Weekly Market Update (14/7/17 - 18/7/17)
- campazine
- Aug 14, 2017
- 3 min read
SP 500: -1.4%
Wall Street took it to the chin this week as a war of words between the U.S. and North Korea prompted investors to take some profits on the heels of the stock market's most recent run to new record highs. Small caps paced the retreat, sending the Russell 2000 lower by 2.7%. The benchmark S&P 500 dropped 1.4% while the Dow (-1.1%) did a little better and the Nasdaq (-1.5%) did a little worse.
After closing Monday at record highs, the S&P 500 and the Dow showed no signs of slowing down on Tuesday morning, further extending their all-time intraday highs. But then sentiment began to shift. The major averages retraced the bulk of their gains as the heavily-weighted financial sector, which led the early rally on Tuesday, began to weaken. Then a second wave of selling took Wall Street into the red.
The second round of selling followed a statement from President Trump, in which he warned that North Korea will be "met with fire and fury like the world has never seen" if it continues to threaten action against the United States. Mr. Trump's comment came just a few hours after the Washington Post reported that North Korea now has the capability to load its missiles with miniaturized nuclear warheads.
Selling extended into Wednesday's session after Pyongyang responded to President Trump's Tuesday comment by saying that it's examining a plan to send missiles towards the U.S. territory of Guam. However, it's important to note that selling on Tuesday and Wednesday was very modest, leaving the S&P 500 with a two-day loss of just 0.3%.
That changed on Thursday though as investors began selling with conviction, sending the S&P 500 lower by 1.5%. While the jawboning between the U.S. and North Korea certainly threw the bulls off balance, Thursday's slide, which marked the S&P 500's worst one-day loss since May, pointed to a market that was probably overdue for a pullback following yet another run to new record highs.
In other words, the U.S.-North Korea spat certainty didn't help investor sentiment, but, more than anything, it provided a convenient excuse for investors to take some money off the table.
Boosted by another lukewarm inflationary reading and an ever-persistent "buy the dip" mentality, the bulls won out on Friday, pushing the stock market slightly higher. The Consumer Price Index ticked up just 0.1% in July, missing the Briefing.com consensus of +0.2%. The Fed prefers the PCE Price Index, but it's clear that the latest CPI reading didn't help the case for a third rate hike in 2017.
The fed funds futures market now points to the June FOMC meeting as the most likely time for the next rate-hike announcement with an implied probability of 57.5%. Last week, the market expected the next rate hike to occur in December with an implied probability of 50.4%.
It's also worth pointing out that the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) spiked 5.5 points, or 54.7%, this week after drifting near an all-time low from mid-July to early August. The VIX shows what kind of a move, in percentage terms, the market is pricing in for a one-month period from the spot reading. The index is derived from near-dated options on the S&P 500.
Nasdaq Composite +16.2% YTD
Dow Jones Industrial Average +10.6% YTD
S&P 500 +9.0% YTD
Russell 2000 +1.3% YTD
Yield Performance:

The yield curve continues to shift downwards, indicating more fear in the market.
Sector Performance:

Discretionary, Healthcare, Materials, Real Estate continued their weaknesses that have lasted a few weeks.
Financials, Industrials dipped into the negative zone. Although Technology and Utilities are in the negative zone too this week, their losses are smaller as compared to others'.
Commodities Performance:
Crude oil closed lower.
Gold closed higher.
Silver closed higher.
Copper closed higher.
Week 33 BMO:

Info: Stock Trader's Almanac 2017
Monday before August Expiration, Dow up 14 of last 21, average gain 0.4%.
August Expiration Day (Friday) less bullish lately, Dow down 5 of last 6, down 531 points (3.1%) in 2015.
Mid-August stronger than beginning and end
According to the Almanac, it's possible that the market would close higher on Monday until Thursday, but Friday has the potential to reap off the gains made for the week.
Key Economic Dates:

Key Earnings Release:
Tues BMO: AAP, COH, HD, TJX
Tues AMC: URBN
Wed BMO: AEO, TGT
Wed AMC: CSCO, LB
Thurs BMO: BABA, WMT
Thurs AMC: AABA, GPS
Fri BMO: FL
Thoughts:
The US-North Korea relation has caused the market to dip over 1% last week, as it was also a light data week with nothing to really cheer about but the fear caused by the missiles, it justifies that the market decided to run for a moment. However, I think that the market is likely to rebound as 'buy the dip' mentality creeps in. Also, there're still quite a couple of retailers are going to announce their earnings so as expected since last week, discretionary sector might not be doing well.
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