U.S. stocks are struggling to advance in early 2024, as investors digest the start of company earnings reports kicked off by Wall Street banks and eye inflation ahead of a closely-watched retail sales report.
“The stock and bond markets are marking time,” said Yardeni Research in a Jan. 11 note. “They might continue to do so during the first half of this year,” the firm wrote, but “the stock market should resume its advance during the second half.”
The S&P 500 index has been trading near its all-time closing peak reached more than two years ago, briefly rising above it on Thursday as it flirted with a fresh record close, but the index ended the session with a slight decline, and its gains this past week left it barely in the green for January.
The two other major U.S. stock indexes, the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA and Nasdaq Composite COMP, ended Friday with modest declines year to date despite weekly gains. Investors are now looking ahead to a report on U.S. retail sales in December, due out on Wednesday, for a window into the strength of consumers to keep fueling the economy.
“We know the consumer, largely because of the job market, has held our economy up reasonably well,” said Bob Doll, chief investment officer at Crossmark Global Investments, in a phone interview. “The question will be, are they still able to spend money?”
Doll said he expects consumer spending in December probably slowed a bit from November, as people no longer have the same pile of excessive savings they built up during the pandemic.
He forecasts the S&P 500 may end 2024 at 4,350 which is down 9% from its closing level Friday, saying he expects companies’ earnings growth to be lower than consensus estimates.
The S&P 500 SPX edged up on Friday to close at 4,783.83 – its highest level since Jan. 4, 2022 and 0.3% below its record close of 4,796.56 on Jan. 3, 2022, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
“I think it’s fully valued,” said Doll. The index’s current price-to-earnings ratio of 20 is “probably not sustainable.”
As for the start of earnings season, shares of JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPM, -0.73%, Bank of America Corp. BAC, -1.06% and Wells Fargo & Co. WFC, -3.34% all ended down on Friday after reporting their fourth-quarter results.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. GS, -0.53% and Morgan Stanley MS, -0.89% will each release their quarterly earnings on Tuesday, following the three-day weekend honoring the late civil-rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
Meanwhile, UnitedHealth Group Inc. UNH, -3.37% was the worst-performing stock in the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Friday after reporting its fourth-quarter earnings, FactSet data show.
‘A big ask’
“The market is looking for a trifecta,” including the U.S. avoiding “even a mild recession,” the Federal Reserve doing around six cuts to interest rates by the end of December, and inflation falling sooner to the Fed’s 2% target than expected, said Sandi Bragar, chief client officer at Aspiriant, in a phone interview.
“Those are three pretty lofty things,” she said. “All three of those things happening is a big ask.”
This past week investors saw two readings on inflation in December, including consumer and wholesale prices. Data released from the consumer-price index on Thursday had a slightly bigger rise than Wall Street anticipated and accelerated to a year-over-year rate of 3.4%, while a Friday report on wholesale inflation measured by the producer price index was softer than anticipated.
The consumer-price-index reading was “hotter” than forecast, “but underneath the surface it shows that the Fed is very close to achieving” its 2% inflation target, according to a DataTrek Research note emailed Thursday. The federal-funds-futures market took the inflation data “as a sign that the Fed will be more, not less, likely to cut rates this year,” said DataTrek co-founder Nicholas Colas, in the note.
But Doll worries “inflation may not fall as fast as people” are hoping. It’s probably “a little more on the sticky side than the market thinks,” he said.
Meanwhile, the U.S. unemployment rate has remained historically low, even with the Fed’s efforts to slow the economy through restrictively high rates in order to bring down inflation.
Against the backdrop of a resilient labor market, real wage growth has “provided a boost to consumers’ pocketbooks,” helped in part by a decline in gasoline prices, said David Doyle, head of economics at Macquarie Group, said in a phone interview.
But he worries the U.S. may see an “undesirable rise” in the unemployment rate this year, potentially close to 5%, from 3.7% in December. “Our base case is that you have a year of flat real GDP growth in 2024, said Doyle, but “certainly a softer economic-growth environment.”
Doyle said such a rise in the unemployment rate helps explain a significant portion of the 225 basis points of rate cuts he expects in 2024, beginning in June. That would imply nine rate cuts.
The fed-funds futures market is anticipating the Fed may start reducing rates as soon as March, and possibly by as much as 175 basis points by December, from its current target range of 5.25% to 5.5%, according to the CME FedWatch Tool on Friday.
‘Not leaning into them’
As for portfolio positioning, Bragar said Aspiriant favors a split in equity portfolios between opportunistic and defensive bets while underweighting the seven megacap Big Tech stocks that carried the S&P 500 to its huge gains last year.
“We have them in the portfolio but we are not leaning into them,” she said.
The so-called “Magnificent Seven” stocks, which collectively have an outsized weighting in the S&P 500, are “quite expensive,” although most other equites in the index are “fairly priced,” Neuberger Berman’s senior investment strategist Raheel Siddiqui said by phone.
Big Tech’s massive surge propelled a 24.2% rise in the price of the S&P 500 in 2023.
Now, “the market is tired,” said Crossmark’s Doll. “It ran so hard off that October low, it’s just taking a pause and a breather and hoping that fundamentals can catch up to the higher prices.”
The U.S. stock market will be closed on Monday for MLK Day.