The morning trading session looks like it’s shaping up to be a quiet one as market participants wait for testimony from Federal Reserve and Treasury Department leaders this afternoon.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin are scheduled to address the House Financial Services Committee at 12:30 p.m. Eastern time. They’re slated to discuss the Fed’s and Treasury’s economic response to the pandemic.
Investors and traders may be looking to the two economic leaders for more guidance as the number of coronavirus cases in the United States rises and forces some states to backtrack on their reopening plans. That has been a source of worry for Wall Street, creating some sharp selling last week.
If the commentary from the Fed and Treasury is upbeat, that could be another catalyst to take the market higher, but if the leaders are more somber, it could be a signal for the market to pause or resume selling.
Market participants may also want to keep in mind that today is the last trading day of the month, quarter, and half year, which could mean some investors and traders may want to adjust their portfolios heading into the close. That could add to potential volatility during this holiday shortened week when some people may be on vacation.
Risk Switch Flips to “On”
The stock market surged Monday, indicating that at least some of the selling from late last week may have been participants de-risking their portfolio ahead of the weekend.
Although the news flow over the weekend was largely dominated by headlines about the coronavirus resurgence, that didn’t seem to keep investors and traders from piling back into equities as the trading week started.
Stocks got a big shot in the arm from Boeing Co (NYSE:BA). The Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DJI) component rose more than 14% on news that Federal Aviation Administration recertification flight tests on the 737 Max began Monday.
While the news was a big deal for BA, the aviation industry in general still has a long row to hoe as airlines are carrying only a fraction of traffic due to the coronavirus (see more below).
Those airlines and BA helped propel the S&P 500 Industrials Sector (IXM) to the position of the day’s biggest gainer. All the other sectors also finished in the green, indicating the return to risk-on sentiment was broad based, despite a domestic resurgence in coronavirus cases.
Green Shoots In Europe, China Help Oil, Stocks
Overseas data also seemed to help the mood on Wall Street. European Commission numbers indicated that eurozone economic sentiment improved in June while data out of China showed industrial-firm profit rose in May, marking its first uptick in six months.
It seems that we’ll have to file the numbers in the green-shoots category. Even if the coronavirus were magically evaporated right now, the global economy would take some time to recover. But as it stands, hotspots of reemergence are popping up around the globe, and it remains to be seen exactly how that will affect the world’s economy.
Still, Monday’s optimism helped propel oil prices higher as the demand outlook brightened. When black gold rises along with equities, that often means that investors have a larger appetite for riskier assets. In Monday’s case, that appetite appears to have been helped by increased optimism about the global economic recovery.
3000 Holds For Now: Monday’s market saw an important technical level hold. After closing just above the psychologically important 3000 mark last week, the SPX briefly dipped ever so slightly below that level on Monday morning before the day’s rally really kicked into gear. The benchmark index hasn’t closed below 3000 in more than a month, and holding that level could be a key factor in determining the shape of the market’s recovery.
TD Ameritrade® commentary for educational purposes only. Member SIPC.
Photo by Liam Kevan on Unsplash
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