Earnings & Election Jitters Spook the Markets Welcome to November:
Earnings & Election Jitters Spook the Markets By Donn Goodman November 03, 2024 Welcome back, readers. Hopefully, you had a good week (perhaps participating in Halloween festivities) and were able to âtune outâ the election noise that seems to resonate every minute of the day on social media or on television shows. I watch a fair amount of sports-NFL and NBA games, and I have noticed that every commercial is full of local and national political ads. Couple this with an onslaught of earnings announcements, especially the Mag 7 announcements this past week (Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, to name a few), and you had the potential for positive and negative surprises in the stock market this past week. Stocks finished the week lower following a few very volatile sessions. There was a mixed bag of corporate earnings as Microsoft and Appleâs forecasts were a bit light on future expectations. Meta hinted at much higher AI spending and Amazon beat the street by a healthy margin. Other stocks also provided a mixed bag that rattled investor confidence right before the âtrick or treatâ began in earnest on Thursday (the last day of October). See the illustration below: What we continue to witness from retail and financial stocks (American Express) is that consumers continue to spend. One would have to believe that wage gains along with good stock market returns these past two years have helped smaller investors believe they are in better financial shape than some of the credit card companies and their high credit card/debt balances would have you think. As we prepare for the upcoming election results this week and an upcoming Fed meeting, we were met with a big surprise in the financial markets on Friday as non-farm payrolls missed expectations by a wide margin. Earlier in the week, inflation numbers indicated that we continued to trend downward, but month-over-month numbers have remained elevated. These two data points prompted every analyst to start speaking on whether the Fed will lower rates at their next meeting. Last month this was a given. The consensus by weekâs end was they would still cut by 25 basis points at their next meeting. Election season. The market this week followed the historical 4-year election blueprint. Enhanced volatility is a typical byproduct of election season anxiety. Mixed with negative economic growth numbers, especially from a lack of job creation, you have a nervous market. On Thursday, this set of factors âspookedâ the markets, and technology stocks sold off over 2% on Halloween. Historically, the markets ALWAYS seem to see elevated volatility ahead of National elections. In 2020 the S&P experienced a sharp 7% decline in late October, as then (and now) uncertainty loomed over how the upcoming administration might affect energy policy, taxes and healthcare. Leading up to this yearâs election, we see a similar pattern. We also have new geopolitical risks coming from Russia, the Middle East and ongoing extreme vitriol and divisiveness in our own country. Expect increased volatility until the dust clears and we have these critical decisions behind us. Still going strong. The last couple of weeks we have been writing about just how good the 2024 stock market has been, so far. We want to reiterate that the returns already this year are well above average and continue to keep investor sentiment high as well as attract new retail investors into the markets. If you have not read the past two weekâs Market Outlooks showing just how good the markets have been this year, [you can go here to read or review what we have written](). The financial markets donât like uncertainty. However, the technology stock plunge (on Thursday) was not so extreme as the NASDAQ scored a new all-time high earlier in the week before pulling back in the second half of the week. See charts below: Election outcome. I have been asked quite a few times lately what I think of the election and who I think becomes our next President. Like you, I follow much of the noise coming from both sides and see the polls, which describe this as a âtoss-upâ race. Different industries and sectors of the economy will directly benefit from a Harris or Trump victory. If Harris wins: Her policies would likely prioritize clean energy, healthcare and technology. Companies dealing with green infrastructure, electric vehicles and renewable energy would benefit. However, her administration would likely continue to be a high regulatory environment, which could force pressure on large companies, including the mega-cap technology firms. Gold and other commodities could benefit from increasing government spending and inflationary pressures. If Trump wins: In a second Trump term, we will likely see a pro-business agenda with further tax cuts and likely deregulation of government policies. Sectors such as industrials, energy and financials would likely be the beneficiaries. Defense stocks and traditional manufacturing industries would likely benefit from additional government spending in these areas. Bitcoin would be a bigger beneficiary under the Trump administration so also watch for that to potentially accelerate. What if? I have also been asked a few times, âWhat if the Republicans sweep the Presidency, the Senate, and the House?â Not knowing what might occur, I have consistently said that I think government works best with checks and balances, which we often call âgridlockâ. The following chart does a much better job of showing the election cycles and what happens with stock market performance operating within a sweep or gridlock under different administrations: More on the upcoming Election. I am very aware that most investors want to know how this upcoming Election turns out. We could spend a whole Outlook addressing many of the prognostications and the ultimate victorâs impact on the economy. Our friend, Jeffrey W. Huge (a CMT-Chartered Market Technician), is a very good and thorough writer and market analyst. On Saturday (yesterday) he put out his HUGE INSIGHTS: The Big Picture #39 issue (a substack paid issue) that he is offering for free this weekend. You might enjoy checking out his monthly publication. He does an excellent job of providing different polls and angles on the upcoming election. You can obtain his latest offering here: [(=) A snapshot of the Big Picture and the election section follows: Click here to continue reading about - 6-Week win streaks
- MarketGauge âColor Chartsâ turn negative
- The best 3-6 months of the year
- Gold & Silver pull back
- The Big View Bullets
- The weekly market analysis video [Click here to continue to the FREE analysis]([Click here to continue to the PREMIUM analysis]() Best wishes for your trading,
Donn Goodman Every week we review the big picture of the market's technical condition as seen through the lens of our Big View data charts. The bullets provide a quick summary organized by conditions we see as being risk-on, risk-off, or neutral. The video analysis dives deeper. The bullets and video were done by Geoff Bysshe this week. Risk On - Seasonality. November is the to first or second most bullish month in[most sectors](=) and the [market indexes](. (+)
- Long-term index trends as depicted by the [weekly charts of the SPY, QQQ, DIA and IWM]() are strong, and the daily charts sit on the 50-day MAâs. However, there is short-term concern (see Risk-Off). (+) Neutral - THE ELECTION FOLLOWED BY A FED MEETING ON WEDNESDAY are neutral because they are not predictable. They could be a catalyst that could begin a significant short term-move in either direction. In the video I describe the significance of the Election Range and suggest getting this report on market patterns related to the election and how to trade them - [www.marketgauge.com/electionRpt-2024](. (=) Click here to continue reading about - 6-Week win streaks
- MarketGauge âColor Chartsâ turn negative
- The best 3-6 months of the year
- Gold & Silver pull back
- The Big View Bullets
- The weekly market analysis video [Click here to continue to the FREE analysis and video.]()[Click here to continue to the PREMIUM analysis and video](). Best wishes for your trading, Keith Schneider
CEO
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