The View from 5th Avenue

The View from 5th Avenue – 31 October 2022

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October as we know is the month that concludes with a celebration of the macabre. But the stock market has resembled a non-stop horror movie for much of 2022. Fortunately for many investors, the stock market chose a bull as its costume for Halloween this year and wore it for most of the month. Indices opened the day in the red and didn’t budge much from that position throughout, but a small retreat as monthly books come to a close could almost be predicted. Especially in light of what’s to come.

The View from 5th Avenue

The View from 5th Avenue – 28 October 2022

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So if I told you coming into this week that Microsoft, META, Amazon and Google would largely disappoint on earnings, what would the guesses have been for where the S&P/Nasdaq closed on Friday? I’m quite confident that most of you, yours truly included, would be wildly off base. Despite the famous 4 failing to confirm the rally we’d seen over the last week plus from a fundamental perspective, markets shrugged it off and kept on their merry way.

The View from 5th Avenue

The View from 5th Avenue – 27 October 2022

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US equities having another mixed day of trading as a complete deluge of earnings has again descended upon us and bringing with it more interesting and/or disappointing datapoints and insight from Q3 to digest and process (to say the least!…). In the perfect demonstration of sector performance divergence- we saw the Dow and Russell hold in +ve territory, while the relatively more tech-heavy SPX fell lower as well as the heavy tech-heavy Nasdaq was under more significant pressure.

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The View from 5th Avenue – 26 October 2022

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Initially, it looked like Microsoft (-7.7%) and Alphabet’s (-9.6%) reporting foibles overnight would not interrupt the current uptrend. Markets spent the first few hours of the day climbing higher in the face of tech-versity, assisted by the Bank of Canada after they surprised with a smaller than expected rate hike. Surely, a leading indicator for the Fed!? The USD 10yr even fell below 4% for a spell – another positive sign. But then came a dose of reality…or mean reversion.

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The View from 5th Avenue – 25 October 2022

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The sound of silence can be deafening sometimes, and markets have been roaring since last Thursday. After a WSJ article suggesting a smaller FOMC hike in December (therefore breaking the 75bps trend), and Mary Daly mentioning a “step down”, the Fed has been in their quiet time ahead of their next meeting. That has forced traders to rethink the rate trajectory amid a new earnings period, and memories of the July market move under similar circumstances. As October is coming to a close, stocks have put together a nice three-day rally.

The View from 5th Avenue

The View from 5th Avenue – 24 October 2022

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Markets drifting higher to kick the week off ahead of much-anticipated earnings from the likes of “Big Tech”. Equities seemed largely unimpressed with depressed PMIs across the globe- all signals pointing to the tightening-induced contraction we’ve been on the lookout for. US Manufacturing component fell below the 50 mark for the first time since June 2020 along with Services well below expectations, and therefore, bringing a disappointing Composite print.

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The View from 5th Avenue – 21 October 2022

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Markets moving higher to close out the week in Friday trading on a positive note. For those counting, that’s 3/5 higher for the week and swinging the pendulum back from last week’s losses. In sticking to theme- it was another day, another lesson of ‘don’t fight the Fed’. But in an interesting plot twist, we found ourselves re-calibrating the skew away from that entirely of the hawks now slightly a touch back to the doves. Or, in other words, rates moved lower (off of new peak levels we’ve not seen in the past decade) and Equities rallied as a result.

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The View from 5th Avenue – 20 October 2022

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In a moment that will be remembered for generations (and apologies for including the UK in a US wrap), the shortest tenured British Leader resigned. Ahead of this (and after), there was little changed from a macro perspective. We continue to watch 1640/1780 on the Russell Futures, and 3806 as a resistance on S&P futures – which we barely looked to approach, let alone test, before turning lower. Pre-market earnings did send futures higher early on, with both AT&T and American Airlines reporting better than expected numbers.

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The View from 5th Avenue – 19 October 2022

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The 10-yr yield has been threatening 4% for the last few sessions and it finally moved through to close at 4.13%. Granted every investor is fully aware of the Fed’s intention, with 75bps expected in November, and very likely in December. But seeing it close at the highest level since 2008 remains stark. Economic data today was housing heavy, and it showed the weight of higher rates. While Building Permits ticked slightly higher (+1.4% m/m), Housing Starts fell after their brief August pop (-8.1% m/m), and Mortgage Apps fell once again.

The View from 5th Avenue

The View from 5th Avenue – 18 October 2022

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With the S&P 500 down 22% ytd, it is not hard to see the negativity that investors currently have. The various headwinds remain, and only seem to be broadening. But the investor spirit cannot be gloomy all the time, and that provides opportunities in the short term. After last week’s intraday turnaround, traders have been cautiously optimistic that indexes can continue the path higher, and today’s S&P gain was the first back-to-back daily gain in two weeks.