Yesterday it was everyone moving out of value and into tech. Today it was everyone moving out of tech and back to value. This has been the seesawing trend day by day for some time now. Today Q1 got started with a bang with Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo turning in stellar reports. At first the indexes soared, then doubts filtered in. “So the question becomes how do the bank stocks rise more from here.” There are enough jitters out there that even today’s great news got taken as bad news. Even JP Morgan Chase’s shares fell despite their earnings jumping four-fold. Whoever said the markets are rational? In the last fifteen years, there has certainly been plenty of evidence to the contrary. But Q1 is only getting started. Volume remains way below average at 9.5 billion.
WED APRIL 14, 2021 4:31 PM
Wall Street ends mixed despite bumper
big-bank earnings
DJ: 33,677.27 -68.13 NAS: 13,996.10 +146.10 S&P: 4,141.59 +13.60 4/13
DJ: 33,730.89 +53.62 NAS: 13,857.84 -138.26 S&P: 4,124.66
-16.93 4/14
(Reuters)
- Wall Street indexes closed mixed on Wednesday, with the Nasdaq Composite and
S&P 500 falling despite another record intraday high for the latter and big
banks’ stellar results on the first day of earnings season. Shares of Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Wells
Fargo & Co rose 2.3% and 5.5% respectively on bumper first-quarter profits. Goldman capitalized on record levels of
global dealmaking activity, and Wells reduced bad loan provisions and got a
grip on costs tied to its sales practices scandal. JPMorgan Chase & Co’s shares fell 1.9%
despite the largest U.S. bank’s earnings jumping almost 400%, as it released
more than $5 billion in reserves to cover coronavirus-driven loan defaults.
“The bank earnings were strong, but the
market expected them to be strong,” said Christopher Grisanti, chief equity
strategist at MAI Capital Management. “So
the question becomes how
do the bank stocks rise more from here. That’s not clear. They have had
a nice ride. I think there will be other places to make money more easily in
the future.” Despite bumper trading and
investment-banking revenue, lending by both JP Morgan and Wells Fargo fell from
a year ago. Investors will be watching this metric carefully in the upcoming
earnings of smaller banks, which are more focused on traditional lending and
deposit-taking. The KBW Regional Banking
Index has outperformed the KBW Bank Index year to date, although the latter -
which represents 24 of the largest U.S. banks - has beaten the index of smaller
institutions over the last month.
“Financials
have done well for a while,
so we’re happy with that now, but will we reach a point of diminishing returns in that
sector? I don’t know,” said Drew Horter, president and chief investment
officer of Tactical Fund Advisors in Cincinnati. The S&P 500 financials sector was one of the first
quarter’s best performers, rising 15% even as the Federal Reserve
pledged to keep interest rates low in the near future. It rose 0.7% on
Wednesday. The S&P 500 energy sector
was the largest gainer among the 11 sub-indexes, advancing 2.9% as it tracked
higher oil prices. [O/R]
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 53.62 points, or 0.16%, to 33,730.89; and the
S&P 500 lost 16.93 points, or 0.41%, at 4,124.66. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 138.26 points,
or 0.99%, to 13,857.84,
weighed by technology-related stocks including Apple Inc, Microsoft Corp and
Tesla Inc.
Coinbase Global Inc jumped upon its
listing on the Nasdaq on Wednesday, at one point hitting $429.54 per share
versus a reference price of $250. The cryptocurrency exchange closed at
$328.28. Cryptocurrency and
blockchain-related firms including Riot Blockchain and Marathon Digital
Holdings fell 15.4% and 15.8% respectively, after soaring ahead of Coinbase’s
debut and as bitcoin hit a record high of over $63,000 on Tuesday.
Volume
on U.S. exchanges was 9.50 billion shares, compared with the 11.27 billion average for the full
session over the last 20 trading days.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 1.45-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.22-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted 68 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 96 new highs and 32 new lows.
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