We had thought that stocks were beginning to straighten themselves out. Apparently, we were wrong.
Beginning in mid-May, we took note of divergences between the Dow and the NASDAQ, the indexes and volume, and the indexes and the Advance/Decline line. We took note of these divergences on this podcast.
These divergences were, perhaps, explained by the fact that the broad market was pausing, consolidating even correcting, while a narrow slice of the tech sector, particularly the chip stocks, particularly the Magnificent Seven, particularly NVIDIA continued to rally. While we worried over these developments a bit, we finally concluded that markets were waiting for evidence that the Fed would start cutting rates at which time, we hypothesized that stocks might continue the rally that began back in October.
That hypothesis seemed confirmed over the last week or so as all the major indexes rallied and rallied in unison, and as long dormant volume expanded and as the advance decline line moved solidly into positive territory.
But, Wednesday’s market action, and we’ll get into the numbers in just a minute, presented some countervailing evidence, and then some.
We think our hypothesis remains solid, if perhaps requiring some refinement and nuance, or maybe just some time for these forces to play out.
What is clear is that these things never unfold in a straight line and to steal a baseball analogy, yesterday, markets put up some crooked numbers.
Stocks broke down on Wednesday in a rather dramatic sell-off and on rising, above average volume.
Interest rates were mixed but mostly little changed on the day.
Oil, Gold, and Bitcoin
There was little in the way of news to explain the dramatic sell-off in stocks, and what news we had was pretty good.
Building permits and housing starts both came in well above expectations on Wednesday and Industrial production likewise surprised, especially us, to the upside.
Industrial production is a peek inside manufacturing, but it also considers the output of mines and utilities.
Today we get an unadulterated look at the manufacturing sector with the release of the Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank’s Manufacturing Index so far for July. Hope springs eternal here at the Buzz on Business!
It’s Thursday so we also get Initial and Continuing Jobless Claims. Expectations are that unemployment claims have ticked up modestly in the last week. We shall see.
Sixteen companies made it through the filters here at the Ministry of Truth and all but two exceeded expectations for second quarter profits.
A bunch more report today including Netflix, after the bell. Netflix always seems to generate some excitement on Wall Street. Analysts expect that the company earned $4.74 per share on sales of $9.53 billion in the second quarter.
We’ll be watching, so all you’ve got to do is keep it right here on the Buzz.