Friday Trick or Trend

Trick or trend: An extended market gets even more extended with no signs of faltering

Trick or trend: An extended market gets even more extended with no signs of faltering

Last week, while the major indexes were putting in another set of record highs, investors poured a record $58 billion into stock funds, according to EPFR data collated by the Bank of America and reported Friday in the Financial Times. U.S. equities got the lion’s share of the money with net inflows of $36.3 billion. The biggest sector destination for all that cash was the technology sector which saw net inflows for the week reach an all-time high of $5.4 billion.

Trick or trend: We’re seeing a near record earnings performance and an almost record increase in earnings estimates

Trick or trend: We’re seeing a near record earnings performance and an almost record increase in earnings estimates

Wall Street analysts have increased their 2021 forecast for S&P 500 earnings by 3.6% to $170.3 a share in January. That’s the biggest jump in earnings estimates in January for any year dating back to 2013 except the revisions in 2018 on the heels of the December 2017 tax cuts. Of course, a good part of this higher estimate is already figured into stock prices.

Trick or trend:  GameStop increases the odds that Congress will tighten regulation on financial sector, and especially FinTech companies

Trick or trend: GameStop increases the odds that Congress will tighten regulation on financial sector, and especially FinTech companies

Even before the GameStop (GME)/Robinhood explosion of last week, Democrats in Congress and the White House were targeting the financial sector for investigations, for tighter enforcement of existing regulation that had been relaxed during the Trump administration, and for new regulations that would address the non-bank sector.

The events of last week when Robinhood and other brokerage services halted trading in shares of GameStop, AMC (AMC) and other heavily shorted stocks that had turned into stock market rockets have just added more energy to those efforts. There’s almost certainly enough energy to go around in the committees now controlled by Democrats to push increased regulation of traditional banks and new non-bank financial institutions. But I expect that the trading halt at Robinhood, etc. will put added attention on FinTech companies.
What might Congress look at?

Trick or trend; American and Delta both forecast weaker traffic, faster cash burn–when will the market care?

Trick or trend; American and Delta both forecast weaker traffic, faster cash burn–when will the market care?

On Friday American Airlines (AAL) said it it seeing a slowdown in demand because of surging coronavirus cases. (Again.)  And that the company now has a weaker outlook on airline bookings heading into the year-end holidays. The news from American Airlines echoes a similar warning the day before from Delta Air Lines (DAL)

Trick or trend: Treasury Secretary Mnuchin just undermined the Fed and the economy–how bad will the damage be?

Trick or trend: Treasury Secretary Mnuchin just undermined the Fed and the economy–how bad will the damage be?

On Thursday night, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin sent a letter to Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell announcing that he was not going to extend beyond December 31 the emergency lending support that the Federal Reserve using as a backstop in its programs to stabilize the bond market. In March, Congress ha earmarked $454 billion to support Fed lending programs as part of that months coronavirus package. The Fed, ever reluctant to take losses onto its own balance sheet, had used the Treasury cash to stand behind loan programs for medium size businessses and municipalities. Much of that money earmarked by Congress has never actually been extended to the Fed, but the Treasury did earmark $195 billion for specific loan programs at the Fed. It’s that money that Mnuchin now says will no longer be available to the Fed after December 31.

Trick or trend: Infrastructure stocks pull back as investors assume that Republican control of Senate means no big infrastructure plan from Biden administration

Trick or trend: Infrastructure stocks pull back as investors assume that Republican control of Senate means no big infrastructure plan from Biden administration

Our regular (or occasional or perhaps occasionally regular) Friday series (actually running on Saturday this week) Trick or Trend looks at what might (or might not) be emerging investible trends. Exclusively on JAM. This post won't run anywhere else. Ever. On Friday...