Spaces:
Runtime error
Runtime error
stock_news_summaries_AI
/
news
/GOOGL
/2023.02.12
/Wall St Week Ahead-Last year's laggards lead U.S. stocks' 2023 rebound, for now.txt
NEW YORK, Feb 10 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks that took a | |
beating last year are surging in the early weeks of 2023, | |
leading markets higher. Some investors believe that trend is | |
unlikely to last.Stunning gains in shares of companies such as Nvidia | |
, Netflix and Meta Platforms are | |
lifting sectors that struggled in last year’s selloff, including | |
technology, and communication services.Smaller stocks that tumbled in 2022 have also burst out of | |
the gate: a Goldman Sachs basket of unprofitable tech stocks | |
that tumbled over 60% in 2022 has rebounded 21% in 2023, | |
dwarfing the S&P 500’s 6.5% gain.A range of factors are driving the moves, including the | |
attractiveness of beaten-up shares, a tailwind from falling bond | |
yields and market participants unwinding bearish bets against | |
stocks.Some investors, however, are skeptical that the gains will | |
last, especially if markets continue recalibrating expectations | |
for how high the Federal Reserve will need to raise rates this | |
year to keep cooling off inflation.While it’s not unusual to see a reversal of trends to begin | |
a year, "the extent to which it’s occurred is pretty dramatic,” | |
said Walter Todd, chief investment officer at Greenwood Capital. | |
“It certainly can’t continue at the extremes it has been.”Greenwood Capital recently sold at least a portion of its | |
shares in some 2023 winners, including Meta Platforms and | |
Netflix. Meta is up 45% so far this year, while Netflix is up | |
almost 18%. Those stocks fell 64% and 51% last year, | |
respectively.The S&P 500 jumped 6.2% in January as many investors rushed | |
to raise their equity positioning after whittling it down last | |
year, encouraged by several months of easing inflation readings. | |
One measure, equity positioning for systematic investors, has | |
climbed to its highest in a year, according to a report from | |
Deutsche Bank issued Feb 3.Moderating bond yields, which surged in 2022 as the Fed | |
raised interest rates to fight soaring inflation, bolstered the | |
case for scooping up last year's losers. The yield on the | |
benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell about 40 | |
basis points during the first few weeks of the year to 3.4% at | |
the start of February after reaching 15-year highs last year.While falling yields often increase the allure of equities | |
in general, they are particularly beneficial for the technology | |
and growth stocks whose valuations suffered when yields shot | |
higher in 2022.“When interest rates fall, lower quality, longer duration | |
assets do well," said Rob Almeida, global investment strategist | |
at MFS Investment Management.Yields have headed higher again in recent days, however, as | |
investors raised estimates for how high the Fed will lift rates | |
and how long the central bank will keep them at peak levels. | |
That's weighed on stocks in the latest week, which saw the S&P | |
500 lose 1.1% after two straight weeks of gains."The market leaders to-date ... are vulnerable to the | |
higher-for-longer interest rates and a slowing economy," | |
strategists at the Wells Fargo Investment Institute said in a | |
note Thursday. "We do not view the recent breadth and leadership | |
as sustainable -- yet -- and prefer not to chase equity rallies | |
at this time."Investors will be closely watching Tuesday's release of U.S. | |
consumer price data for signs that inflation is continuing to | |
moderate.David Kotok, chief investment officer at Cumberland | |
Advisors, is skeptical of the latest rally and some of the | |
stocks leading the current run. His firm is underweight many of | |
the big tech and growth stocks that have rebounded in 2023, | |
preferring healthcare and defense shares and keeping a big | |
allocation in cash.“Either the deterioration last year from an overvalued space | |
is over, or this is a dead cat bounce in a wounded large sector | |
and the bear market of last year is not over," Kotok said. "I am | |
in the latter camp.”To be sure, there are some signs the leaders could continue | |
to do well.Since 1990, the three best-performing sectors in January | |
went on to post an average return of 11.3% over the next 12 | |
months versus the S&P 500’s average gain of 9.3% over that time, | |
according to investment research firm CFRA Research.Matt Stucky, senior portfolio manager at Northwestern Mutual | |
Wealth Management Company, said some of last year’s most | |
beaten-up stocks could continue moving higher in the near term | |
as investors cover more short positions.Short sellers have covered $51 billion of their bearish | |
bets so far in 2023, or about 6% of total shares shorted, | |
including over $1 billion in shorts each related to Amazon | |
and Alphabet shares, according to | |
financial and analytics firm S3 Partners.“Can this last a quarter or two? Yes," Stucky said. "Can it | |
last for the entirety of 2023 or a multiyear period? Likely | |
not."(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and | |
Deepa Babignton) |