After last week’s rotation from growth (tech) to value (the Dow), investors decided today to return to the conventional bet of focusing again on the tech companies that will do well regardless of the pandemic. So there was a reverse rotation today out of the Dow and back to tech with the Dow slumping 223 points as a result. This was likely triggered by the weekend news that coronavirus cases have now topped 6 million. Last week caution favored value, today tech, referred to as the “old pandemic playbook.” The S&P is now almost 4% above its pre-crisis record, the Nasdaq almost 20% as last week’s sell off suddenly made all these momentum stocks look more attractive. The S&P has seen a 35% gain since April, its strongest run since 1938. The biggest winner was Aimmune Therapeutics, a maker of a peanut allergy treatment, which soared 171% after news that Nestle offered to buy them for $2 billion. For once volume was above the 4-week average at 9.4 billion.
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AUGUST 31, 2020 / 5:40 pm
Nasdaq ends higher while S&P 500 posts biggest August gain
since 1986
DJ: 28,653.87 +161.60 NAS: 11,695.63 +70.30 S&P: 3,508.01 +23.46 8/28
DJ: 28,430.05 -223.82 NAS: 11,775.46 +79.82 S&P: 3,500.31
-7.70 8/31
NEW YORK (Reuters) -
While the S&P boasted its steepest August percentage gain in more than
three decades it ended Monday slightly lower and the Dow also lost ground as
investors took a pause although the Nasdaq closed higher thanks to high-flying
stocks including Apple Inc. The Federal
Reserve’s commitment to tolerate inflation and keep interest rates low,
positive developments in vaccines and treatments for COVID-19 and a rally in
tech-focused stocks have helped the S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit record highs in
August.
But while states such as New Jersey continued to ease
restrictions on Monday, investors noted that across the United States, total coronavirus cases topped 6
million on Sunday as many states in the Midwest reported increasing
infections, according to a Reuters tally.
“It’s a momentum
trade. People are flooding to the technology companies they think will do well regardless
of the pandemic,” said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer,
Independent Advisor Alliance. “The U.S.
just passed 6 million cases, a further reminder that the pandemic is here to
stay until we do something about it. Clearly it has an impact on all businesses
but some are more pandemic resistant,” he said.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average fell 223.82 points, or 0.78%, to close at 28,430.05, the S&P 500
lost 7.7 points, or 0.22%, to 3,500.31 and the Nasdaq Composite added 79.82
points, or 0.68%, to 11,775.46. Technology, then healthcare and utilities
stocks were the biggest percentage gainers among the 11 major S&P sectors
while energy was the biggest percentage decliner.
With the S&P reaching
3.8% above its pre-crisis record during the session, Mona Mahajan, senior U.S. investment
strategist at Allianz Global Investors in New York, said investors were showing some caution by favoring
technology as they looked warily at U.S. and overseas COVID-19 numbers. “After such a strong summer run we’re reverting back to the old
pandemic playbook so we see tech outperforming,” she said. “Really
that’s a defensive move as people think about stay-at-home more as we’re
heading toward that fall season.”
The Nasdaq, meanwhile,
ended the day almost 20% above its pre-crisis record closing high. Its top two boosts for
Monday were from Apple Inc and Tesla Inc after their stock splits. While the splits did not provide a
fundamental reason to buy the stocks, Mahajan noted that the lower prices may be making the
momentum stocks more attractive to some retail investors.
For the month the S&P
showed a gain of 7.01%, its
biggest advance for August since 1986 when it rose 7.1% that month. The three main indexes showed their fifth straight monthly
rise following March lows, even as economic data pointed to an uneven recovery from the
steep downturn. For the S&P, this
was its longest winning steak on a monthly basis since a six-month run from
April to September 2018. And the
benchmark’s 35.6% gain
since April marked the strongest five-month run for the S&P since 1938, according
to data from Bespoke Investment Group.
Apple ended the day 3.4% higher at $129.04 while Tesla closed up 12.6% at
$498.32. Aimmune Therapeutics Inc’s shares soared 171.6% after Swiss
food group Nestle SA offered to pay $2 billion for full ownership of the peanut allergy treatment
maker. Shares of Microsoft Corp, Walmart
Inc and Oracle Corp - all suitors for TikTok’s U.S. assets - fell as China’s
new rules around tech exports meant a deal with TikTok owner ByteDance could
need Beijing’s approval.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
2.02-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.64-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 32 new 52-week highs
and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 86 new highs and 24 new lows.
On U.S. exchanges 9.4 billion shares changed hands on Monday compared with the
average of 9.18 billion for the last 20 sessions.
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