As I have noted for the last two weeks, this earnings season carries a special significance. It provides an alternative to the official data on the economy. After a bad week for stocks, the punditry will be asking:
What is the message of the market?
Prior Theme Recap
In my last WTWA I predicted that attention to earnings reports would once again dominate the news. This was an accurate call. Earnings stories, both good and bad, were daily highlights. Our featured chart on dollar weakness as more important than geopolitics was especially accurate. More on earnings in the account of the week below.
We would all like to know the direction of the market in advance. Good luck with that! Second best is planning what to look for and how to react. That is the purpose of considering possible themes for the week ahead. You can try it at home.
This Week's Theme
Earnings season has developed a bipolar theme: Strength in some popular momentum names and weakness in stocks sensitive to the dollar. The market has provided a daily verdict on earnings reports. For many there is also an important economic message. Observers are asking:
What is the message of the market?
…and for some… Will the Fed be listening?
The Viewpoints
The earnings message draws several different viewpoints, including some noted last week.
- A weak economy has finally taken a toll on corporate profits, especially in some sectors.
- Stock market leadership has narrowed dramatically. Frank Zorilla illustrates with the chart below. He is open-minded about how this divergence could resolve, including a possible broad rally.
Stockbee has a very similar take on this important theme, including the potential for a rally.
- The strong dollar has hurt exports and profit margins of many large companies. It is showing up dramatically in energy stocks.
- Commodity price declines have accompanied the earnings reports, providing a negative feedback loop.
- Commodity prices remain strong on a long-term basis. The current economic risk is exaggerated. Scott Grannis has one of his helpful chart packs, including this “favorite indicator.”
As always, I have my own ideas in today's conclusion. But first, let us do our regular update of the last week's news and data. Readers, especially those new to this series, will benefit from reading the background information.
Last Week's Data
Each week I break down events into good and bad. Often there is “ugly” and on rare occasion something really good. My working definition of “good” has two components:
The Good
There was some good economic news.
The Bad
There was also some negative data last week.
Calculated Risk Ed Yardeni notes the 4% decline including energy and the 1.5% increase without that sector.