February 15 – February 19 Week in Review
It was mostly a down week for the market last week. The Nasdaq Composite fell 1.6%, the Russell 2000 fell 1.0%, and the S&P 500 fell 0.7%. Only the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended the week slightly higher, up 0.1%. It was a good week for the financial and energy stocks, as growth/inflation expectations increased, but it wasn't so great for the growth stocks that were being supported by really low interest rates. Interest rates were still low from a historical perspective, but the quick ascent in the longer end of the yield curve raised investor valuation concerns.
The top weighted information technology sector dropped 1.9%, which weighed heavily on index performance given the sector comprises about 28% of the S&P 500's market capitalization. The health care, utilities, and consumer staples sectors also posted noticeable declines.
Conversely, the curve steepening activity in the Treasury market was a boon for the bank stocks within the financials sector, while the energy sector continued to rally from a low base. Oil prices were volatile after a winter storm forced many refineries in Texas to temporarily shut down. The cyclical materials and industrials sectors were the other two sectors that closed higher for the week.
On the news front the following occurred last week:
From a price action perspective, the S&P 500 didn't move all that much last week, even though it closed lower in every session. This suggests the market has entered a consolidation phase in which it absorbs higher rates and cyclical rotation without hurting overall risk sentiment.
On the interest rate front the yield curve continued to steepen as the 10 year U.S. Treasury yield rose 15 basis points to 1.35% amid continued selling interest that was supported by a pro-cyclical news cycle. The 2 year U.S. Treasury yield increased only one basis point to 0.11%.
In other markets WTI crude fell slightly closing at $59.01 a barrel, the U.S. Dollar index closed marginally lower at 90.34 and gold prices fell closing at $1,783.10 an ounce.
February 22 – February 26 Economic Calendar