Apr 1, 2024

Last Year’s Rally Spills into 2024

Weekly Market Commentary

Stocks turned in a surprisingly strong 2023, and momentum has yet to slow in 2024 as last year’s rally remains in high gear.

According to Dow Jones Market Data published by MarketWatch, the S&P 500 Index set 22 all-time closing highs this year. Likewise, the Dow notched 17 closing records, and the Nasdaq Composite recorded four new closing highs.

There’s been no shortage of chatter that a few large companies have fueled the advance, while many other firms have failed to participate or have lagged the broad-market indexes.

Well, that appears to be changing. The S&P 500 Index is a market-capitalization-weighted index, which simply means that large companies have a greater influence on the index than the smaller companies. Last year, a few large companies played a key role in the market’s advance.

However, if we equal weight all 500 firms, such a gauge also set multiple new highs in March, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.

Further, ten of the eleven major sectors of the S&P 500 Index are up this year, according to the Wall Street Journal. That is to say, the rally has broadened.

Fueling the rally

What’s driving shares higher? Let’s review three major pillars.

1. Enthusiasm for AI has yet to wane. AI is aiding the tech sector.

2. The Federal Reserve is anticipating three quarter-point rate cuts this year. Yet, that’s below the six or seven quarter-point rate cuts that investors were eyeing in January (CME Group). 

Moreover, the modest rise in the yield on the 10-year benchmark Treasury since the start of the year has done little to dampen bullish momentum.

Investors aren’t opposed to lower interest rates, but the market doesn’t appear entirely reliant on a less restrictive Fed policy. Therefore, the expanding economy and rising corporate earnings appear to be doing much of the heavy lifting.

3. The economy is defying expectations. A much-forecasted recession never materialized, and economic growth has fueled S&P 500 corporate profits, which rose 10% in the fourth quarter of 2023 versus one year ago (LSEG, formerly Refinitiv).

We recognize that past performance is no guarantee of what may happen down the road. Any number of unwanted surprises could change the narrative. We also recognize that even in a bull market, stocks can experience a decline.

But we also want to point out that when the S&P 500 Index rises by 8% or more in the first quarter, as it did this year, the index ends the year up 94% of the time, with an average gain of 9.7% over the next three quarters, per Dow Jones Market Data for S&P 500 performance since 1950.

Reproduction Prohibited without Express Permission. Copyright FDP Wealth Management. All rights reserved. Advisory Services offered through FDP Wealth Management, LLC, a state Registered Investment Advisor. Securities offered through Valmark Securities, Inc., Member FINRA/SIPC | 130 Springside Drive Suite 300 Akron, OH 44333-2431 | 800.765.5201. FDP Wealth Management, LLC is a separate entity from Valmark Securities, Inc. If you do not want to receive further editions of this weekly newsletter, please contact me at (949) 855-4337 or e-mail me at info@fdpwm.com or write me at 8841 Research Drive, Suite 100, Irvine, CA 92618. FDP Wealth Management, LLC, Valmark Securities, Inc. and their representatives do not offer tax or legal advice. You should consult your tax or legal professional regarding your individual circumstances. Indices are unmanaged and cannot be invested directly in. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

RELATED POSTS

Job Growth Blows Past Expectations

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the economy added a whopping 254,000 jobs in September, about 100,000 more than economists surveyed by Bloomberg had projected. The unemployment rate, expected to hold steady at 4.2%, slipped to 4.1%.

A Fed Rate Cut and Your Mortgage Rate

A recent online advertisement from a major bank read, “The Fed just lowered interest rates. Could refinancing save you money?” There is an implicit assumption in the ad that the Fed’s half-percentage point rate reduction brought about a significant drop in mortgage rates shortly following the decision.

Boom – Fed Opts for 50

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve announced a 50-basis point (bp, 1 bp = 0.01%) rate cut for the fed funds rate to 4.75 – 5.00%, its first reduction since 2020. The announcement marks the end of the most aggressive rate-hike cycle since 1980 when the Fed funds rate rose a whopping 11 percentage points (1,100 bps) in just 6 months.

A Green Light for the Fed – in Three Graphs

All indications point to a rate cut by the Federal Reserve this week. What’s behind the Fed’s rationale? Let’s look at three key metrics. Aided by lower gasoline prices and stable prices for consumer goods, the rate of inflation has slowed dramatically.

August Melt-Up Follows Brief Meltdown

Market pullbacks are to be expected. They are incorporated into the financial plan. But like an unexpected traffic jam, they are exceedingly difficult to predict. Early August was one such event. The turbulence began at the end of July in the wake of seemingly minor news—the U.S. BLS reported another rise in the unemployment rate, which forced some investors to re-evaluate their view of a recession.