In the Markets - February 8, 2021
U.S. Markets: The major U.S. equity benchmarks rebounded from the previous week’s steep losses, helped by plans for a new fiscal stimulus and improving vaccine distribution. The large-cap S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite, and small-cap Russell 2000 indexes all reached record highs. The Dow Jones Industrial Average soared over 1100 points finishing the week at 31,138, a gain of 3.9%. The technology-heavy NASDAQ surged 6% to 13,856. By market cap, the large cap S&P 500 added 4.6%, while the mid cap S&P 400 and small cap Russell 2000 rallied 5.8% and 7.7%, respectively.
International Markets: Major international markets finished the week with green across the board. Canada’s TSX rose 4.6% while the United Kingdom’s FTSE 100 gained 1.3%. On Europe’s mainland, France’s CAC 40 added 4.8% and Germany’s DAX finished up 4.6%. In Asia, China’s Shanghai Composite gained 0.4% while Japan’s Nikkei closed up 4.0%. As grouped by Morgan Stanley Capital International, emerging markets finished the week up 5.5%, while developed markets rose 3.2%.
Commodities: Precious metals were mixed last week. Gold retreated for a second week, declining -2% to $1813.00 per ounce. After hitting a high of over $30 per ounce, Silver settled to close at $27.02, a gain of 0.4%. The big gainer among commodities was oil, surged almost 9% on renewed hopes that vaccination efforts would lead to a full reopening of the U.S. economy in the near future. West Texas Intermediate crude oil finished the week up $4.65 to close at $56.85 per barrel. Copper, viewed by some analysts as a barometer of world economic health due to its wide variety of industrial uses, retraced last week’s decline finishing up 1.97%.
U.S. Economic News: The U.S. added just 49,000 jobs in January as the U.S. struggles to recover from a resurgence of coronavirus cases at the end of last year. The reading was in line with the consensus forecast of 50,000 new jobs. There were notable gains in professional and business services (97,000 jobs created, but nearly all were temporary help). Private education, wholesale trade, and mining also added jobs. However, leisure and hospitality, retail trade, health care, and transportation and warehousing all lost jobs. The unemployment rate tumbled to 6.3% from 6.7%, below expectations of an unchanged reading, but that decline was for the wrong reason: people abandoning job searches and thereby dropping out of the labor force. Economists say the true level of joblessness is several points higher. Curt Long, chief economist at the National Association of Federally-Insured Credit Unions stated, “There is still a long road ahead to full employment, and the case for fiscal stimulus got a bit stronger.”
The number of Americans filing first-time claims for unemployment benefits fell to a nine-week low last week, suggesting hiring is slowly beginning to pick up again. The Labor Department reported initial jobless claims declined by 33,000 last week to 779,000. Economists had forecast claims to total 830,000. It was the third consecutive decline and a hopeful sign that layoffs have begun to taper amid more vaccinations and a rollover in the COVID curve. Continuing claims, which counts the number of Americans already receiving benefits, fell by 193,000 to 4.592 million. That number is reported with a one-week delay.
Activity among the nation’s manufacturers pulled back but still remained strong. The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reported its manufacturing index fell 1.8 points in January to 58.7. Economists had expected a reading of 60.0. Still, it was only the second pullback in the index since last April and the index remains close to its highest level since November 2018. Of the 18 industries tracked by ISM, 16 reported growth. Analysts note the breadth of the expansion supports continued gains in manufacturing output. The pullback was led by slower growth in new orders and production. A separate survey from the Markit organization reported its U.S. Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) increased 2.1 points to 59.2—a record high. In contrast with the ISM report, the Markit survey indicated faster growth in output and new orders.
The much larger services side of the U.S. economy started the new year on a positive note, as well, according to ISM. ISM reported its non-manufacturing index (NMI) increased 1.0 point to 58.7. Economists were expecting a -0.7 point pullback to 57.0. The reading was its highest since February 2019. The latest reading is consistent with above-trend economic expansion. While survey respondents noted that various COVID restrictions continue to weigh on activity, they also expressed optimism about business conditions and the economic recovery. Of the 18 industries in the survey, 14 registered growth and four contracted. The net number indicates a broad-based expansion and is consistent with continued growth. Separately, the Markit Services PMI rebounded 3.6 points in January to 58.3, its second-best level since March 2015.
International Economic News: Canada’s economy shed over 213,000 jobs in January as lockdowns forced more businesses to close their doors across the country. Statistics Canada reported the jobless rate ticked up 0.6% to 9.4%. That’s the highest level since August. January’s decline means that Canada now has 858,000 fewer jobs than it did in February of last year—just before the coronavirus crisis began. The reading was far higher than the 40,000 economists had expected. Almost all of the job losses came from Ontario and Quebec, which lost a combined 251,000 jobs — mostly in retail, accommodation and food services. That plunge was offset by slight job gains in Alberta, Manitoba, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, while the jobs number held steady in British Columbia, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick.
Across the Atlantic, the Bank of England expects the United Kingdom’s economy will “recover rapidly” as vaccines are rolled out this year. The bank expects GDP to shrink by around 4% in the first quarter as a result of the latest lockdown measures. However, its latest monetary policy report suggests a brighter outlook for much of the rest of the year. "GDP is projected to recover rapidly towards pre-COVID levels over 2021, as the vaccination program is assumed to lead to an easing of COVID-related restrictions and people's health concerns," it said. For 2022, the Bank predicts growth of 7.25%, up from a previously forecast 6.25%.
On Europe’s mainland, French Prime Minister Jean Castex rejected calls for a third lockdown because the “economic, social and human costs can’t be justified”. During a press conference, Castex said stabilizing new infection rates and an impending vaccine roll-out means the government can hold off from imposing new nationwide measures. France's daily infection rate is just marginally lower than the UK's with the country reporting 316.47 cases of Covid per million people compared to Britain's 331.09. Castex said another lockdown could only be enacted “as a last resort”. “The situation today does not justify such a move,” he added.
Germany’s governing parties have agreed on more help for families with children and people on benefits, as well as tax help for companies, as they try to keep Europe’s biggest economy on course to grow out of the pandemic. Leaders of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s governing coalition agreed to give a one-time 150-euro ($180) bonus to families that receive child benefit, following a 300-euro bonus last year. There also will be a 150-euro payment for people on welfare benefits. Restaurants, cafes and bars have been closed, except for take-outs and deliveries since early November as part of a lockdown that was expanded in mid-December and is still in force. Merkel and state governors will confer next week to decide what, if any, restrictions can be loosened.
In Asia, China’s growth is expected to moderate in the coming months as the country faces risks on two fronts according to Goldman Sachs chief economist Andrew Tilton. China is expected to show “spectacular” gross domestic product numbers in the first quarter of the year, Tilton said. That growth may lead Chinese policymakers to pull back on economic stimulus. Furthermore, China is experiencing a resurgence of local coronavirus outbreaks. Chinese authorities have recently imposed new restrictions in an effort to suppress a series of outbreaks in and around Beijing. Ultimately, Tilton expects the Chinese economy to stay in the relatively “happy middle of these two scenarios” over the next six to nine months. “But I think markets will probably worry at times about one or both of those,” he noted.
Unable to rein in a third wave of coronavirus infections after a month-long state of emergency, Japan announced it is the extending the emergency for another month. The move comes despite the mounting toll on the economy and poses a threat of impacting the country’s Summer Olympics preparations. Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga told Parliament that thanks to the current state of emergency “the number of new COVID-19 patients nationwide is heading downward.” “But we need to continue this trend,” he added. The state of emergency requests residents to cut unnecessary outings and businesses to shorten hours.
(Sources: All index- and returns-data from Yahoo Finance; news from Reuters, Barron’s, Wall St. Journal, Bloomberg.com, ft.com, guggenheimpartners.com, zerohedge.com, ritholtz.com, markit.com, financialpost.com, Eurostat, Statistics Canada, Yahoo! Finance, stocksandnews.com, marketwatch.com, wantchinatimes.com, BBC, 361capital.com, pensionpartners.com, cnbc.com, CNBC, FactSet.)
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