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We’re still taking a while cranking up this trading week, following a slightly mixed session to start the holiday-shortened week yesterday. All three major indexes are up this morning — the Dow +80 points, the S&P 500 +7 and the Nasdaq +15 — but it feels as if market participants are still wiping sleep from their eyes. That everything looks green at this hour certainly helps; even Energy and Bitcoin are performing well right now.
We talked in this space yesterday about the “meme stocks” taking some of the air out of the market, with trading pressures often stemming from general run-ups in companies like GameStop (GME - Free Report) and AMC (AMC - Free Report) . This morning, we’re also seeing shares of BlackBerry (BB - Free Report) off to the races again, looking for its fifth consecutive up trading day, +16% as of this hour, and nearly +15% yesterday. For its part, AMC is up another 20% today.
Aside from potentially stoking some irrational trading habits, these meme stocks also indicate a lot of money sloshing around the stock market without a lot of purposeful direction. Not that there aren’t some helpful news items boosting companies like AMC — the Great Reopening and millions in new capital raised, for instance — but Q1 earnings season is just about over, and no economic prints are pushing on the market.
That may change as of tomorrow morning: aside from normal Initial and Continuing Jobless Claims Thursday morning, we also look forward to May private-sector employment figures from Automatic Data Processing (ADP - Free Report) . Expectations are for another big monthly boost in American jobs: 680K. This is down from the 742K posted for April, but still opening the spigot on re-hires, especially in service-related businesses as a new summer approaches.
Of course, following the ADP report will be non-farm payrolls from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) on Friday, which are expected to have brought 674K new jobs last month with an Unemployment Rate dropping 20 basis points to 5.9%. It would be the first five-handle on Unemployment in the pandemic era, although the labor market appears to have cooled somewhat from expectations over the past few weeks.
In general, however, the market is in a good place. The Dow is riding a four-day winning streak, up seven of its last eight sessions, even though indexes overall have done a good job of keeping gains (or losses) measured, within relatively reasonable valuations. Currently, aside from meme stocks obscuring overall growth levels, the open question seems to be whether inflation headwinds are transitory (as the Fed believes) or more permanent. Data in the coming days and weeks will inform.
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Wall Street Continues Northbound Journey
We’re still taking a while cranking up this trading week, following a slightly mixed session to start the holiday-shortened week yesterday. All three major indexes are up this morning — the Dow +80 points, the S&P 500 +7 and the Nasdaq +15 — but it feels as if market participants are still wiping sleep from their eyes. That everything looks green at this hour certainly helps; even Energy and Bitcoin are performing well right now.
We talked in this space yesterday about the “meme stocks” taking some of the air out of the market, with trading pressures often stemming from general run-ups in companies like GameStop (GME - Free Report) and AMC (AMC - Free Report) . This morning, we’re also seeing shares of BlackBerry (BB - Free Report) off to the races again, looking for its fifth consecutive up trading day, +16% as of this hour, and nearly +15% yesterday. For its part, AMC is up another 20% today.
Aside from potentially stoking some irrational trading habits, these meme stocks also indicate a lot of money sloshing around the stock market without a lot of purposeful direction. Not that there aren’t some helpful news items boosting companies like AMC — the Great Reopening and millions in new capital raised, for instance — but Q1 earnings season is just about over, and no economic prints are pushing on the market.
That may change as of tomorrow morning: aside from normal Initial and Continuing Jobless Claims Thursday morning, we also look forward to May private-sector employment figures from Automatic Data Processing (ADP - Free Report) . Expectations are for another big monthly boost in American jobs: 680K. This is down from the 742K posted for April, but still opening the spigot on re-hires, especially in service-related businesses as a new summer approaches.
Of course, following the ADP report will be non-farm payrolls from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) on Friday, which are expected to have brought 674K new jobs last month with an Unemployment Rate dropping 20 basis points to 5.9%. It would be the first five-handle on Unemployment in the pandemic era, although the labor market appears to have cooled somewhat from expectations over the past few weeks.
In general, however, the market is in a good place. The Dow is riding a four-day winning streak, up seven of its last eight sessions, even though indexes overall have done a good job of keeping gains (or losses) measured, within relatively reasonable valuations. Currently, aside from meme stocks obscuring overall growth levels, the open question seems to be whether inflation headwinds are transitory (as the Fed believes) or more permanent. Data in the coming days and weeks will inform.