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Sunday, October 13, 2024

SPX Hit New Highs on Solid Bank Earnings. Possible China Stimulus Ahead.

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Main Content:

1.    Major indexes weekly performance 

2.    U.S stocks weekly wrap 

3.    S&P 500 sector index weekly/month performance 

4.    China/Hong Kong stocks weekly wrap 

5.    Singapore stocks weekly wrap 

6.    Major indexes weekly chart and technical support & resistance levels

U.S.

For the week of Oct 11, both the S&P 500 Index (SPX) and Dow Jones Industrial Average(DJI) moved to record highs, helped by some upside surprises to kick off earnings season. Shares in JPMorgan Chase(JPM) and Wells Fargo(WFC) rose on Friday after the banking giants reported smaller-than-feared declines in third-quarter profits, while the former managed a small increase in revenues. Refer to below major indexes performance table for the the week.

Key highlights for the week and next:

1.    Inflation modestly higher than expected. As reported on Thursday, both headline and core inflation in September a tick above expectation, which rose by 0.2% and 0.3% respectively. On a year-over-year basis, core prices increased 3.3% in September versus 3.2% in August, marking the first increase since March 2023. 

2.    While September inflation came in slightly hotter than expected, it's unlikely to stop the Fed from continuing its easing campaign, as it has now shifted its focus from inflation to the labor market. It’s expected quarter-point rate cuts at each meeting until Fed policy settles around 3% - 3.5%. 

3.    The CME FedWatch Tool shows a decent (14.1%) chance of the Fed keeping rates steady for the Fed’s next policy meeting in November. Minutes from the Fed’s last policy meeting released Wednesday, also revealed that several members preferred only a 25-basis-point (0.25 percentage points) rate cut. 

4.    The Q3 earnings season kicked off on Friday, with some of the big U.S. banks reporting better-than-expected results. Consensus expects earnings for the quarter to grow 4.2%, the fifth consecutive quarter of growth. A key trend to watch is whether an expected slowdown in earnings of the Magnificent 7 group of stocks coincides with a pickup in earnings growth from the rest of the market, or the S&P 493. 

SPX sectors in play

Six out of the 11 SPX sectors closed with gains for the week. Technology (XLK) outperformed, as a solid gain in NVIDIA(NVDA) shares compensate for a decline in Google parent Alphabet(GOOGL), following reports of a possible breakup of the company. Tesla was also weak following a skeptical response to the company’s highly anticipated unveiling of its new “robotaxis” and “robovans.” Utilities(XLU) shares lagged. Refer to below SPX sectors ETF weekly performance table.

Indexes technical levels

All the three major indexes closed up for the week with each added more than 1%. Both the SPX and DJI closed at record new highs. Going forward, elevated valuations, geopolitical risks in the Middle East, and a tight U.S. presidential election could act as catalysts for short-term volatility.

Click below three indexes for their weekly charts.  

DJI weekly chart

SPX weekly chart

Nasdaq weekly chart


China/HK

China stocks fell over a holiday-shortened week as optimism about Beijing’s stimulus measures waned. The Shanghai Composite Index(SSE) lost 3.56%, while the blue chip CSI 300 gave up 3.25%. In Hong Kong, the benchmark Hang Seng Index fell 6.53%. (Refer to the above weekly performance table).

Key highlights for the week and outlook for China/HK:

1.    The National Development and Reform Commission(NDRC), the country’s economic planning agency, announced at a press conference on Tuesday that China would speed up countercyclical measures to support growth. The speech largely reiterated plans to boost investment and increase direct support to low-income groups and new graduates. Officials also stated that the central government will continue issuing ultra-long special sovereign bonds in 2025 to fund major projects and invest RMB 100 billion in strategic areas. 

2.    The People’s Bank of China launched a RMB 500 billion swap facility to provide liquidity to institutional investors to buy stocks, Bloomberg reported. Under the mechanism, the central bank will accept applications from nonbank financial institutions such as securities firms, funds, and insurers to obtain highly liquid assets, such as government bonds and central bank bills, if they provide certain collateral. The facility was part of a sweeping stimulus package announced by the central bank in late September that included interest rate cuts and other measures aimed at jumpstarting China’s economy. 

3.    Spending by Chinese consumers over the long holiday that ended Monday lagged pre-pandemic levels, Bloomberg reported, citing official data. Passenger traffic rose by 5.9%, while spending increased by 6.3% year on year. Box office sales totaled RMB 2.1 billion, down from RMB 2.7 billion reported a year earlier. However, average daily spending per trip was approximately RMB 131, up from RMB 113 during the five-day Labor Day holiday in May. 

4.    The highly anticipated briefing by China’s Ministry of Finance has wrapped up on Saturday Oct 13 - alas with no specific pledge of the 2 trillion yuan ($283 billion) in fresh economic stimulus that investors were hoping for in the lead up to the event. However, Policymakers offered clearer guidance on the focus of fiscal policy, vowing new measures to support the beleaguered property sector and to relieve the debt burden of local officials. Investors are turning their attention to the next meeting in the coming weeks of China’s top legislature, the National People’s Congress(NPC) Standing Committee, which has the power to approve more government bond sales. Investors and analysts expect China to deploy as much as 2 trillion yuan in fresh fiscal stimulus in order to shore up growth and boost confidence, a flash survey by Bloomberg shows.

Click below SSE and .HSI indexes for their weekly charts. 

SSE weekly chart

.HSI weekly chart


Singapore

STI index (STI) closed with a modest decline of 0.43% for the week. The index has been in sideways trading in the range of 3544- 3653 level over the past four weeks, while it hit new record of 3652.62 during this period. There were only five stock closed up among its 30 component stocks(refer to below STI index stock weekly return table). Overall, the index still in uptrend but in sideway consolidation mode right now, the healthy breather is essential for a bull market to continue.

Refer to below index stocks weekly performance.

Click below for STI weekly chart.

STI weekly chart

Source: Some contents and data excerpted from various public market reports.

Monday, October 7, 2024

Oil Prices Rise on Escalating Middle East Tensions

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Main Content:

1.    Major indexes weekly performance 

2.    U.S stocks weekly wrap 

3.   S&P 500 sector index weekly/month performance 

4.    China/Hong Kong stocks weekly wrap 

5.    Singapore stocks weekly wrap 

6.    Major indexes weekly chart and technical support & resistance levels

U.S.

For the week of Oct 4, U.S three major indexes closed higher for the volatile week, thanks to a monster Sep jobs growth data released on Friday, though the same data sent odds of a 50-basis point rate cut next month to zero in futures trading.

After a strong three quarters of the year, with the S&P 500 up over 19%, stock markets began the fourth quarter on a volatile note. This was in large part because of elevated uncertainty around four key areas: The U.S. labor market, port strikes on the East Coast, tensions in the Middle East, and the looming U.S. presidential election. Refer to below major indexes performance table for the month and the week.


Major indexes monthly performance for September

Key highlights for the week and next:

1.    U.S. labor market was perhaps the biggest upside surprise for the markets in the week. The U.S. nonfarm-jobs report for September on Friday indicated that not only did jobs added well-exceed expectations, coming in at 254k versus forecasts of 150k, the unemployment rate also ticked lower, from 4.2% to 4.1%. Last month's total jobs added was also revised higher, from 142k to 159k. 

2.    Strong labour report impact on Fed rate cut: After the labor-report data was released, markets immediately reacted, pushing Treasury bond yields sharply higher and pricing in rate cuts of 0.25% rather than 0.5% for either the November or December meeting this year. Overall, we continue to see the Fed gradually bringing interest rates down toward the 3.0% - 3.5% range through next year, which should be supportive of both consumer and corporate spending. 

3.    Geopolitical tensions also escalated in the Middle East early this week, as Israel faced an Iranian missile strike and deliberated retaliation. From a market perspective, the immediate response to the escalation was a rise in oil and commodity prices, as well as sharp move higher in the VIX volatility index. However, safe-heavy assets such as gold and Treasury bonds have largely reversed to moving back lower. 

4.    Inflation data ahead coming Friday on Oct 11.

 

SPX sectors in play

Six out of the 11 SPX sectors closed with gains for the week. Energy(XLE) and Financials(XLF) stocks outperformed, while Materials(XLB) and Consumer Staplers(XLP) stocks lagged. Refer to below SPX sectors ETF weekly performance table.

Indexes technical levels

The three major indexes had a strong rally after a surprising Sep jobs data released before market open on Friday, the indexes since recovered all their losses earlier in the week and closed positive for the week. Sentiment turned bullish and bulls are still in charge by now. Click below three indexes for their weekly charts.  

DJI weekly chart

SPX weekly chart

Nasdaq weekly chart

 

China/HK

China stocks surged in a holiday-shortened week as optimism about Beijing’s comprehensive support measures offset disappointing data. The Shanghai Composite Index(SSE) gained 8.06% and the blue chip CSI 300 added 8.48%. In Hong Kong, the benchmark Hang Seng Index rallied 10.2%. (Refer to the above weekly performance table). Markets in mainland China were closed on Tuesday for the National Day holiday and will reopen on Tuesday, October 8. Hong Kong markets were closed Tuesday but reopened Wednesday.

Key highlights for the week and outlook for China/HK:

1.    China’s factory activity contracted for the fifth consecutive month amid weak demand. The official manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to an above-consensus 49.8 in September from 49.1 in August, according to the country’s statistics office but remained below the 50-mark threshold separating growth from contraction. The manufacturing PMI has now been in contraction for all but three months since April 2023, according to Bloomberg. The nonmanufacturing PMI, which measures construction and services activity, fell to a lower-than-expected 50 in September, its lowest level in 21 months. 

2.    Separately, the private Caixin/S&P Global survey of manufacturing activity eased to 49.3 in September from the prior month’s 50.4, its lowest reading since July 2023 and below economists’ forecasts. The Caixin services PMI fell to 50.3 from 51.6 in August but remained in expansion. 

3.    The value of new home sales by the country’s top 100 developers fell 37.7% in September from a year ago, accelerating from August’s 26.8% drop, according to the China Real Estate Information Corp. However, market sentiment improved after three of China’s largest cities relaxed homebuying restrictions on the back of the central government’s extensive stimulus package unveiled the prior week. On Sunday, Guangzhou became the first so-called Tier 1 city to remove all restrictions on home purchases. Shanghai, China’s financial center, and Shenzhen, the country’s tech hub, also announced reductions in minimum down-payment ratios for first and second homes in an effort to stoke demand.

Click below SSE and .HSI indexes for their weekly charts. 

SSE weekly chart

.HSI weekly chart

Singapore

STI index (STI) closed with a modest 0.44% increase, bringing its YTD performance to 10.77%. The index displayed a mixed performance across its component stocks, with notable divergences between top weekly gainers and losers. Seatrium was top gainer with 15% weekly gain, possible implication of crude oil price surge. The three local banks saw obvious divergence this week, DBS gained 1.17% while UOB and OCBC declined 1.12% and 1.46% respectively. Refer to below index stocks weekly performance.

Click below for STI weekly chart.

STI weekly chart

Source: Some contents and data excerpted from various public market reports.

Sunday, September 29, 2024

China Announces Robust Stimulus Measures

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Main Content:

1.    Major indexes weekly performance 

2.    U.S stocks weekly wrap 

3.    S&P 500 sector index weekly performance 

4.    China/Hong Kong stocks weekly wrap 

5.    Singapore stocks weekly wrap 

6.    Major indexes weekly chart and technical support & resistance levels

U.S.

For the week of Sep 27, the Dow Jones Industrial Average(DJI) and the S&P 500 Index(SPX) moved to record highs, as investors appeared to celebrate new stimulus measures in China (see below). Chemicals and materials stocks were particularly strong on hopes for a rebound in Chinese demand. Copper prices also increased, raising hopes that “Doctor Copper” was again reflecting a healthier global industrial economy. Refer to below major indexes weekly performance table.

Key highlights for the week and next:

1.    Election heading to Nov 5. This election poses uncertainty, and markets hate uncertainty. Historically, market volatility has risen leading up to elections and has subsided after. Markets have generally done well after elections, so stick around. 

2.    Inflation gauge nears Fed’s target. On Friday, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, the core (less food and energy) personal consumer expenditures (PCE) price index, rose only 0.1% in August, a tick below expectations. On a year-over-year basis, the index climbed only 2.2%, close to the Fed’s 2.0% long-term inflation target and the least since February 2021.

SPX sectors in play

Six out of the 11 SPX sectors closed with gains for the week. Chemicals and materials (XLB) stocks were particularly strong on hopes for a rebound in Chinese demand. “Doctor Copper” especially strong. Technology stocks related sectors including Consumer Discretionary(XLY) and Communication Services(XLC) outperformed as well, helped by reports of a possible takeover of Intel and news that NVIDIA’s CEO had ceased sales of his own shares in the company. In addition, chipmaker Micron Technology surged and seemed to provide a general tailwind for the sector following its upbeat outlook for artificial intelligence demand. Energy stocks (XLE) lagged. Refer to below SPX sectors ETF weekly performance table.

Indexes technical levels

Both Dow(DJI) and SPX indexes hit new records again, while Nasdaq Composite(COMP) also closed its 3rd weekly gains in a row. Click below three indexes for their weekly charts.  

DJI weekly chart

SPX weekly chart

Nasdaq weekly chart

 

China/HK

China stocks surged after Beijing unveiled a slew of measures to shore up the economy. The Shanghai Composite Index(SSE) gained 12.81% and the blue chip CSI 300 added 15.7%. In Hong Kong, the benchmark Hang Seng Index gained 13%. (Refer to the above weekly performance table). The rally marked the biggest weekly gain for the benchmark CSI 300 since 2008, when Beijing unveiled a massive stimulus package during the global financial crisis.

Key highlights for the week and outlook for China/HK:

1.    The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) cut its reserve requirement ratio by 50 basis points for most banks, its second cut in banks’ required reserves this year, and reduced its seven-day reverse repo rate—a key short-term policy rate—by 20 basis points to 1.5%. It cut the medium-term lending facility rate by 30 basis points to 2%, marking the largest-ever cut to the monetary policy tool since the central bank began using it to guide market rates in 2016, according to Bloomberg. The moves were part of a sweeping stimulus package announced last Tuesday at a rare press conference by PBOC Governor Pan Gongsheng that aims to jumpstart China’s ailing economy. Other measures unveiled by the PBOC included a rate cut for existing home mortgages and slashing the nationwide down payment ratio for second home purchases to 15% from 25%. 

2.    On Thursday, China’s top leaders vowed to take action to stabilize the country’s property market and make real estate prices “stop declining,” according to state media. The readout from the 24-man Politburo included a statement that China would deploy the necessary fiscal spending to meet its 2024 growth target of around 5%. The Politburo statement contained no specifics on fiscal spending. However, China plans to issue special sovereign bonds worth about RMB 2 trillion (USD 284.4 billion) this year as part of the fiscal stimulus plan, Reuters reported, citing unnamed sources. The package will include RMB 1 trillion of special sovereign debt focused on boosting domestic consumption, which has flagged since pandemic lockdowns ended. 

3.    Taken together, analysts believe the stimulus package is a positive development for China’s economy and will bolster near-term activity and pull market sentiment from very weak levels.

Click below SSE and .HSI indexes for their weekly charts. 

SSE weekly chart

.HSI weekly chart


Singapore

STI index closed lower after a six-week consecutive rally with total of 11% gains, the decline possible due to proit-taking led by the banks. Counters related to China rallied following China/HK markets’ stunning gains. Refer to below index stocks weekly performance.

Click below for STI weekly chart.

STI weekly chart

Source: Some contents and data excerpted from various public market reports.

Saturday, September 21, 2024

Fed Cuts Rates for First Time in Over Four Years, Stocks Hit New High

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Main Content:

1.    Major indexes weekly performance 

2.    U.S stocks weekly wrap 

3.    S&P 500 sector index weekly performance 

4.    China/Hong Kong stocks weekly wrap 

5.    Singapore stocks weekly wrap 

6.    Major indexes weekly chart and technical support & resistance levels

U.S.

For the week of Sep 20, major U.S. indexes moved to record highs as investors celebrated the kickoff to what many expect to be a prolonged Fed rate-cutting cycle. The rally was also relatively broad, with the smaller-cap indexes outperforming, the small-cap Russell 2000 Index, in particular, ended the week roughly 9% below the all-time high it established in November 2021. Refer to below major indexes weekly performance table.

Key highlights for the week and next:

1.    First rate cut to start easing cycle. After the most aggressive tightening campaign in 40 years and the second-longest pause in history with rates in restrictive territory, the Fed cut its policy rate last week for the first time in four years. Instead of the typical quarter-point move (0.25%), the Fed opted to lower rates by a larger half a percentage point (0.5%), taking the policy target range down to 4.75%-5.0% from 5.25%-5.5%. 

2.    Yield curve normalises. The 10-year yield's premium to the 2-year yield is now around 15 basis points. The yield curve is important because an inverted yield curve is an indication of a recession. This time round, the economy has not - to-date - gone into a recession. The normalisation of the yield curve is indicative of normal economic conditions. As to whether a recession has been averted completely or contained, that remains to be seen.   

SPX sectors in play

Eight out of the 11 SPX sectors closed with gains for the week. The rally was also relatively broad, Energy(XLE), Financials(XLF), Communication Services(XLC) and Consumer Discretionary(XLY) were among the top gainers, while the smaller Real Estate(XLRE) and Consumer Stapler(XLP) lagged. Refer to below SPX sectors ETF weekly performance table.

Indexes technical levels

Both Dow(DJI) and SPX indexes closed new records, while Nasdaq Composite(COMP) is about 4% away to its peak. Click below three indexes for their weekly charts.  

DJI weekly chart

SPX weekly chart

Nasdaq weekly chart

 

China/HK

China stocks rose in a holiday-shortened week as the Fed’s decision to cut interest rates offset a batch of disappointing economic data. The Shanghai Composite Index(SSE) gained 1.21% and the blue chip CSI 300 added 1.32%. In Hong Kong, the benchmark Hang Seng Index gained 5.12%. (Refer to the above weekly performance table). Markets in mainland China were closed Monday and Tuesday for the Mid-Autumn Festival. Hong Kong markets were closed Wednesday but reopened Thursday.

Key highlights for the week and outlook for China/HK:

1.    August data underscored the slowing momentum in China’s economy. Industrial production rose 4.5% from a year earlier, lagging forecasts and down from July’s 5.1% increase amid weaker commodity prices and auto sales. Retail sales expanded a below-consensus 2.1% from a year ago, easing from July’s 2.7% rise. Fixed asset investment rose a lower-than-expected 3.4% in the January to August period, down from the 3.6% expansion recorded in the first seven months this year, while property investment fell 10.2% year on year. 

2.    China’s urban unemployment rate unexpectedly edged up to 5.3%, a six-month high, from 5.2% in July. The property sector, now in its fourth year of a downturn, showed no sign of a letup. New home prices in 70 cities fell 0.7% in August, according to the National Bureau of Statistics, unchanged from the pace of declines in the prior three months and marking the 14th consecutive monthly drop. 

3.    Taken together, the indicators suggested growing risks for Beijing in meeting its economic growth target of about 5% this year. As a result, many economists expect that China’s government will implement further easing measures to stimulate the economy. The start of the long-awaited U.S. interest rate cuts is also expected to give policymakers more room to cut rates in the coming months.

Click below SSE and .HSI indexes for their weekly charts. 

SSE weekly chart

.HSI weekly chart


Singapore

STI index closed to new record on its marvellous 6th consecutive weekly gain. Blue chip industrials and banks led the rally. Refer to below index stocks weekly performance.

Click below for STI weekly chart.

STI weekly chart

Source: Some contents and data excerpted from various public market reports.