer Daniels Midland, which put its chief financial officer on leave. After getting a document request from U.S. regulators, it said it’s investigating some of its accounting practices. ADM also said it expects to report profit for the full year of 2023 that’s below what analysts were forecasting.
This upcoming week will have a rush of companies reporting their results for the last three months of 2023, with roughly 70 companies from the S&P 500 on the calendar. They include American Airlines, Intel, Procter & Gamble and Tesla.
Analysts are expecting companies in the S&P 500 to report an overall dip in earnings for the fourth quarter, down nearly 2% from a year earlier, according to FactSet. If they’re right, it would be the fourth quarter in the last five where profits have fallen.
After the initial week of earnings reporting season, companies that have been topping analysts’ forecasts for profits and revenue have been getting smaller bumps to their stock prices than usual, according to strategists at Bank of America.
Companies that fall short of expectations, meanwhile, have seen their stock prices get punished more than usual. It all points to “a higher bar after a big rally,” Savita Subramanian and Ohsung Kwon wrote in a BofA Global Research report.
That big rally, which carried the S&P 500 to a record for the first time in two years, came largely on hopes that a cooldown in inflation will allow the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates several times this year. It would be a sharp turnaround from the last two years, when the Fed jacked its main interest rate drastically higher in hopes of slowing the economy enough to grind down high inflation.
Some stronger-than-expected reports on the economy recently have forced traders to push out their forecasts for when the Fed will begin cutting rates. They overall see a less than 42% probability that it could begin in March, down from more than 80% a week ago, according to data from CME Group.
But the expectation is still for the Fed to cut rates more this year than the three times it’s indicated.
Some upcoming reports on the economy could shift those expectations further. On Thursday, the government will give its first estimate for how strongly the economy grew during the last three months of 2023.
Economists expect it to show the economy is still growing, but at a slower pace than during the summer. That’s exactly what the Federal Reserve wants to see, because too strong of an economy would keep upward pressure on inflation.
On Friday, the government will release the latest reading for the inflation gauge that the Fed prefers to use. Economists expect it to show inflation held steady at 2.6% in December from a month earlier.
Treasury yields have eased significantly since October on expectations for coming rate cuts. That in turn has relaxed the pressure considerably on the stock market and helped it to rip higher. Yields dipped further on Monday.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.09% from 4.13% late Friday and from 5% in October.
The two-year Treasury yield, which tends to move more on expectations for action by the Fed, slipped to 4.36% from 4.39%.
In stock markets abroad, indexes tumbled in China as worries continue about the strength of the recovery in the world’s second-largest economy. Stocks fell 2.3% in Hong Kong to bring their loss for the young year to date to 12.2%. Stocks also tumbled 2.7% in Shanghai.
China’s commercial banks kept their loan prime rate unchanged Monday. That disappointed investors hoping for strong moves to juice China’s economy.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 did better, rising 1.6% with expectations that the Bank of Japan will keep its interest rates ultra-low following its two-day meeting that began Monday.