S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 Can’t Shake Off the Blues as Yields Rise, Netflix Earnings Eyed
After swinging between positive and negative territory throughout the day, U.S. stocks finished the day largely flat, held back by rising rates across most of the U.S. Treasury curve on expectations that sky-high inflation will lead the Federal Reserve to aggressively remove policy accommodation over the coming months to restore price stability.
When it was all said and done, the S&P 500 inched down 0.02% to 4,374, extending its decline for the second consecutive session and closing at its lowest level in a month, with most sectors relatively soft, except for energy, which managed a solid rise. The Dow Jones, for its part, fell 0.11% to 34,411, but weakness was limited by a 2.56% rally in Goldman Sachs stock prices.
Elsewhere, the Nasdaq 100, eked out a 0.13% advance thanks to a late day-push, finishing at 13,910, but gains were contained by soaring yields, with the 10-year shooting up to 2.86%, its highest level since December 2018. Rising yields weigh on companies’ valuations by increasing the rate at which future cash flows are discounted, but the pressure tends to be more acute for tech and growth shares whose valuations are based on earnings expected to materialize further down the road.
Looking ahead, there are no high impact economic data on Tuesday, so investors will remain laser-focused on the earnings season that has just gotten underway last week. That said, Johnson and Johnson (JNJ) and Netflix (NFLX) are two key companies, with huge market capitalizations, whose results are worth watching tomorrow (see table below for consensus expectations).
Source: Nasdaq
It is still too early to make broad assumptions, but the reporting period is off to a decent start with 81.5% of S&P 500 companies that have announced results posting better-than-forecast EPS figures according to FactSet. If this trend consolidates and firms continue to deliver good numbers, excessive market pessimism should start waning, encouraging investors to redeploy capital into risk assets.
While earnings are always key, forward-guidance is likely to be more important for Wall Street in the coming days and weeks. In this context, traders should pay close attention to any comments about the outlook, profits and how management is handling ongoing supply chain snags and surging costs. Ultimately, if margins remain healthy and prospects stay constructive, sentiment could improve, paving the way for a meaningful rebound in stocks.