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Both the consumer staples and consumer discretionary sectors traded higher Monday, bucking a broader market decline. The S&P 500 staples sector advanced nearly 1%, while consumer discretionary gained 0.8%. Colgate-Palmolive led staples with a 2.6% gain. Dollar Tree, Dollar General and Target advanced more than 2% each to lead discretionary stocks higher. Tesla, which is also part of the discretionary sector, gained 4.2%.
—Fred Imbert
The weakness in oil prices was weighing on major energy stocks in early trading.
Shares of Diamondback Energy fell 3.7%, while ExxonMobil slid more than 2%. Chevron dipped 1.6%. Devon Energy and Occidental Petroleum shed 2.6% and 1.5%, respectively.
Futures for U.S. benchmark West Texas intermediate crude were last down more than 5%, trading at roughly $93.30 per barrel. European benchmark Brent crude fell more than 4% to break below $100 per barrel.
— Jesse Pound
Stocks fell to start Monday’s session, kicking off August in the red. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 154.4, points, or 0.47%. The S&P 500 fell 0.81% and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.90%.
— Carmen Reinicke
Technology shares, among the best performers since the market bottomed in mid-June, were set to fall slightly on Monday. Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet were all in the red in premarket trading. Apple shares are up 25% since the S&P 500’s bottom on June 16 through Friday. Microsoft is up 14% and Alphabet is 10% higher over the same period.
— John Melloy
It’s too soon to call the bottom even as the S&P 500 just enjoyed its best month since November, according to BofA Securities head of U.S. equity and quantitative strategy Savita Subramanian.
The strategist said the stock market typically bottoms after earnings estimates get slashed dramatically, but that hasn’t happened yet.
“Was June low the big low? We need more EPS cuts,” Subramanian said in a note. “We are still in the very early innings of downturn and estimate cuts.”
During the prior five recessions except in 1990, the S&P 500 bottomed after estimates were revised down, but today, estimate cuts are just starting and forward earnings per share is still up 7% since the market peak, the strategist said.
Secondly, Bank of America’s bull market signposts indicate it’s premature to call a bottom. Subramanian said historical market bottoms were accompanied by over 80% of these indicators being triggered, and now just 30% are triggered.
Lastly, she said bear markets always ended after the Federal Reserve started to cut interest rates, which is a scenario that’s at least six months away.
— Yun Li
Shares of Boeing rose more than 4% in premarket trading, helping to trim the overnight losses for futures.
The move comes after the Wall Street Journal and Reuters reported over the weekend that U.S. regulators approved the company’s planned inspection changes to the 787 Dreamliner.
Additionally, a potential strike among Boeing machinists in St. Louis was averted until at least Wednesday, when the workers will vote on a new contract.
Boeing’s stock has been hot in recent weeks, rising more than 16% in July.
— Jesse Pound
Stock futures fell back into the red on Monday ahead of market open, erasing earlier gains. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures shed 49 points, or 0.15%. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures slipped 0.27% and 0.17%, respectively.
— Carmen Reinicke
Oil prices declined during Monday morning trading on Wall Street after soft manufacturing data out of China prompted demand slowdown concerns.
West Texas Intermediate crude, the U.S. oil benchmark, shed 2.3%, or $2.31, to trade at $96.31 per barrel. International benchmark Brent crude dipped 1.8% to $102.07 per barrel.
WTI rose 4.14% last week, for its first positive week in four. However, it ended July in the red for its second straight losing month.
— Pippa Stevens
Stock futures rose from overnight lows to trade flat Monday morning ahead of the open. Both Dow Jones Industrial Average futures and Nasdaq 100 futures turned positive, trading slightly in the green. S&P 500 futures were still negative but gained from trading overnight.
— Carmen Reinicke
The dollar index sank to 105.311 Monday, its lowest level since July 5 as investors bet that the Federal Reserve’s rate hikes will tip the economy into recession. Year to date, the index is still up nearly 10%.
— Carmen Reinicke
Bitcoin fell about 3% early Monday after coming off its best month of 2022, as stock futures took a small dip. The cryptocurrency rallied on Wednesday through Friday as investors responded to updates from the Federal Reserve about its rate hiking path as well as the latest GDP report, and pulled back over the weekend as the possibility that the market has likely hit a bottom began to settle in. Bitcoin continues to trade in tandem with stocks, whose major indexes also notched their best months of the year Friday.
“Bitcoin may be struggling to break above the $24,000 level, but its weekly candle finally closed above the 200-week moving average and that could improve the technical sentiment significantly,” said Yuya Hasegawa, crypto market analyst at Japanese crypto exchange Bitbank. “In case of break out, the price could retrace its June loss and could go as high as $32,000.”
— Tanaya Macheel
Target shares jumped about 2.5% in early trading after Wells Fargo upgraded the stock to overweight from equal weight, saying the recent pullback was a good buying opportunity. Target shares are down 29% so far this year amid inflation curbing consumer spending and lingering supply chain issues.
— John Melloy
The market’s strong performance in July could be lead to more gains in August and September, data compiled by Bank of America shows.
Stephen Suttmeier, a technical strategist at the bank, said in a note that, when the S&P 500 rises 5% or more in July, “August and September show stronger seasonality vs when July is not up 5% or more and for all years back to 1928.”
More specifically, the benchmark index averages a return of 2.01% in August after such a strong July, with the S&P 500 rising 59% of the time. September, meanwhile, is up 55% of the time and averages a return of 0.73% in these scenarios.
The S&P 500 rallied 9.1% in July, marking its biggest one-month gain since November 2020.
— Fred Imbert
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba said it will comply with U.S. regulators and work to maintain its listings in New York and Hong Kong.
“Alibaba will continue to monitor market developments, comply with applicable laws and regulations and strive to maintain its listing status on both the NYSE and the Hong Kong Stock Exchange,” it said in a statement to the Hong Kong bourse.
The statement came after Alibaba was added to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s list of Chinese companies at risk of being delisted for not meeting auditing requirements on Friday. U.S.-listed Alibaba shares plunged 11% in the Friday trading session.
— Sumathi Bala
Inflation is hitting consumers’ wallets, and the economy looks to be slowing.
With the consumer accounting for 68% of all economic activity in the first quarter, it is a key metric to watch.
What does all of this mean for consumer-related companies, and will they hold up in a recession? Wall Street analysts pick the consumer stocks they say are resilient, even as the economy slows. Pro subscribers can read more here.
— Weizhen Tan
Chinese factory activity grew in July, but at a slower pace than in June, according to the latest Caixin/Markit manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index.
The private survey print came in at 50.4, down from 51.7 in June.
PMI readings are sequential and represent expansion or contraction from the month before. A figure above 50 represents growth.
Over the weekend, official data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed that factory activity declined, with the PMI at 49.
— Abigail Ng
So far, 56% of companies in the S&P 500 have reported results for the second quarter 2022. Of those, 73% have reported EPS results above analyst estimates, according to FactSet.
That means that so far, blended earnings growth – including both companies that have reported and estimates for those reporting later – is 6% for the second quarter. That’s higher than the blended earnings growth seen in last week.
Still, if the actual earnings growth rate is 6% at the end of the season, it will mark the lowest earnings growth rate for S&P 500 companies since the fourth quarter of 2022.
Revenue, on the other hand, is outperforming earnings. The blended revenue growth rate so far is 12.3%, up from last week and last quarter. If the actual revenue growth rate is 12.3% it will mark the sixth-straight quarter of year-over-year revenue growth of more than 10% for the index.
— Carmen Reinicke
All three major indexes ended the day higher on Friday, capping off a solid month of trading in July. Here are other key stats about how stocks traded last month.
— Carmen Reinicke
Investors are still watching for signs that the U.S. is in a recession and that inflation is slowing down. Last week, the Federal Reserve increased its benchmark interest rate by another three-quarters of a percentage point to stave off high inflation.
The first reading of second-quarter GDP on Thursday was negative, potentially pointing to a technical recession. On Friday, the June personal consumption expenditures hit the highest level since January 1982. The report is a key inflation measure.
Solid earnings reports from Amazon and Apple boosted each company stock and lifted the indexes higher to round out July. Energy companies such as Chevron and Exxon Mobil also rose on better-than-expected reports, ending Friday higher. Not all earnings have been rosy, however. Meta Platforms and Intel both posted disappointing results, sending shares lower.
— Carmen Reinicke
Stock futures opened just slightly lower to start trading Sunday evening.
Dow and S&P 500 futures were lower by 0.2%. Nasdaq futures were off by about 0.3%.
— John Melloy
Stocks enter the typically volatile month of August with a tailwind. There are dozens of earnings reports in the week ahead, with more than 20% of the S&P 500 companies reporting. There is also key data, with Friday’s July jobs report the most important.
Big economic reports could become important catalysts now that the Federal Reserve has indicated it is going to rely on data for its decision on how much to raise interest rates in September. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said the labor market remains strong, and investors worried about an economic slowdown will be carefully watching to see how strong job creation remains. There are 250,000 jobs expected. According to CFRA, since 1995, the S&P 500 has averaged a 0.5% decline in August. Strategists say earnings could remain a positive force.
“A lot of this is better than feared. If that process continues, it’s likely to help the market grind higher. The market seems to be sitting on this notion that we had priced in Armageddon and thus far, that has not been thrust upon us,” said one strategist.
— Patti Domm