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  • August used to be the best month for the stock market. Then it became the worst.

    August used to be the best month for the stock market. Then it became the worst.

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    August the best month for average stock market performance? Or is it the worst?

    The answer depends on the period of stock-market history you examine. Over the 90 years from the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s
    DJIA,
    +0.50%

    inception in 1896 until 1986, August on average was far ahead of the other months — more than four times larger, as you can see from the table below. August outperformed the other months’ average by 1.4 percentage points. This difference is significant at the 95% confidence level that statisticians often use when determining if a pattern is genuine.

    In the years since then, in contrast, August has been the worst month for the stock market, on average, lagging the other months’ average by 1.7 percentage points. Since 1986, in fact, August has been a worse month for the stock market than even September, whose reputation for stock market losses is widely known.

    August’s average DJIA return

    Average return of all other months

    August’s rank among all 12 months

    1896 to 1986

    +1.8%

    +0.4%

    1st

    After 1986

    -0.8%

    +0.9%

    12th

    If the 36 years since 1986 were all that statisticians had to go on, they would conclude that August’s underperformance was significant at the 95% confidence level — just the opposite of the conclusion that emerges from the 90 years prior. But when analyzing the Dow’s entire history since 1896, August’s performance is no better or worse than average.

    This August, in order to use history as a basis for investing, you’d first need to come up with a plausible explanation of what changed in the 1980s that caused August to swing from best to worst.

    Though I’m not aware of any such explanation, it’s always possible that one exists. To search for it, I analyzed monthly values back to 1900 for the Economic Policy Uncertainty (EPU) index that was created by Scott Baker of Northwestern University, Nicholas Bloom of Stanford University, and Steven Davis of the University of Chicago. We know from Finance 101 that the stock market responds to changes in economic uncertainty, so we’d be onto a possible explanation of August’s seasonal tendencies if the EPU underwent some fundamental change in 1986.

    But no such change shows up in the data. August’s average EPU level is no different than for any of the other months of the calendar, either before or after 1986.

    Another possible explanation might trace to investor sentiment. To investigate that possibility, I analyzed stock market timers’ average recommended equity exposure levels, as measured by the Hulbert Stock Newsletter Sentiment Index (HSNSI). I was looking to see if, after 1986, the HSNSI was significantly different at the beginning of August than in other months, on average. The answer is “no.”

    A plausible explanation might still exist for August’s change of fortune beginning in the mid-1980s, notwithstanding my inability to find one. But absent such an explanation, the most likely explanation is that it’s a random fluke.

    It would hardly be a surprise if randomness is the culprit. Most of the patterns that capture Wall Street’s attention are in fact nothing more than statistical noise. The reason we nevertheless insist that significant patterns exist is because — as numerous psychological studies have shown — we’re hardwired to find patterns even in randomness.

    That’s why your default reaction to all alleged patterns, not just those involving August, should be skepticism. The odds are overwhelming that they aren’t genuine. Only if those patterns can survive the scrutiny of a skeptical statistician should you even begin to be interested.

    Mark Hulbert is a regular contributor to MarketWatch. His Hulbert Ratings tracks investment newsletters that pay a flat fee to be audited. He can be reached at mark@hulbertratings.com

    More: Puzzled by the stock-market surge? Overshoots are the new normal, Bank of America strategist says

    Plus: Here’s how long the stock market rally may last

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  • Puzzled by the stock-market surge? Overshoots are the new normal, Bank of America strategist says

    Puzzled by the stock-market surge? Overshoots are the new normal, Bank of America strategist says

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    Stocks have surged this year without really anything going right, besides the rolling out of error-prone artificial intellligence chatbots. Interest rates have surged to a 22-year high, earnings are down from last year, and pandemic-era savings are being drawn down if not entirely exhausted.

    Read more: Those extra pandemic savings are now wiped out, Fed study finds.

    Strategists at Bank of America led by Michael Hartnett have an interesting theory.

    “Asset price overshoots [are] the new normal,” they say.

    Consider:

    • Oil
      CL00,
      -0.37%

      went from -$37 in April 2020 to $123 in March 2022, then down to $67 the following 12 months.

    • Bitcoin
      BTCUSD,
      +0.32%

      went from $5,000 in January 2020 to $68,000 in November 2021, down to $16,000 a year later, and up to $29,000 now.

    • The S&P 500 went from 3300 to 2200 to 4800 to 3500 to 4600 thus far in 2020s.

    “AI is simply the new overshoot,” they say.

    The S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.67%

    has gained 18% this year as the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +1.53%

    has rallied by 34%.

    Hartnett and team noted that real retail sales — that is, adjusted for inflation — fell at a 1.6% year-over-year clip, which has coincided with recessions since 1967. Real retail sales falls in excess of 3% are associated with hard recessions.

    Historically, a 2-3 point rise in the savings rate also is recessionary, and already it’s risen from 3% to 4.6%. The unemployment rate so far hasn’t risen, though a 0.5 point to 1 point rise in the jobless rate also is typically recessionary.

    “It would be so ‘2020s’ for the economy to hit a brick wall just as everyone punts ‘soft landing’ into 2024,” they say.

    They like emerging market/commodities as summer upside plays and credit and tech as autumn downside plays.

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  • Why U.S. stocks and bonds stumbled on talk of a Bank of Japan policy tweak

    Why U.S. stocks and bonds stumbled on talk of a Bank of Japan policy tweak

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    Worries about a possible policy tweak by the Bank of Japan threw a wet blanket on a stretched U.S. stock-market rally Thursday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average snapping its longest winning streak since 1987 after the 10-year Treasury yield surged back above the 4% level.

    The Japanese yen also strengthened after a news report said policy makers on Friday would discuss a possible tweak to the Bank of Japan’s so-called yield-curve control policy that would loosen the cap on long-dated government bond yields.

    Nikkei, without citing sources, reported that BOJ officials would talk about the matter at Friday’s policy meeting and that the potential change would allow the yield on the 10-year Japanese government bond
    TMBMKJP-10Y,
    0.440%

    to trade above its cap of 0.5% “to some degree.”

    ‘Ultimate fear’

    Why is that a negative for U.S. Treasurys and, in turn, U.S. stocks?

    The “ultimate fear” is that Japanese investors, who have vast holdings of U.S. fixed income, including Treasury notes and other securities, “begin to see a higher level of yields in their own backyard,” Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo Global Management, told MarketWatch in a phone interview. That could prompt heavy liquidation of those U.S. positions as investors repatriate holdings to reinvest the proceeds at home.

    That dynamic explains the knee-jerk reaction that saw the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    4.004%

    surge more than 16 basis points to end above 4%, he said. Yields rise as debt prices fall.

    The surge in yields, in turn, saw stocks give up early gains, with U.S. indexes ending lower across the board.

    What is yield curve control?

    The Bank of Japan began implementing yield curve control, or YCC, in 2016, a policy that aims to keep government bond yields low while ensuring an upward-sloping yield curve. Under YCC, the BOJ buys whatever amount of JGBs is necessary to ensure the 10-year yield remains below 0.5%.

    Nikkei said a possible tweak would allow gradual increases in the yield above 0.5%, but would clamp down on any sudden spikes, allowing the BOJ to rein in fluctuations driven by speculators.

    Global market participants are sensitive to changes in YCC. The BOJ sent shock waves through markets in December when it lifted the cap from 0.25% to 0.5%. Investors were rattled by the prospect of the Bank of Japan giving up its role as the remaining low-rate anchor among major central banks.

    BOJ Gov. Kazuo Ueda in May said the bank would start shrinking its balance sheet and end its yield-curve control policy if a 2% inflation looks achievable and sustainable after many years of undershooting.

    Yen rallies

    The yield on the 10-year JGB has traded above 0.4%, but remained below the 0.5% cap. Continued interest rate rises by the Federal Reserve and other major central banks in the past year have raised worries that the 10-year JGB yield could test the limit, Nikkei reported. Those rate hikes, meanwhile, have added pressure to the yen, whose weakness is seen contributing to inflation pressures.

    The yen
    USDJPY,
    -0.02%

    strengthened following the report. The U.S. dollar was off 0.5% versus the currency, fetching 139.48 yen.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.67%

    ended the day down nearly 240 points, or 0.7%, snapping a 13-day winning streak, while the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.64%

    declined 0.6% and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -0.55%

    lost 0.5%.

    Japanese stocks have solidly outpaced strong gains for U.S. equities in 2023, with the Nikkei 225
    NIK,
    +0.68%

    up 26% so far this year versus an 18.7% rise for the S&P 500.

    See: Japan’s stock market is roaring 25% higher. These 4 things could keep the rally going.

    What’s next

    Investors are waiting to see what the Bank of Japan actually has to say.

    While the Nikkei report helped “exaggerate” a selloff in Treasurys, the market may be inoculated against bigger swings after the BOJ’s December adjustment to the rate band, said Ian Lyngen and Benjamin Jeffery, rates strategists at BMO Capital Markets, in a note.

    The analysts said they expect that “the magnitude of the follow through repricing in U.S. rates will be comparatively more contained than would otherwise be expected.”

    More recently, the weak yen has raised the cost of hedging long Treasury positions for Japanese investors. So a stronger yen resulting from a shift toward tighter policy would help make hedging costs for owning Treasurys less onerous for Japanese investors as well, Lyngen and Jeffery wrote, “which over the longer term may begin to make Treasurys more attractive to Japanese buyers and add to the list of sources for duration demand.”

    That could make U.S. debt more attractive to new Japanese buyers, Slok agreed.

    But that’s oveshadowed by the near-term worry, Slok said, that existing Japanese investors will be inclined to sell Treasurys. Flow data will be very much in focus if the Bank of Japan follows through on the apparent trial balloon floated in the Nikkei report.

    Investors will be watching, he said, to see “if the train is leaving the station.”

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  • Intel stock rallies after earnings show AI data-center beat, strong PC sales

    Intel stock rallies after earnings show AI data-center beat, strong PC sales

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    Intel Corp. shares surged in the extended session Thursday after the chip maker posted a surprise profit, but while data-center sales came in better than expected, a larger beat in PC product sales drove margin improvement.

    Intel
    INTC,
    +0.55%

    shares surged around 8% after hours, following a 0.6% rise to close the regular session at $34.55.

    The company reported second-quarter net income of $1.48 billion, or 35 cents a share, versus a loss of $454 million, or 11 cents a share, in the year-ago period. After adjusting for restructuring charges and other items, Intel reported 13 cents a share, versus net income of 28 cents a share a year ago.

    Revenue fell to $12.95 billion from $15.32 billion in the year-ago period, and adjusted gross margins came in at 39.8%, the company said.

    Intel had forecast an adjusted second-quarter loss of 4 cents a share on revenue of about $11.5 billion to $12.5 billion for the current period, and adjusted gross margins of about 33.2% for the quarter.

    Analysts surveyed by FactSet, on average, expected a loss of 4 cents a share on revenue of $12.12 billion.

    The margin beat was “largely a function of revenue,” Intel Chief Financial Officer David Zinsner told analysts on a conference call, and that revenue beat was much more pronounced in Intel client, or PC, business than it was data center.

    “We had obviously beat revenue significantly, and we’ve got a good follow-through in the fixed-cost nature of our business, and so that really was what helped us outperform significantly on the gross-margin side in the second quarter,” Zinsner told analysts.

    Intel posted PC-group sales of $6.8 billion and data-center sales of $4 billion, while analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast $6.08 billion and $3.8 billion, respectively.

    Before the conference call, Edward Jones analyst Logan Purk told MarketWatch in an interview following the report that most of the improvement in Intel’s gross margin came from the unexpected amount of growth in the PC business.

    “The magnitude of client computing growth, and how the PC market is recovering faster than anticipated,” came as a surprise, Purk told MarketWatch. The analyst, who has a hold rating on Intel, said he expects sequential single-digit improvement in data center going forward.

    Still, on the call, Intel Chief Executive Pat Gelsinger hammered home the point that Intel was wholeheartedly going after the AI market, which is expected to be dominated by Nvidia Corp.
    NVDA,
    +0.99%
    ,
    and to a lesser extent, by Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
    AMD,
    +0.92%
    ,
    which reports earnings on Tuesday.

    “We see AI being infused in everything and there’s going to be AI chips for the edge, AI chips for the communications infrastructure, AI chips for sensing devices, for automotive devices, and we see opportunities for us both as a product provider and as a foundry and technology provider across that spectrum,” Gelsinger said.

    Meanwhile, network and edge sales came in at $1.4 billion, while analysts called for $1.48 billion, and foundry services revenue rose to $232 million for the quarter, while Wall Street looked for $149.2 million.

    “In the third quarter, we do obviously at the midpoint see revenue growth sequentially and so that will be helpful in terms of gross margin,” Zinsner told analysts on the call. “We expect, again, pretty good follow-through as we get that incremental revenue.”

    Intel forecast third-quarter earnings of about 20 cents a share on revenue of about $12.9 billion to $13.9 billion and adjusted gross margins of about 43% for the current quarter. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast third-quarter adjusted earnings of 16 cents a share on revenue of $13.22 billion.

    Read: Intel may have bottomed, but earnings will show if chip maker can hope to catch up to Nvidia and AMD in AI

    Year to date, Intel shares have gained nearly 31%, while the PHLX Semiconductor Index 
    SOX,
    +1.86%

    has surged 49%, the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.64%

    has grown 18%, the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -0.55%

    has gained 34% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.67%

    is up more than 6%.

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  • Former Fed official Clarida backs another interest-rate hike this year

    Former Fed official Clarida backs another interest-rate hike this year

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    Former Federal Reserve Vice Chair Richard Clarida on Thursday said he thinks another interest-rate hike this year would be a wise move by the U.S. central bank.

    In an interview on Bloomberg, Clarida said the biggest risk for the Fed is to declare “mission accomplished” too early and having to restart rate hikes next year.

    “So if I were there, it would skew me to getting in that additional hike this year, and I think some members of the Fed will see it that way,” Clarida said.

    Fed Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday that the Fed will decide what to do about interest rates on a “meeting-by-meeting” basis.

    Read: Fed no longer foresees a U.S. recession, highlights from Powell presser

    The Fed is forecasting that the unemployment rate will rise to 4.5% by the end of 2024 from 3.6% in June.

    That is still a forecast for recession because under the Sahm rule, created by former top Fed staffer Claudia Sahm, the start of a recession is signaled when the three-month moving average on the unemployment rate rises by 0.5 percentage points or more from its low during the past year.

    But Clarida said the Fed faces an alternative scenario where inflation picks up again early next year after slowing later this year.

    “If the Fed finds itself in March of 2024 with an unemployment rate of 4% and and inflation rate of 4% with some of that temporary good news [on inflation] behind them, they’re in a very tough spot,” he said.

    “I do think that’s a risk. It’s not the base case,” he said.

    The Dow Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.61%

    was trading slightly lower on Thursday after 13 straight sessions in the green.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury yield
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    4.016%

    has risen to 3.97%, the highest level in two weeks.

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  • Banc of California is expected to keep leading regional banks higher as PacWest deal ignites sector

    Banc of California is expected to keep leading regional banks higher as PacWest deal ignites sector

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    Banc of California Inc.’s proposed agreement to acquire PacWest Bancorp. helped send regional-bank stocks considerably higher on Wednesday. But even after a two-day increase of 12% for its shares, the acquiring bank remains the favorite name among analysts covering regional players in the U.S.

    The merger agreement was announced after the market close on Tuesday, but the rumor mill had already sent Banc of California’s
    BANC,
    +0.62%

    stock up by 11% that day. Then on Wednesday, shares of PacWest Bancorp
    PACW,
    +26.92%

    shot up 27% to $9.76, which was above the estimated takeout value of $9.60 a share when the deal was announced. The merger deal, if approved by both banks’ shareholders, will also include a $400 million investment from Warburg Pincus LLC and Centerbridge Partners L.P.

    A screen of regional banks by rating and stock-price target is below.

    Deal coverage:

    With PacWest closing above the initial per-share deal valuation, it is fair to wonder whether or not its shareholders will vote to approve the agreement. In a note to clients on Wednesday, Wedbush analyst David Chiaverini called Banc of California’s offer “fair, but not overwhelmingly attractive,” and wrote that PacWest was “a likely seller before the mini banking crisis occurred in March.”

    While Chiaverini went on to predict the deal’s approval by PacWest’s shareholders, he added that he “wouldn’t be surprised if there were some dissent among a minority of shareholders [which could] possibly open the door to the potential emergence of a third-party bid.”

    More broadly, Odeon Capital analyst Dick Bove wrote to clients on Wednesday that the merger deal, along with increasing involvement of private-equity firms in lending businesses, the expected enhancement of regulatory capital requirements for banks and other factors could lead to more consolidation among smaller banks.

    He went on to write that we might be entering a period for the banking industry similar to the 1990s, “when rules were being changed and acquisitions were rampant,” which “created new investment opportunities.”

    The SPDR S&P Regional Banking exchange-traded fund
    KRE,
    +4.74%

    rose 5% on Wednesday but was still down 17% for 2023, while the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust
    SPY,
    +0.02%

    was up 19%, both excluding dividends.

    KRE holds 139 stocks, with 98 covered by at least five analysts working for brokerage firms polled by FactSet. Out of those 98 banks, 45 have majority “buy” ratings among the analysts. Among those 45, here are the 10 with the most upside potential over the next 12 months, implied by consensus price targets:

    Bank

    Ticker

    City

    Total assets ($mil)

    July 26 price change

    Share buy ratings

    July 26 closing price

    Consensus price target

    Implied 12-month upside potential

    Banc of California Inc.

    BANC,
    +0.62%
    Santa Ana, Calif.

    $9,370

    1%

    71%

    $14.71

    $18.58

    26%

    Enterprise Financial Services Corp.

    EFSC,
    +1.83%
    Clayton, Mo.

    $13,871

    2%

    80%

    $41.75

    $49.25

    18%

    First Merchants Corp.

    FRME,
    +3.52%
    Muncie, Ind.

    $17,968

    4%

    100%

    $32.38

    $37.33

    15%

    Amerant Bancorp Inc. Class A

    AMTB,
    +3.47%
    Coral Gables, Fla.

    $9,520

    3%

    60%

    $20.26

    $23.30

    15%

    Old Second Bancorp Inc.

    OSBC,
    +3.39%
    Aurora, Ill.

    $5,884

    3%

    100%

    $16.15

    $18.50

    15%

    F.N.B. Corp.

    FNB,
    +2.87%
    Pittsburgh

    $44,778

    3%

    75%

    $12.91

    $14.50

    12%

    Columbia Banking System Inc.

    COLB,
    +3.95%
    Tacoma, Wash.

    $53,592

    4%

    55%

    $22.63

    $25.32

    12%

    Wintrust Financial Corp.

    WTFC,
    +3.43%
    Rosemont, Ill.

    $54,286

    3%

    92%

    $86.05

    $95.33

    11%

    Synovus Financial Corp.

    SNV,
    +6.01%
    Columbus, Ga.

    $60,656

    6%

    75%

    $34.06

    $37.73

    11%

    Home BancShares Inc.

    HOMB,
    +4.56%
    Conway, Ark.

    $22,126

    5%

    57%

    $24.09

    $26.67

    11%

    Source: FactSet

    Click on the tickers for more about each bank.

    Click here for Tomi Kilgore’s detailed guide to the wealth of information available for free on the MarketWatch quote page.

    Any stock screen can only be a starting point when considering whether or not to invest. If you see any stocks of interest here, you should do your own research to form your own opinion.

    Don’t miss: How you can profit in the stock market from an incredible financial-services trend over the next 20 years

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  • Dow scores longest win streak since 1987 after Fed decision

    Dow scores longest win streak since 1987 after Fed decision

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    The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended slightly higher Wednesday to book its longest win streak since 1987 after the Federal Reserve announced its decision to raise interest rates. The Dow
    DJIA,
    +0.23%

    rose 0.2% Wednesday, while the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.02%

    closed about flat and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -0.12%

    dipped 0.1%, according to preliminary FactSet data. The Dow rose for a 13th straight day in its longest win streak since 1987, according to Dow Jones Market Data. As expected by the market, the Fed said Wednesday that it raised its benchmark rate a quarter percentage point to a targeted range of 5.25% to 5.5% in a bid to bring down elevated inflation.

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  • PacWest stock rockets nearly 40% after Banc of California confirms plan to buy troubled bank

    PacWest stock rockets nearly 40% after Banc of California confirms plan to buy troubled bank

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    PacWest Bancorp’s stock jumped more than 38% in after-hours trading Tuesday after the company said it had agreed to be acquired by Banc of California Inc. in an all-stock merger backed by two private-equity firms. The merger comes as PacWest looks to put a rocky period behind it.

    Under the terms of the merger agreement, PacWest
    PACW,
    -27.04%

    stockholders will receive 0.6569 of a share of Banc of California common stock for each share of PacWest common stock. Based on closing prices on Tuesday, the deal values PacWest at $9.60 a share, a premium over its closing price of $7.67 a share on Tuesday.

    Warburg Pincus and Centerbridge will provide $400 million in equity.

    PacWest stockholders will own 47% of the outstanding shares of the combined company, while the private-equity investors will own 19% and Banc of California shareholders will have 34%.

    PacWest said that it is the company being acquired and that it will change its name to Banc of California. PacWest said it will be the “accounting acquirer,” with fair-value accounting applied to Banc of California’s balance sheet at closing.

    Banc of California CEO Jared Wolff will retain the same role at the combined company.

    The combined company will repay about $13 billion in wholesale borrowings to be funded by the sale of assets, “which are fully marked as a result of the transaction, and excess cash,” the companies said.

    The merged company is currently projecting about $36.1 billion in assets, $25.3 billion in total loans, $30.5 billion in total deposits and more than 70 branches in California.

    John Eggemeyer, the independent lead director at PacWest, will be chair of the board of the combined company following the merger.

    The board of directors of the combined company will consist of 12 directors: eight from the existing Banc of California board, three from the existing PacWest board and one from the pair of private-equity firms led by Warburg Pincus.

    Citing sources close to the deal, the Wall Street Journal had reported earlier that a tie-up was imminent.

    In regular trading Tuesday, PacWest’s stock ended 27% down; trading was halted for volatility following the report of the deal.

    Banc of California’s stock rose 11% but was later halted for news pending as well. The stock rose more than 9% in after-hours trading on Tuesday.

    At last check, PacWest’s market capitalization was about $1.2 billion, while Banc of California’s was about $764 million. Combined, the business would be worth about $2 billion.

    PacWest’s big share-price move on Tuesday marks the latest in a volatile few months for the Beverly Hills, Calif., bank, which was founded in 1999.

    Investors had speculated that the bank could be the next to fail after Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank failed in March and First Republic Bank was taken over by JPMorgan.

    Also on Tuesday, PacWest said it lost $207.4 million, or $1.75 a share, in its second quarter, as it got a hit from items related to loan sales and restructuring of its lending unit Civic. The loss contrasts with earnings of $122 million, or $1.02 a share, in the year-ago period.

    Analysts polled by FactSet expected the bank to report a loss of 58 cents a share in the quarter.

    PacWest disclosed in recent months that it was exploring strategic alternatives while it sold off parts of its business to raise cash to strengthen its balance sheet. It sold a loan portfolio to Ares Management Corp.
    ARES,
    +0.92%

    in a move to generate $2 billion.

    Also read: PacWest sells loan portfolio to Ares Management in deal that generates $2 billion ‘to improve liquidity’

    It also sold a portfolio of loans to Kennedy-Wilson Holdings Inc.
    KW,
    -1.70%
    ,
    which then sold part of the portfolio to Canada’s Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd.
    FFH,
    +1.07%
    .

    Also read: PacWest sparks regional-bank rally after unveiling plan to sell loans worth $2.6 billion

    In May, PacWest sold its real-estate lending portfolio to Roc360.

    Also in May, PacWest’s stock dropped more than 20% after it said it had lost 9.5% of its deposits amid market volatility.

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  • Alphabet earnings push stock up 6%; CFO Ruth Porat to become president, chief investment officer

    Alphabet earnings push stock up 6%; CFO Ruth Porat to become president, chief investment officer

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    Google parent Alphabet Inc.’s stock jumped 6% in after-hours trading Tuesday after the company beat estimates on the top and bottom line, and announced the transition of Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat to president and chief investment officer in September.

    Fueled by strong advertising sales, Alphabet
    GOOGL,
    +0.56%

     
    GOOG,
    +0.75%

    racked up fiscal second-quarter net income of $18.4 billion, or $1.44 a share, compared with net income of $16 billion, or $1.21 a share, in the same quarter a year ago.

    Total revenue was $74.6 billion, compared with $69.7 billion a year ago. Sales minus traffic-acquisition costs were $62.06 billion, vs. $57.5 billion last year.

    Analysts surveyed by FactSet had expected on average net earnings of $1.34 a share on revenue of $72.85 billion and ex-TAC revenue of $60.25 billion.

    “There’s exciting momentum across our products and the company, which drove strong results this quarter,” Alphabet Chief Executive Sundar Pichai said in a statement. “Our continued leadership in AI and our excellence in engineering
    and innovation are driving the next evolution of Search, and improving all our services.”

    During a conference call Tuesday afternoon, he highlighted the intertwining of advertising and Alphabet’s strides in generative AI. He added the company continues to consolidate and align operations to streamline spending.

    Shares of Alphabet have advanced 39% so far this year largely on the strength of generative AI and its potential. The broader S&P 500 index 
    SPX,
    +0.28%

    is up 19%. Alphabet’s stock inched up 0.6% to $122.21 in the regular session Tuesday.

    Google’s total advertising sales improved to $58.14 billion from $56.3 billion a year ago, and edged analysts’ average expectations of $57.45 billion. Google Cloud hauled in $8 billion, compared with $6.3 billion last year. YouTube ad sales rebounded to $7.7 billion from $7.34 billion a year ago.

    “The proverbial floodgates aren’t opening yet but clients are starting to see pockets of opportunity and are willing to invest for a direct return,” Aaron Levy, vice president of paid search at Tinuiti, said in an email.

    Porat, who has played an essential role in Google’s advertising success since she became CFO in 2015, will start her new role on Sept. 1. She will be responsible for Alphabet’s investments in its Other Bets portfolio, and the company’s investments in countries and communities around the world. Porat will continue to report to Pichai.

    “We see technology can make so much of a difference in people’s lives… and in economic growth globally,” Porat said during the conference call late Tuesday.

    The monetization of AI continues to be an obsession of investors and Wall Street. Microsoft Corp.’s
    MSFT,
    +1.70%

    AI version, Bing, hit the market first, but Google’s competing entry, Bard, is making headway, according to analysts. Alphabet is ramping up AI initiatives to improve operational efficiency and productivity.

    When asked on the call about AI monetization, Pichai said the technology expands the company’s total addressable market, brings in potential new customers, deepens the versatility of its product portfolio, and differentiates core products such as cybersecurity.

    AI’s importance was underscored by a Wall Street Journal report on Tuesday that Google co-founder Sergey Brin has been spotted at the company’s Mountain View, Calif., headquarters in recent weeks working with AI researchers on a large-scale project. Brin has been largely out of sight after stepping down from an executive role at parent company Alphabet in 2019.

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  • U.S. stocks drift higher as tech earnings, Fed rate decision loom

    U.S. stocks drift higher as tech earnings, Fed rate decision loom

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    U.S. stocks were modestly higher on Tuesday as the Dow’s winning streak continued for now, while investors waited for big tech company earnings after the bell and the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision on Wednesday.

    How stocks are trading

    • The S&P 500 climbed 5 points, or 0.1%, to 4,560

    • The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 12 points, or 0%, to 35,423

    • The Nasdaq Composite increased 51 points, or 0.3%, to 14,110

    On Monday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.21%

    rose 184 points, or 0.52%, to 35411, the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.30%

    increased 18 points, or 0.4%, to 4555, and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +0.66%

    gained 26 points, or 0.19%, to 14059.

    What’s driving markets

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average is on an 11-session winning streak, its best run in more than six years, as hopes build that the Federal Reserve’s remaining interest rate hikes this year will not cause a recession as inflation cools.

    Whether the Dow can make it an even dozen days of gains and extend its rally even further to fresh 15-month highs will likely depend on the next few days containing corporate earnings reports and Fed comments.

    Dow components 3M
    MMM,
    +5.58%

    and Verizon Communications Inc.
    VZ,
    +0.60%

    both reported results before the bell. So did big name companies like General Electric
    GE,
    +5.97%

    and General Motors
    GM,
    -4.44%
    .

    After the bell, come Microsoft
    MSFT,
    +1.18%

    and Visa
    V,
    -0.28%
    ,
    with non-Dow member Alphabet
    GOOG,
    +0.11%

    also a highlight. Coca-Cola
    KO,
    -0.23%

    and Boeing
    BA,
    -1.67%

    are among those Dow members presenting their numbers on Wednesday.

    Investors will be want to hear from Alphabet and Microsoft about their cloud businesses, the ongoing impact and use of artificial intelligence and their general outlooks for American and global markets, David Sekera, chief U.S. market strategist at Morningstar, said in a phone interview.

    Meanwhile, equity markets are in “a little bit of a holding period” ahead of the events to come, he noted.

    Read also: IMF sees signs global economy is headed in the right direction

    Wednesday also sees the Fed’s latest monetary policy decision. The market is certain the central bank will increase its policy interest rate by another 25 basis points to a range of 5.25% to 5.50%.

    But investors are less sure of whether that will be the last hike of the current cycle, so the Fed’s accompanying statement and what Chair Jerome Powell says at his press conference will be the main drivers of bonds, equities and forex around the event.

    “Our view is the Fed is one and done,” Sekera said. Even with expectations that central banks will continue to “talk tough” on inflation, Sekera said Morningstar’s base case is that July’s 25-basis point hike is the last, while inflation continues to cool over the second half of the year. Rate cuts could occur as early as February, he said.

    At Vanguard, Andrew Patterson, senior international economist, said in a note that the Fed could reach its terminal rate “with 1 or 2 more hikes.” The central bank is “likely to remain on hold through at least the end of the year.  If inflation proves persistent, this may be a sign of a higher neutral rate and the Fed may need to go to 6% or beyond in order to bring inflation back to target,” he said.

    Others think there’s more rate hikes to go. “There is a great chance that the Fed will spoil your mood if you are among those thinking that this week’s rate hike will be the last for this tightening cycle in the U.S.,” said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank.

    Read also: ‘No chance we’re having a soft landing’: Stock-market strategist David Rosenberg gives Powell’s Fed no credit — and no mercy

    Meanwhile, helping underpin sentiment on Tuesday was a rebound in Chinese stocks, notably property developers after Beijing signaled support for the heavily-indebted sector.

    In other economic data Tuesday, home prices increased for the fourth consecutive month in May, according to the S&P Case-Shiller Index. May’s strongest price gains were in Midwest cities, but the overall gains underscore the ongoing lack of supply of homes.

    While home prices are rising, so is consumer confidence. One gauge on consumer sentiment reached a two-year high, according to data out Tuesday. The Conference Board’s index for July increased to 117.0, which was above economists’ expectations and up from a revised 110.1 last month.

    While mood is brightening, the index is still below pre-pandemic levels as consumers contend with the toll of high prices and rising interest rates.

    Companies in focus

    • General Electric Co.
      GE,
      +5.97%

      shares up more than 6% and approaching a nearly five-year high after second quarter results from the aerospace and renewable energy company that topped expectation. The company reported net income of $946 million, or 86 cents per share, from a loss of $1.25 billion, or $1.13 a share one year ago, while free cash flow and revenue also beat estimates.

    • Verizon Communications Inc.
      VZ,
      +0.60%

       shares are up more than 0.7% after the telecommunications company topped profit expectations in its latest earnings but came just below revenue expectations. The company reported $1.21 earnings per share, above FactSet consensus for $1.17 earnings per share.

    • General Motors Co.
      GM,
      -4.44%

      shares are more than 3% lower after the car maker delivered better than expected second quarter earnings and raised its guidance. The company had adjusted earnings per share of $1.91, topping the $1.86 consensus according to FactSet.  

    • 3M Co.
      MMM,
      +5.58%

      shares are more than 6% higher Tuesday after results showing the company booked a loss in connection with a litigation settlement over “forever chemicals.” But taking away the one-time charge, the company still topped adjusted profit expectations and raised its full-year outlook.

    • Spotify Technology
      SPOT,
      -13.68%

      shares tumbled about 12% Tuesday after the streaming giant easily surpassed subscriber-growth expectations for its latest quarter but failed to sport upside on its key financials.

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  • ‘Oppenheimer’ gives stock investors another reason to be bullish about nuclear energy

    ‘Oppenheimer’ gives stock investors another reason to be bullish about nuclear energy

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    One of the hottest movies of the summer is the staggeringly good biopic “Oppenheimer,” about the man who oversaw the frantic race to develop the atomic bomb during World War II. 

    The atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan on Aug 6, 1945 was a fission-style device. This also happens to be the same basic physics behind nuclear reactors that are in use today. It’s a reminder that technology can be, at its essence, agnostic: Whether it is used for malevolent or benevolent purposes (in nuclear fission’s instance, an instrument of death or clean, carbon-free electricity) depends upon the intent of the user. 

    Fission reactors generate about 10% of the world’s electricity today. The United States gets even more of its electricity this way, about a fifth.

    These percentages are likely to rise as global demand for electricity — and concerns about global warming and climate change — rise. This will present opportunities for long-term oriented investors. The lion’s share of this demand — about 70%, says the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA), will come from India, which the United Nations says is now the world’s most populous country, China, and Southeast Asia. Put another way, “the world’s growing demand for electricity is set to accelerate, adding more than double Japan’s current electricity consumption over the next three years,” says Fatih Birol, the IEA’s executive director.

    While fossil fuels remain the dominant source of electricity generation worldwide — the Central Intelligence Agency estimates that it provides about 70% of America’s electricity, 71% of India’s and 62% of China’s, for example—the IEA report says future demand will be met almost exclusively from two sources: renewables and nuclear power. “We are close to a tipping point for power sector emissions,” the IEA says. “Governments now need to enable low-emissions sources to grow even faster and drive down emissions so that the world can ensure secure electricity supplies while reaching climate goals.”

    The Biden administration is a big booster of nuclear energy.

    It’s helpful that the Biden administration is a big booster of nuclear energy, which the White House sees as an integral part of its broader effort to move the U.S. economy away from fossil fuels. The Department of Energy says that the country’s 93 reactors generate more than half of America’s carbon-free electricity. But price pressures from wind, solar and natural gas (which the feds call “relatively clean” even though it emits about 60% of coal’s carbon levels) have putseveral reactors out of business in recent years. 

    The bipartisan infrastructure bill that Biden signed into law in November 2021 includes $6 billion, spread out over several years, for the so-called Civil Nuclear Credit Program, designed to keep reactors — and the high-paying jobs that come with them — running. If a plant were to close, it would “result in an increase in air pollutants because other types of power plants with higher air pollutants typically fill the void left by nuclear facilities,” the administration says. U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm has said the Biden administration is “using every tool available” to get the country powered by clean energy by 2035.

    The private sector is beginning to stir. Last week, Maryland-based X-Energy said it would build up to 12 reactors in Central Washington state, for Energy Northwest, a public utility. These wouldn’t be the behemoth-type reactors we’re used to seeing, but “advanced small, nuclear reactors.” X-Energy, which is privately held,  has also been selected by Dow
    DOW,
    -1.40%

    to construct a similar facility in Texas.  

    Other companies are also rolling out new technology to meet demand. Nuclear fusion — a breakthrough in that it creates more energy than the Oppenheimer-era fission model and at a lower cost — is likely to be the basis for reactors in the years ahead; the Washington, D.C.-based Fusion Industry Association thinks the first fusion power plant could come online by 2030. After seven rounds of funding, one fusion company, Seattle-based Helion Energy, is currently valued at around $3.6 billion, and appears headed for a public offering.    

    Here too, the Biden administration is getting involved. In May, the Department of Energy announced $46 million in funding for eight other fusion companies. “We have generated energy by drawing power from the sun above us. Fusion offers the potential to create the power of the sun right here on Earth,” says Granholm.  

    There are several opportunities here for long-term investors. You can pick your way through any number of publicly held companies, including more traditional utilities, or spread your bet across the industry through a handful of exchange-traded funds. The largest of these is the Global X Uranium Fund
    URA,
    +0.78%
    ,
    with about $1.6 billion in assets. It’s up about 9% year-to-date. The VanEck Uranium + Nuclear Energy Fund
    NLR,
    +0.41%

     is up almost 10% and sports a 1.8% dividend yield. These are respectable year-t0-date returns, even though they lag the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.32%

    (up close to 19%) by a wide margin. 

    More: Net-zero by 2050: Will it be costly to decarbonize the global economy?

    Also read: Fukushima’s disaster led to a “lost decade” for nuclear markets. Russia, low carbon goals help stage a comeback.

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  • Here are 4 of the biggest changes to the Nasdaq 100 from Monday’s special rebalancing

    Here are 4 of the biggest changes to the Nasdaq 100 from Monday’s special rebalancing

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    New weightings for the largest stocks in the Nasdaq 100 are taking effect on Monday following the index’s second “special rebalancing” in 25 years.

    See: Nasdaq rebalancing is coming, and it’s boosting interest in Friday’s $2.3 trillion option expiration

    These new levels were shared ahead of time with Goldman Sachs Group Chief U.S. Equity Analyst David Kostin. Kostin and his team have published a report on the changes that was shared with Goldman clients and the press last week.

    Here are four of the most important shifts highlighted in Kostin’s note:

    • The seven stocks with the heaviest weightings in the Nasdaq 100 are seeing their collective weight reduced to 44% from 56%.

    • At the sector level, information technology will continue to account for roughly half of the index, but the sector’s weight will decline to 49% from 51%.

    • Apple Inc.
      AAPL,
      +0.56%

      and Microsoft Corp.
      MSFT,
      +0.19%

      will remain the index’s largest constituents, but their index weights will be reduced by roughly four percentage points — to 12% and 10%, respectively.

    • Broadcom’s index weight is seeing the biggest increase, and will see its weighting increase by 64 basis points to 3%.

    The Goldman analyst summarized how the new weightings would impact the index’s 25 largest constituents in the chart below.


    GOLDMAN SACHS

    According to Nasdaq representatives, the Nasdaq 100 is the most popular of the exchange’s indexes. So far this year, it has outperformed the Nasdaq Composite, a broader index including every company traded on the exchange. The Nasdaq 100 is up 41.2%, to the Composite’s 34.4%, according to FactSet data.

    EPFR data show $261 billion in mutual fund and exchange-traded fund assets are benchmarked to the Nasdaq 100, including the Invesco QQQ Trust Series
    QQQ,
    +0.11%
    ,
    better known by its ticker QQQ. More than $250 billion of this money is invested in passive benchmark-tracking strategies.

    Nasdaq decided to implement the special rebalancing earlier this month to try and ward off concentration risk after its seven largest components surged earlier this year. According to its official index-management methodology, Nasdaq aims to keep the combined weighting of its largest constituents to 40%.

    Kostin said he doesn’t expect these changes to have much of an impact on markets, arguing that the previous special rebalancing didn’t move the index much, either.

    Both the Nasdaq 100 and Nasdaq Composite were slightly lower on Monday as big-tech names continued to lag the S&P 500 and suddenly high-flying Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.57%
    ,
    just like they did last week.

    Nasdaq 100-tracking QQQ
    QQQ,
    +0.11%

    was off by 0.2% at $374 per share Monday morning, while the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +0.19%

    was down 0.2% at 14, 013.

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  • These stock watchers nailed the market’s melt-up, but now they’re bracing for a fall. Here’s what to watch.

    These stock watchers nailed the market’s melt-up, but now they’re bracing for a fall. Here’s what to watch.

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    Similar to the buzzy intrigue behind the mashup viewing of the tonally different Barbie and the Oppenheimer movies, the market is rallying to its own oddball double feature: higher interest rates and economic uncertainty.

    What could go wrong? That is what some stock-market specialists are wondering.

    On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.13%

    notched a 10th consecutive positive close, marking the longest win streak for the blue-chip benchmark since Aug. 7, 2017, according to the team at Dow Jones Market Data.

    To say that it has been a remarkable run-up is, perhaps, an understatement for some assets. Carvana
    CVNA,
    -2.38%
    ,
    a left-for-dead used-car retailer, whose stock had surged by 1,100% at its peak so far this year, before retreating somewhat, is a perfect example of the fervor surrounding risky assets.

    It feels as if buyers are crazed, even as the Federal Reserve is set next week to raise interest rates a quarter of a percentage point, marking the 11th time (since March of 2022) that the central bank has increased benchmark interest rates after pausing in June to assess the inflation backdrop.

    Read: U.S. inflation slows again, CPI shows

    The Wall Street Journal this week described the investing environment as hitting a “fever pitch” with “risk-on” assets the most popular they have been since late 2021—right before stocks entered the longest bear market in decades.”

    The surprising velocity at which the bearish miasma from earlier this year has dissipated is also noteworthy, considering the concerns around stubbornly high inflation and incessant fear of a Fed-induced recession.

    At Friday’s close of trade, the Dow was off a mere 4.3% from its January record high reached in 2022, the S&P 500 is about 5.4% shy of its Jan. 2, 2022 closing high. Soberingly, the tech-weighted Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    -0.22%

    remains off nearly 13%.

    Now, however, may be time to take profits, some pros seem to caution.

    Stifel’s chief equity strategist Barry Bannister told MarketWatch via email that the lagged effects of the Fed’s barrage of tightening, combined with stingy lending — among other factors — would likely be triggers for a market pullback, if not an economic retrenchment.

     “In total, those leading indicators will keep economic growth soft,” Bannister said, also referencing flagging manufacturing.

    In large part, that is why he’s calling for sideways action or a possible retreat of about 3% for the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.03%

    to 4,400.

    Bannister’s recent call is worth heeding because he nailed the first part of a two-pronged prediction for 2023, when he referred to it as a year of two halves.

    Back in January, he wrote:

    2023 may be a year of 2 halves, with the S&P 500 peaking mid-2023. The S&P 500 in late 2023 may give back some or all of 2023 gains.

    The Stifel analyst sees a heightened recession risk for 2024.

    Meanwhile, Michael Gayed, who also runs the Lead-Lag Report and is a portfolio manager at Tidal Financial Group, warned of the perils of investors’ rabid buying, in a recent report. Similar to Bannister, he also predicted a strong first half of 2023 followed by a retreat in latter part of the year.

    Jacques Cesar, a former managing partner at Oliver Wyman who now works on market valuation for the firm, shared a similar sentiment to those two…but with some nuances, in an interview with MarketWatch.

    “Right now, we are in a melt-up,” he said. “And Rule No. 1 about a melt-up, don’t short a melt-up,” he said, referring to making bearish bets that the market will fall soon.

    “Is the market too high? Yes,” Cesar said. “But is there a signal to short? Absolutely not,” he said.

    The market valuation pro, says investors find themselves in a Russian nesting doll of market conditions: “We are in a sub-cyclical bull in a cyclical bear in a suprasecular bull.”

    His assumption is that the current melt-up in markets will reverse but cautions that predicting the precise timing is impossible.

    Useful signs to look for will be decelerating market pricing and then reversing coupled with trading volume picking up as stocks slide.

    Cesar also predicts a pullback in 2024, if not a recession, and said that downturn will be followed by a return to a suprasecular, long-term bull run in 2025.

    Although, there won’t be an apparent trigger for the market and economic slump, Cesar says eroding consumer savings. built up during the pandemic, will be depleted by the end of 2023.

    As for inflation, Cesar says it has been dropping like a stone and pointed to the New York Fed’s Underlying Inflation Gauge as an early (but perhaps unheeded) signal that pricing pressures have been steadily receding.

    So much so that disinflation, a slowdown in the rate of inflation, may be a corporate concern in coming quarters.

    He said companies, which enjoyed healthy pricing power during the inflationary period, will be hurt in the short-term by disinflation in the short term.

    “As you go into disinflation, the margins get squeezed,” he said.

    Bannister says oversold parts of the market like banks
    KRE,
    -1.26%

    KBE,
    -1.20%
    ,
    industrials
    XLI,
    -0.47%

    and basic materials
    XLB,
    +0.01%
    ,
    might be better opportunities for investors in the third quarter than growth-oriented tech plays like Tesla
    TSLA,
    -1.10%
    ,
    for example.

    In the end, bulls (and bears), similar to moviegoers are wading back into a market that had been written off at the start of the year. The major cinematic question? Will they will be partying with Barbie or getting blown up with Oppenheimer?

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  • Here’s why Wall Street has fallen out of love with Tesla — for now

    Here’s why Wall Street has fallen out of love with Tesla — for now

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    Late on Wednesday, Tesla Inc.
    TSLA,
    -1.10%

    reported that quarterly sales were up 47% from a year earlier. But the stock tumbled 10% on Thursday.

    Tesla’s shares are still up 113% this year. The company is among a group of 13 in the S&P 500 that stand out with high growth expectations for sales, earnings and free cash flow through 2025.

    But less than half of analysts polled by FactSet rate Tesla a buy. Emily Bary explains what they are worried about.

    Traders have placed large short bets against Tesla and two of its rival EV makers — Rivian Automotive Inc.
    RIVN,
    -2.09%

    and Nio Inc.
    NIO,
    +2.52%
    .
    Claudia Assis looks into how well those trades have been working out.

    Cody Willard explains why he remains confident that Tesla and Rivian will dominate the EV market over the long term.

    Related coverage:

    Here’s what may propel U.S. stocks for years.

    Chipotle Mexican Grill is among 14 stocks named by Michael Brush for consideration by investors looking to ride along with long-term improvement of U.S. labor productivity.


    AP

    The S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.03%

    has returned 19% this year, following its 18% decline in 2022. On the same basis, with dividends reinvested, the benchmark index is still down 2% since the end of 2021.

    What is going on? Michael Brush believes that a high level of corporate investment in new technology and equipment is setting the stage for a long phase of earnings growth for U.S. companies. He shares four developments behind the coming productivity boom and 14 stocks expected to benefit from it.

    A signal for the stock-market’s health


    Getty Images

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.01%

    is up 6% this year. The venerable index has trailed the S&P 500, but its closing level of 35,255.18 on Thursday was only 4% shy of its record close a 36,799.65 on Jan. 4, 2022. Joseph Adinolfi explains Dow Theory, which according to technical analysts is sending a strong bullish signal for the stock market.

    Other opinions about market sentiment:

    Even if you have resisted the idea of a Roth IRA, you may soon be forced to have one

    This year if you are age 50 or older and are already maxing-out your contribution to a 401(K), 403(B) or other qualified employer-sponsored tax-deferred retirement plan at $22,500, you can make an additional “catch up” tax deductible contribution of $7,500 for a total of $30,000. But starting in 2024, the catch up contribution will no longer be tax deductible if you earn at least $145,000 a year. You can still make the contribution with after-tax money into a Roth 401(K) account that your plan administrator may already have set up for you.

    Alessandra Malito provides more details and news about employers’ efforts to delay the rule’s implementation.

    Beth Pinker writes the Fix My Portfolio column. This week she digs into Roth IRA conversions, through which you can simplify your taxes down the line.

    A hot vote in Spain

    The center of Madrid on July 15, 2023. A brutal heat wave could affect turnout for the country’s general election on July 23.


    Uncredited

    Barbara Kollmeyer reports from Spain about a highly contested election on Sunday, with controversy over the government’s policies during the pandemic, parties’ social policies and the possibility of a coalition government that might rattle financial markets.

    Meta vs. Alphabet

    Shares of Meta Platforms Inc. and Alphabet Inc. trade only slightly higher than the S&P 500 on a forward price-to-earnings bases, while Nvidia Corp., Microsoft Corp. and Apple Inc. trade much higher.


    FactSet

    Leslie Albrecht looks at Meta Platforms Inc.
    META,
    -2.73%
    ,
    which is Facebook’s holding company and has a hit on its hands with the new Threads social-media platform, and Google holding company Alphabet Inc.
    GOOGL,
    +0.69%
    ,
    to consider which stock is a better buy.

    Brett Arends: ‘I used to work at Nvidia. The stock I got is now half my portfolio. Should I sell?’

    The Ratings Game

    In The Ratings Game column, MarketWatch reporters track analysts’ thoughts about various stocks. Here’s a sampling of this week’s coverage:

    You don’t know every bad factor causing air travel to be nothing but harassment

    Getting there is half the fun.


    Getty Images

    The U.S. flying scene — from shortages of equipment and labor (and runways) to ill-staffed air-traffic control towers — is a well-known nightmare for U.S. travelers. But there is more to the story. Jeremy Binckes looks into other factors that may surprise you and cause great inconvenience this summer.

    The Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest rates again next week

    The Federal Open Market Committee will meet next Tuesday and Wednesday, to be immediately followed by a policy announcement. Economists expect the central to raise the federal-funds rate by another quarter point. The question is whether or not this will end the Fed’s inflation-fighting rate cycle.

    More coverage of the Fed:

    How much would you pay for 100% downside protection in the stock market?


    MarketWatch illustration/iStockphoto

    Over the past 30 years, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust
    SPY,

    has returned 1,650%, for an average annual return of 10%, with dividends reinvested, according to FactSet. But it hasn’t been a smooth ride. The ETF, which tracks the benchmark S&P 500, fell 18% last year and 37% during 2008, for example. And there have been even larger declines if the analysis isn’t confined to calendar years.

    But can you ride through market declines? Many studies have shown that most investors who try to time the market sell after a decline has started and buy back in well after a recovery is under way, which means their long-term performance can suffer significantly.

    In this week’s ETF Wrap column (and emailed newsletter), Isabel Wang describes a new buffered fund that can give you 100% downside protection over a two-year period, in return for a cap on your potential gains in the stock market. Here’s the price you would pay for the protection.

    The World Cup games have started

    Hannah Wilkinson scored the home team’s first goal against Norway during the first World Cup game in Auckland, New Zealand, on July 20.


    Getty Images

    The Women’s World Cup began Thursday with an upset victory by New Zealand over Norway.

    James Rogers reports on what is expected to be a much easier environment for FIFA and corporate sponsors than that of last year’s Men’s World Cup in Qatar.

    U.S. Soccer Federation President Cindy Parlow Cone participated in MarketWatch’s Best New Ideas in Money podcast and spoke about the long-term effort to achieve equal treatment for women soccer players.

    More coverage of the World Cup:

    Want more from MarketWatch? Sign up for this and other newsletters to get the latest news and advice on personal finance and investing.

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  • 3 Reasons Sirius XM Stock Just Surged 42%

    3 Reasons Sirius XM Stock Just Surged 42%

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    3 Reasons Sirius XM Stock Just Surged 42%

    Sirius XM Holdings stock surged 42% Thursday on an apparent combination of short covering, an unwinding of a spread trade involving Liberty SiriusXM, and possible buying related to a rebalancing of the Nasdaq 100 index.

    An error has occurred, please try again later.

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  • Dow posts longest winning streak in nearly 6 years; Nasdaq slumps over 2%

    Dow posts longest winning streak in nearly 6 years; Nasdaq slumps over 2%

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    U.S. stocks finished mostly lower Thursday, with the Nasdaq and S&P 500 dragged down by disappointing earnings, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose for a ninth straight day for its longest winning streak in nearly six years.

    How stocks traded

    • The S&P 500
      SPX,
      -0.68%

      fell 30.85 points, or 0.7%, to close at 4,534.87.

    • The Dow
      DJIA,
      +0.47%

      rose 163.97 points, or 0.5%, to finish at 35,225.18. The winning streak is its longest since a nine-day run that ended on Sept. 20, 2017, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    • The Nasdaq Composite
      COMP,
      -2.05%

      ended at 14,063.31, down 294.71 points, or 2.1%.

    What drove markets

    After lagging behind the S&P 500 and Nasdaq for most of the year, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has climbed over the past two weeks. The blue-chip gauge is now heading for its longest streak of daily gains since Sept. 20, 2017, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    It’s the latest milestone as value stocks and other lagging sectors of the market appear to be playing “catch up,” said Paul Nolte, senior wealth adviser and market strategist at Murphy & Sylvest Wealth Management, during a phone interview with MarketWatch. Although the Dow’s year-to-date gains are still well behind those of the S&P 500, with the blue-chip gauge up 6.6% since Jan. 1, FactSet data show.

    On Wednesday, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed at their highest levels in nearly 16 months.

    “We’re finally seeing the rotation to value,” he said. “The Dow is playing catch up with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq.”

    See: Stock-market bubble trouble? Check out the 3-year view on Nasdaq, S&P 500 returns.

    Technology stocks were lagging following earnings from Netflix Inc.
    NFLX,
    -8.41%

    released late Wednesday, which showed that revenue fell short. Shares fell 8.4%.

    Tesla Inc.
    TSLA,
    -9.74%

    shares fell 9.7% after the electric vehicle maker beat Wall Street expectations for its second quarter but not in the blowout fashion that some market observers were expecting.

    “Netflix missed sales estimates and issued lower-than-expected Q3 guidance, while Tesla’s results showed shrinking profitability with squeeze on margins,” said Henry Allen, strategist at Deutsche Bank.

    Semiconductor shares also took it on the chin, with the PHLX Semiconductor Index
    SOX,
    -3.62%

    falling 3.6%. The drop came after Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. 
    TSM,
    -5.05%

    topped second-quarter earnings expectations but reported margins that contracted, while providing a somewhat downbeat outlook.

    Meanwhile, shares of IBM Corp.
    IBM,
    +2.14%

    and Johnson & Johnson
    JNJ,
    +6.07%

    drove the Dow higher after both companies beat earnings expectations.

    Bad news for Netflix seemed to infect other megacap technology names, as Alphabet Inc. Class A
    GOOGL,
    -2.32%

    and Alphabet Inc.
    GOOG,
    -2.65%

    retreated, as did shares of Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    -1.01%

    and Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    -2.31%

    after the latter hit a record this week.

    Investors also digested earnings from American Airlines Group Inc.
    AAL,
    -6.24%

    and Blackstone Inc.
    BX,
    -0.61%

    which reported before the opening bell. After the close, investors will hear from Capital One Financial Corp.
    COF,
    -2.52%
    ,
    CSX Corp.
    CSX,
    -0.27%

    and First Financial Bancorp
    FFBC,
    -0.54%
    ,
    along with a few others.

    In U.S. economic data, weekly jobless benefit claims data showed the number of Americans applying for first-time unemployment benefits fell to a two-month low. Meanwhile, the Philadelphia Fed’s gauge of manufacturing activity came in at negative 13.5 in July, up from 13.7 during the prior month.

    Existing home sales fell in June, while leading index of economic indicators dropped 0.7% in June, falling for the 15th month in a row.

    Companies in focus

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  • Stock-market bubble trouble? Check out the 3-year view on Nasdaq, S&P 500 returns.

    Stock-market bubble trouble? Check out the 3-year view on Nasdaq, S&P 500 returns.

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    A 2023 stock-market rally led by megacap tech names is stirring fears another bubble may be forming as the Nasdaq Composite index significantly outpaces strong gains for the S&P 500.

    But a longer term look at the tape indicates the Nasdaq may merely be playing catch-up with the large-cap U.S. benchmark, argued Jessica Rabe, co-founder of DataTrek Research, in a Thursday note, who also warned against losing sight of how dismal 2022 was for stocks.

    The Nasdaq
    COMP,
    -2.05%

    was up 37.2% year-to-date through Wednesday’s close, far outpacing the S&P 500’s
    SPX,
    -0.68%

    18.9% rally, but over the last three years, the S&P 500, up 42%, has outpaced the Nasdaq’s 37% rise, Rabe observed.

    DataTrek ran the three-year rolling returns for both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite over the last 50 years to put 2022’s losses and 2023’s rebounds into a larger context. Rabe said they chose those time frames because the three-year period helps smooth out year-to-year seasonality and volatility, and five decades capture a variety of business, interest rate and valuation cycles (see chart below).


    DataTrek Research

    The Nasdaq Composite tends to outperform the S&P 500 over a 3-year time horizon but it is also more volatile, as would be expected, Rabe noted. The three-year average price return for the Nasdaq was 41.% versus 29% for the S&P 500 back to 1974.

    The Nasdaq Composite is up 37.1% over the last three years, versus 42% for the S&P 500, making this year’s performance look like a reversion to the longer term mean.

    “The Nasdaq has underperformed the S&P by almost 500 basis points over the last three years, when the Comp typically outperforms by a much larger margin (+1,220 bps). It therefore makes sense that the Nasdaq is playing some catch-up in 2023,” the analyst said.

    The data also show 3-year returns rarely go negative and that they continue to trade in similar bands to prior cycles. “Barring a geopolitical or economic shock, both the Nasdaq and S&P tend to generate positive, double-digit returns over three-year periods,” she said.

    Even with the Nasdaq and S&P’s double-digit rallies this year, three-year returns for both indexes are relatively ordinary as compared with historical norms, Rabe noted. The Composite’s 37.1% return over the last three years is slightly below the average of 41.2% but well within one standard deviation to the downside. The S&P 500’s 42% rise over the same stretch tops its average of 29% but is well within standard deviation to the upside, she said.

    What does it all mean? Rabe acknowledged that stock valuations are rich and that companies need to keep delivering on earnings, but said it’s also worth noting that part of the impressive rallies for both indexes can be explained in part as a reversion to historical averages. She noted that the S&P 500 and Nasdaq’s 2022 performances were nearly or just as bad as those seen in the 1973-74 oil crisis and recession, the period around the bursting of the dot-com bubble, the lead-up to the second Gulf War, and the 2007-09 financial crisis.

    “This year’s gains so far have gotten them back closer to their 3-year average returns but are nowhere near bubble territory,” she said.

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  • Tesla Beat Earnings Estimates. That Isn’t The Biggest Surprise.

    Tesla Beat Earnings Estimates. That Isn’t The Biggest Surprise.

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    Tesla Beat Earnings Estimates. That Isn’t The Biggest Surprise.

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  • Il Makiage parent Oddity Tech’s stock rockets out of the gate in trading debut

    Il Makiage parent Oddity Tech’s stock rockets out of the gate in trading debut

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    “We want to build something huge.”

    That’s Lindsay Drucker Mann, chief financial officer of Oddity Tech, the Israeli digital consumer technology platform for the beauty and wellness market that started trading on Nasdaq on Wednesday.

    The stock
    ODD,
    +38.23%

    soared 38% out of the gate after the company’s initial public offering priced above its proposed range. The deal was also upsized in another sign of strong demand.

    “We’ve unlocked online one of the most attractive and lucrative TAMs on the planet,” said the CFO, referring to the sector’s total addressable market. The beauty industry is worth an estimated $600 billion and is still dominated by bricks-and-mortar retailers.

    “The encumbents are amazing megacap businesses that have built so much value over time,” said Drucker Mann. “But we believe the consumer has moved on and that we’re building the future of the category.”

    The company, which was founded by Israeli sister-brother team Oran Holtzman, who is chief executive, and Shiran Holtzman-Erel, who is chief product officer, is confident its high-tech approach to the beauty business gives it a strong advantage.

    For more, see: Il Makiage parent Oddity Tech is going public: 5 things to know about the Israeli digital beauty company

    Oddity harnesses data science, machine learning and computer vision and artificial intelligence to allow its customers identify the correct products, formulations and shades, and it owns patented software that allows them to do it using their smartphones.

    The company acquired Voyage 81 in 2021, a company that has developed software that can provide hyperspectral information.

    Simply put, the eye can only see three colors — red, green and blue — but there are many more colors on smaller wavelength bands that remain invisible. Technology developed by NASA can extract that information but the hardware is expensive at a cost of $20,000 or more.

    The Voyage81 software can extract the same information and bring it to all devices, allowing consumers to see more colors.

    “We can analyze skin and hair features, detect facial blood flows and more. We’re building a whole new suite of tools to harness that power,” said Drucker Mann.

    The results are impressive. The company’s first brand, Il Makiage, which was launched in 2018, was the fastest-growing global beauty direct-to-consumer platform from 2020 through 2022, says the prospectus, citing trade magazine Women’s Wear Daily.

    Il Makiage was also the fastest-growing digital, direct-to-consumer beauty brand in the U.S. through 2021, says the IPO prospectus, citing data from Digital Commerce 360, which is its most recent available.

    The second brand, SpoiledChild, launched in 2022 with the goal of disrupting the wellness category online, and is scaling even faster, said Drucker Mann.

    The company now has more than 40 million users on the platform that have generated more than 1 billion data points on their beauty preferences. As of end-March, Oddity had more 4 million active customers, or customers that had made at least one purchase in the last year.

    “Our business is unique in that it’s a company that’s growing and as young as we are and in tech, we’re profitable from very early on,” said Drucker Mann. “We have generated significant Ebitda margins and cash flow and so we have more than $100 million of cash on our balance sheet from earnings, and not from a capital raise.”

    The company plans to use the proceeds from today’s deal to develop new products and expand into new markets. Some of those products will come out of Oddity Labs, which it set up in April to bring AI-based molecule discovery to beauty and wellness.

    Brands three and four are in the works, although Drucker Mann is unable to offer details just yet.

    “There are so many pain points that consumers have told us about so we’re developing products to address those,” she said.

    The executive’s background as a Goldman Sachs banker made her passionate about companies and consumer products, understanding how a company works and what makes a business succeed.

    “Getting global capital markets behind us when the business has never been stronger is making us excited as we look at 2024 and beyond,” she said.

    The Renaissance IPO ETF
    IPO,
    +0.29%

    has gained 45% in the year to date, while the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.32%

    has gained 19%.

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  • U.S. dollar could soon wipe out all of its post-pandemic gains, Soc Gen strategist warns

    U.S. dollar could soon wipe out all of its post-pandemic gains, Soc Gen strategist warns

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    The slide in the U.S. dollar in the last eight months could mean that mean all of its gains in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic will soon be lost, according to Kit Juckes, a macro strategist at Société Générale who has been a long-time currency analyst.

    Juckes said in a note shared with SocGen clients and the media on Tuesday that he expects the greenback could return to its lows from December 2020, the level it fell to during the pandemic given the market is pricing in an end to interest rate rises by the Federal Reserve this year.

    “As was the case in January/February before the SVB mini crisis, the market is anticipating the peak in US rates and a further narrowing relative rates. If nothing happens to scupper those expectations (another upside surprise in US growth, or further European growth disappointment) I would expect the Dollar Index to move closer but not all the way to, the lows at the end of 2020,” he said.

    “That won’t happen in a straight line and will require further interest rate convergence between the U.S. and other major economies, however.”

    Over the past week, investors’ expectations about the outlook for where U.S. interest rates are headed have shifted. Following lower-than-expected readings last week on U.S. June inflation, as measured by the consumer price index and the producer price index, many investors expect the Fed will raise its benchmark interest rate only once more when the central bank holds its policy meeting next week.

    Read this next: U.S. stocks benefiting from ‘sense of urgency’ as investors rush into equity mutual funds

    Fed-funds futures, which are used to bet on the expected path of interest rates, are pricing in nearly a 100% probability of a hike in July, but analysts also think rate cuts could come by the Fed’s January policy meeting, where futures markets already see a nearly 40% probability of a cut, according to CME’s FedWatch tool.

    This shift in expectations has triggered a wave of dollar-bearishness across Wall Street, with many top currency analysts opining that the path of least resistance for the U.S. dollar is likely lower.

    The ICE U.S. Dollar Index
    DXY,
    +0.13%
    ,
    a gauge of the dollar’s strength against a basket of major currencies, was trading modestly higher on Tuesday, up 0.1% at 99.96, but on Monday, the index touched its lowest level since mid-April 2022.

    Back in December 2020, it briefly broke below 90 to what was at the time its weakest level in more than two years.

    Read more: Why stocks could get a boost from a falling U.S. dollar

    Another important question for markets will be whether the dollar’s peak in late September 2022, when the dollar index traded just shy of 115, its highest level in more than two decades, will mark a long-term cyclical peak. As Juckes notes, the dollar has traded at a succession of higher lows since 2007.

    Another issue on Juckes’ radar: the prospect that the U.S. dollar and Chinese yuan
    USDCNY,
    +0.35%

    could weaken in tandem. Juckes said he expects the yuan to climb to 7.40 against the dollar by the end of the year, a level it hasn’t seen in roughly 15 years.

    The onshore renminbi, which incorporates the yuan’s more tightly controlled exchange rate within China, was trading at 7.18, with the dollar climbing 0.1%.

    While American consumers could see the price of imported goods rise and international travel become more expensive, a weaker dollar could also help boost U.S. equity prices, as earnings of exporters get a boost from the currency’s slide, and the chances of a global recession eases, as MarketWatch reported on Monday.

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