Our Gift to You This Holiday Season
Scott Jennings Schools Libs on the Trump-Kennedy Center and the Epstein Files on...
We Know When the Brown University Shooter Killed Himself
The Real Hero of the Brown University Shooting Is Getting the Shaft
This Democrat Made a Huge Mistake When Celebrating Jasmine Crockett's Endorsement
British Citizens Are in an Abusive Relationship With Their Government
Did the Biden Administration Seek to Punish Kyrsten Sinema for Refusing to Nuke...
The Rules for California Stop at Gavin Newsom’s Driveway
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 299: The Meaning of Christmas for Those Who...
Two Romanian Nationals Indicted in Oregon SNAP Fraud Scheme Allegedly Stealing Over $160,0...
USPS Chicago Employee Charged With Collecting $51K in Fraudulent Benefits, Feds Say
The Geese Are Being Stolen From Parks Again
Report: America Gets $48B Return on $3.8B Israel Spending
The Baby in the Manger Was Divine
Will We Have a Christmas Day Massacre in Nigeria?
OPINION

Can Markets Survive Tech Slowdown?

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

An analyst at Morgan Stanley made the case for a 10% selloff as the market is exhibiting an inability to absorb losses in technology.  Pointing out the market has been in the process of a “rolling bear market” that “every sector in the S&P 500 has gone through a significant derating” with the exception of technology and consumer discretionary.

Advertisement

The report does “recognize that money can also move from these sectors to others thereby leaving the S&P 500 around current levels.”

This has been the greatest fear for market watchers, including myself, for some time. 

S&P 500 Index

-0.58%

Consumer Discretionary (XLY)

-0.77%

Consumer Staples (XLP)

-0.15%

Energy (XLE)

+0.82%

Financials (XLF)

+0.00%

Health Care (XLV)

+0.11%

Industrials (XLI)

-0.99%

Materials (XLB)

-0.19%

Real Estate (XLRE)

-0.09%

Technology (XLK)

-1.56%

Utilities (XLU)

-0.61%

Leadership Void

Wall Street jumped on the notion financials, led by big banks, could provide leadership; but, that theory has been a bust thus far.  Although, I have to say risk-reward for large banks like Goldman (GS) and JP Morgan (JPM) is very attractive, but they cannot support the entire market.  The influence of banks and energy has declined significantly since the Great Recession.

S&P 500 Sector Weighting

2007

2018

Information Technology

15.9%

24.5%

Health Care

12.4%

13.6%

Consumer Discretionary

8.2%

13.1%

Financials

18.1%

14.8%

Energy

12.7%

5.8%

 

Of course, this tech wreck, while long in the offing, might be just a blimp, and maybe investors should be considering this dip a gift, as they have been for years with many of these names.

Advertisement

As I mentioned on yesterday’s note, the NASDAQ 100, which is a purer reflection of big tech then the NASDAQ top holdings, are Big Tech other than Netflix. 

•             14.1% AAPL

•             11.3% MSFT

•             7.2% FB

•             5.2% GOOG & • 5.2% GOOGL

The NASDAQ 100 has held above its 50-day moving average and must make a stand here, because the 200-day moving average is a long way down.  Apple post its results today after the bell, so we will have a better idea on tech.  If you’ve missed Google (GOOGL-GOOG), Amazon (AMZN) and Microsoft (MSFT), I think they are getting near Buy points. But, key support points must hold.

 

Today’s Session

The market is looking at another tepid start to the session as investors continue to digest earnings results and wait for Apple’s results after the close.  This morning, we got another strong read from the industrial sector and are reminded why consumer staples have been such laggards.

Key Reports This Morning

Cummins Engine (CMI)

Revenue $6.1 billion +21% to all-time quarterly record

Advertisement

North America sales +22%

  • Components +36%
  • Power +30%

International +18%

The company is on track to record yearly records on sales, earnings and cash flow driven by the mining and oil sector demand and heavy-duty engine growth.

Proctor & Gamble (PG)

Revenue $16.50 billion +2.6%

The company suffered from a lack of pricing power across most product segments resulting in a decline in gross margin to 45.3% from 48.4%.

Beauty segment was lone bright spot with revenue +10% and income +37% from a year ago.

Economic Data

Very impressive economic data released this morning shows strongest compensation gains in more than a decade and is a reminder that the consumer is confident and spending money.   We’ll have greater detail on the afternoon note. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement