LIVE MARKETS One-month high for the STOXX

  • 12/23/2021
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Major U.S. indexes rise; FANGs, transports, chips outperform Industrials lead S&P sector gainers; real estate sole loser Euro STOXX 600 index gains ~1% Dollar ~flat; crude, gold, bitcoin rise U.S. 10-Year Treasury yield rise to ~1.49% Dec 23 - Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of markets brought to you by Reuters reporters. You can share your thoughts with us at markets.research@thomsonreuters.com ONE-MONTH HIGH FOR THE STOXX (1134 EST/1634 GMT) Optimism about the economic recovery and a limited fallout of Omicron has brought a festive mood back to markets. In Europe that has pushed the STOXX 600 (.STOXX) equity benchmark up by 1% to its highest in one month with banks and travel stocks leading the way in a broadly positive market. The index is now just 1.5% far away from the record high of 490.58 hit in November before the new highly infectious COVID-19 variant spooked markets. snapshot snapshot (Danilo Masoni) ***** SANTA CLAUS RALLY LIKELY STILL ON THE WAY (1103 EST/1603 GMT) Investors upset that stocks haven’t taken off enough for a Christmas rally shouldn’t fret, Santa Claus is likely still coming to town. Stock market strength in December is typically known as a Santa Claus rally, however the term is misunderstood and strength typically comes in the last 5 trading days of the year, and first two days of the new year, according to LPL Financial. That means it is due to start on Monday, which is also the last day a Santa Claus rally can start and the latest it has started over the last 11 years. While the rally is not a sure thing, stocks have rallied during this period 78.9% of the time, with an average return of 1.33%, which is the third best performance of the year, LPL said. “Why are these seven days so strong? Whether optimism over a coming new year, holiday spending, traders on vacation, institutions squaring up books – or the holiday spirit – the bottom line is that bulls tend to believe in Santa,” LPL’s chief market strategist Ryan Detrick said in a note. If Santa fails to show, however, it would likely portend a weak January. In the six instances that the Santa rally failed to materialize since the mid-1990s, five were followed by a dip in January and only one had a solid gain for the year, LPL said. “Should this seasonally strong period miss the mark, it could be a warning sign,” Detrick said. (Karen Brettell) ***** S&P 500 ON TRACK FOR RECORD FINISH (1004 EST/1504 GMT) Wall Street"s main indexes are higher Thursday morning after early data suggested the Omicron variant of the coronavirus was less severe than feared. With this, the S&P 500 index (.SPX) is pushing over 4,720, which puts it on track for a record finish above its 4,712.02 Dec. 10 close. The SPX record intraday high was 4,743.83 on Nov. 22. Meanwhile, the U.S. 10-Year Treasury yield is back up to challenge the 1.50% level, and value (.IVX) is slightly outperforming growth (.IGX). All major S&P 500 sectors are rallying with more economically sensitive groups out front. Under the surface, chips (.SOX), banks (.SPXBK) and transports (.DJT) are also among outperformers. The NYSE FANG+TM index (.NYFANG) is slightly red. Here is where markets stand early on Thursday: earlytrade12232021 earlytrade12232021 (Terence Gabriel) ***** VOLATILITY IN THE TIME OF OMICRON (0927 EST/1427 GMT) As the last trading day before Christmas gets underway, the S&P 500 has posted moves of at least 1% in either direction for the four straight prior sessions -- rising by at least 1% for past two days, after falling by at least that amount in the two days before. Indeed, the benchmark index has swung by at least 1% in nine of the 16 full sessions so far in December. As it stands, the S&P 500"s average move of 1.1% would make it the fourth-rockiest December since 1987, according to Art Hogan, chief market strategist at National Securities. Only 2018, 2008 and 2000 had bigger average December moves, per Hogan. Hogan says in a note that the volatility stems from "three well disseminated concerns": a more hawkish Fed, the "shelving" of President Joe Biden"s "Build Back Better" investment bill, and fears the spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant could derail the economy. Yet even with that volatility, as of Wednesday"s close, the S&P 500 was up 2.8% in December, and 25% for 2021. Hogan writes: "With many of the current market concerns well known, and arguably well priced in at both the index, and more prominently at the average stock level, we would suggest markets have done an overly efficient job in selling the rumor, and will likely start buying the news." (Lewis Krauskopf) ***** NASDAQ 100: ON THE FLIP SIDE OF A FLOP (0900 EST/1400 GMT) The Nasdaq 100 (.NDX) is currently up 0.27% for the month of December. That puts it on track for its smallest monthly rise since November 2016. That said, it"s not that there hasn"t been volatility this month. In fact, there has been significant flip-flopping on a weekly basis. This week, the NDX is on track to rise 2.4%. read more Over the preceding three weeks, the index of the one hundred largest non-financial companies on the Nasdaq fell 2%, surged 4%, and then slid 3.2%. Of note, on the downside, the rising 20-week moving average (WMA) has proven to be resilient support since it was reclaimed in April 2020 read more : NDX12232021 NDX12232021 More recently, the early-December 4% surge came after an NDX slide that ended just 1.6% above the 20-WMA. This week"s rally is coming after the index declined and finished last Friday just 1.5% above the moving average. Meanwhile, the 20-WMA, which is now around 15,625, will likely ascend to around 15,680 next week. A resistance line from the July 2020 20-WMA disparity high will then be residing around 7.1% above the moving average, which will equate to around 16,793 on the NDX. This should add to the wall of resistance at the NDX"s Nov. 19 record close of 16,573.343 and Nov. 22 record intraday high of 16,764.855. A disparity break out above the resistance line could suggest the NDX could accelerate further into record-high territory. Conversely, a more decisive closing break of the 20-WMA than was seen in late-October 2020 (or more than -0.1%), with the moving average then ticking down, could instead lead to a sea change in trend, to the downside. read more (Terence Gabriel) ***** FOR THURSDAY"S LIVE MARKETS" POSTS PRIOR TO 0900 EST/1400 GMT - CLICK HERE: read more

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