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Re: ReturntoSender post# 9204

Tuesday, 01/15/2019 5:05:02 PM

Tuesday, January 15, 2019 5:05:02 PM

Post# of 12809

High-Growth Stocks Help Wall Street Rally Past Disappointing Earnings
15-Jan-19 16:25 ET
Dow +155.75 at 24065.59, Nasdaq +117.92 at 7023.85, S&P +27.69 at 2610.26

https://www.briefing.com/investor/markets/stock-market-update/2019/1/15/highgrowth-stocks-help-wall-street-rally-past-disappointing-earnings-.htm

[BRIEFING.COM] The S&P 500 gained 1.1% on Tuesday, as a shift to high-growth stocks helped the market rally past several earnings disappointments. The ability of the market to rally on bad news fed into a belief that the bad news was priced in already during the December rout, which in turn fueled hope that bargain-hunting efforts will keep the 2019 rally try going.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.7%, the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.7%, and the Russell 2000 gained 0.9%.

The S&P 500 health care (+1.7%), communication services (+1.7%), and information technology (+1.5%) sectors led the advance. Conversely, the industrials (-0.3%) and material (-0.7%) sectors underperformed.

Stocks jumped out of the gate despite early weakness from the heavily-weighted financial sector (+0.8%).

Weaker-than-expected (but not weak) earnings reports from JPMorgan Chase (JPM 101.68, +0.74, +0.7%) and Wells Fargo (WFC 47.67, -0.75, -1.6%) provided an early justification to sell the banks. JPMorgan missed both top and bottom line estimates, but net income increased 67%, earnings per share increased 85%, and net revenue growth increased 4%. Wells Fargo for its part missed top line estimates but beat earnings estimates.

On a related note, Delta Air Lines (DAL 47.83, +0.08, +0.2%) overcame a Q1 earnings warning.

Dow component UnitedHealth (UNH 256.87, +8.81, +3.6%) outperformed after it beat earnings estimates and helped drive the leadership of the health care sector.

The preference for high-growth tech stocks kept the broader market afloat despite the earnings disappointments. The outperformance of the growth stocks on Tuesday could be rationalized in part as an effort to invest in companies with stronger growth prospects amid a slowing growth environment.

Netflix (NFLX 354.64, +21.70, +6.5%), for instance, remained in growth mode with reports indicating it will raise its U.S. subscription prices to finance its original content and heavy debt load.

Notably, JPMorgan and the financial sector eventually turned it around in late morning trading. A pivot from negative territory into positive territory helped lift the S&P 500 to session highs (+1.2%) and above the closely-watched 2600 level, which approximates the low end of the 2018 trading range.

The broader market succumbed to some knee-jerk selling shortly after 2:00 p.m. ET when it was learned the British Parliament voted against PM Theresa May's Brexit deal, as expected. The outcome of the vote is a huge blow to Ms. May's leadership but it didn't matter for long for the U.S. market, as stocks would close near session highs.

The bond market was quiet despite the gains in the stock market. The 2-yr yield and 10-yr yield were unchanged at 2.52% and 2.71%. The U.S. Dollar Index rose 0.3% to 95.92. WTI crude rose 2.6% to $51.92/bbl.

Reviewing Tuesday's economic data, which included the Producer Price Index for December and the Empire State Manufacturing Survey for January:

The Producer Price Index for final demand declined 0.2% (Briefing.com consensus -0.1%) while the index for final demand, less food and energy, declined 0.1% (Briefing.com consensus +0.2%). The monthly changes left the index for final demand up 2.5% year-over-year, unchanged from November, and the index for final demand, less food and energy, up 2.7%, also unchanged from November.
The key takeaway from this report is that producer price inflation is moderating, which will suggest in the market's mind that consumer price inflation is going to as well.
The Empire State Manufacturing Survey General Business Conditions Index fell to 3.9 in January (Briefing.com consensus 12.2) from 11.5 in December, led by a deceleration in new orders, inventories, and the number of employees. The six-month outlook also dropped, falling to 17.8 from 30.6.
The key takeaway from the report is that it fits the view that there is a slowdown in manufacturing activity, which has piqued concerns about a broader slowdown in economic activity unfolding in 2019.

Looking ahead, investors will receive several economic reports on Wednesday: the NAHB Housing Market Index for January, the weekly MBA Mortgage Applications Index, Import and Export Prices for December, the Fed's Beige Book for January, and Net Long-Term TIC Flow for November.

Russell 2000 +7.2% YTD
Nasdaq Composite +5.9% YTD
S&P 500 +4.1% YTD
Dow Jones Industrial Average +3.2% YTD

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