Weekly Market Update, September 12, 2016

Presented by Mark Gallagher

General market news
• Treasuries sold off late last week as a number of events seemed to support higher yields. New Treasury auctions were announced, the European Central Bank left its stimulus policy unchanged, and a handful of Federal Reserve officials—including historically dovish Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren—indicated that rates could move higher this year. The 10-year Treasury opened with a yield of 1.68 percent early this Monday morning, while the 30-year opened at 2.39 percent.
• The S&P 500 Index posted a loss of 2.36 percent last week, as hawkish comments from Fed officials pushed markets downward. The energy sector led gains after Russia and Saudi Arabia came to a deal to stabilize oil prices. Consumer staples and materials were the top detractors, with losses of 3.6 percent and 3.5 percent, respectively. The Nasdaq Composite Index also dropped by 2.35 percent.
• In a fairly quiet week for economic data, the ISM Non-Manufacturing Index fell more than expected, reaching its lowest levels in quite some time. The details of the August report were mostly negative, with new, export, and backlog orders all contracting. There was some positive news on the jobs front, with unemployment claims dropping slightly and the Department of Labor’s JOLTS report showing record levels of job openings.

 

Equity Index Week-to-Date Month-to-Date Year-to-Date 12-Month
S&P 500 –2.36% –1.95% 5.71% 12.01%
Nasdaq Composite –2.35% –1.66% 3.29% 9.12%
DJIA –2.15% –1.66% 5.87% 14.28%
MSCI EAFE –0.13% 0.57% 2.26% 2.03%
MSCI Emerging Markets 1.12% 1.34% 17.00% 15.49%
Russell 2000 –2.59% –1.64% 8.42% 7.82%

Source: Bloomberg

 

Fixed Income Index Month-to-Date Year-to-Date 12-Month
U.S. Broad Market –0.53% 5.30% 5.18%
U.S. Treasury –0.62% 4.56% 4.30%
U.S. Mortgages –0.06% 3.37% 3.72%
Municipal Bond –0.29% 4.23% 6.76%

Source: Morningstar Direct

 

What to look forward to
The focus this week will be on August inflation data, with releases of the Producer and Consumer Price indices. The CPI is expected to show only minor price pressure.

We will also see data on Retail Sales and Industrial Production.

Disclosures: Certain sections of this commentary contain forward-looking statements that are based on our reasonable expectations, estimates, projections, and assumptions. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve certain risks and uncertainties, which are difficult to predict. All indices are unmanaged and are not available for direct investment by the public. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The S&P 500 is based on the average performance of the 500 industrial stocks monitored by Standard & Poor’s. The Nasdaq Composite Index measures the performance of all issues listed in the Nasdaq Stock Market, except for rights, warrants, units, and convertible debentures. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is computed by summing the prices of the stocks of 30 large companies and then dividing that total by an adjusted value, one which has been adjusted over the years to account for the effects of stock splits on the prices of the 30 companies. Dividends are reinvested to reflect the actual performance of the underlying securities. The MSCI EAFE Index is a float-adjusted market capitalization index designed to measure developed market equity performance, excluding the U.S. and Canada. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index is a market capitalization-weighted index composed of companies representative of the market structure of 26 emerging market countries in Europe, Latin America, and the Pacific Basin. The Russell 2000® Index measures the performance of the 2,000 smallest companies in the Russell 3000® Index. The Barclays Capital Aggregate Bond Index is an unmanaged market value-weighted performance benchmark for investment-grade fixed-rate debt issues, including government, corporate, asset-backed, and mortgage-backed securities with maturities of at least one year. The U.S. Treasury Index is based on the auctions of U.S. Treasury bills, or on the U.S. Treasury’s daily yield curve. The Barclays Capital Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) Index is an unmanaged market value-weighted index of 15- and 30-year fixed-rate securities backed by mortgage pools of the Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA), Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC), and balloon mortgages with fixed-rate coupons. The Barclays Capital Municipal Bond Index includes investment-grade, tax-exempt, and fixed-rate bonds with long-term maturities (greater than 2 years) selected from issues larger than $50 million.

 

Mark Gallagher is a financial advisor located at Gallagher Financial Services at 2586 East 7th Ave. Suite #304, North Saint Paul, MN 55109. He offers securities and advisory services as an Investment Adviser Representative of Commonwealth Financial Network®, Member FINRA/SIPC, a Registered Investment Adviser. He can be reached at 651-774-8759 or at mark@markgallagher.com.

Authored by the Investment Research team at Commonwealth Financial Network.

© 2016 Commonwealth Financial Network®

 

Weekly Market Update, September 6, 2016

Presented by Mark Gallagher

General market news
• The 10-year Treasury yield was quite volatile following the release of Friday’s weak employment report. After moving as low as 1.53 percent and as high as 1.63 percent, it opened early Monday morning around 1.60 percent. It seems likely that the jobs report will take a September rate hike off the table.
• The S&P 500 Index rose slightly last week, gaining 0.56 percent, after the jobs report miss eased near-term rate hike fears. The financial sector led gains while health care and energy were the top detractors, as drug pricing pressure and high oil inventories remain in the news. The Nasdaq Composite Index also moved a bit higher, posting a gain of 0.62 percent.
• Last week’s economic news was mixed. Personal consumption expenditures were up 0.1 percent month-over-month, but the rest of the week’s data was soft or negative. Jobless claims rose by 3,000 to 263,000, the ISM Manufacturing Index declined to 49.4, and unemployment remained at 4.9 percent. The Department of Labor’s employment report showed that nonfarm payrolls increased by 151,000 in August, versus expectations of 180,000. Wages also fell short of expectations; hourly earnings rose only 0.1 percent from the previous month and 2.4 percent from August of last year.

Equity Index Week-to-Date Month-to-Date Year-to-Date 12-Month
S&P 500 0.56% 0.42% 8.27% 14.35%
Nasdaq Composite 0.62% 0.71% 5.84% 12.03%
DJIA 0.61% 0.50% 8.19% 16.16%
MSCI EAFE –0.42% 0.55% 1.49% 3.81%
MSCI Emerging Markets –1.00% –0.17% 14.58% 15.13%
Russell 2000 1.15% 0.97% 11.29% 10.91%

Source: Bloomberg

 

Fixed Income Index Month-to-Date Year-to-Date 12-Month
U.S. Broad Market –0.15% 5.70% 5.46%
U.S. Treasury –0.17% 5.03% 4.60%
U.S. Mortgages –0.05% 3.38% 3.70%
Municipal Bond –0.18% 4.35% 6.68%

Source: Morningstar Direct

What to look forward to
This holiday-shortened week will be light in important economic news.

After last week’s disappointing manufacturing data, we expect the ISM Non-Manufacturing Index to show that the rest of the economy is holding up fairly well.

Disclosures: Certain sections of this commentary contain forward-looking statements that are based on our reasonable expectations, estimates, projections, and assumptions. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve certain risks and uncertainties, which are difficult to predict. All indices are unmanaged and are not available for direct investment by the public. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The S&P 500 is based on the average performance of the 500 industrial stocks monitored by Standard & Poor’s. The Nasdaq Composite Index measures the performance of all issues listed in the Nasdaq Stock Market, except for rights, warrants, units, and convertible debentures. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is computed by summing the prices of the stocks of 30 large companies and then dividing that total by an adjusted value, one which has been adjusted over the years to account for the effects of stock splits on the prices of the 30 companies. Dividends are reinvested to reflect the actual performance of the underlying securities. The MSCI EAFE Index is a float-adjusted market capitalization index designed to measure developed market equity performance, excluding the U.S. and Canada. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index is a market capitalization-weighted index composed of companies representative of the market structure of 26 emerging market countries in Europe, Latin America, and the Pacific Basin. The Russell 2000® Index measures the performance of the 2,000 smallest companies in the Russell 3000® Index. The Barclays Capital Aggregate Bond Index is an unmanaged market value-weighted performance benchmark for investment-grade fixed-rate debt issues, including government, corporate, asset-backed, and mortgage-backed securities with maturities of at least one year. The U.S. Treasury Index is based on the auctions of U.S. Treasury bills, or on the U.S. Treasury’s daily yield curve. The Barclays Capital Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) Index is an unmanaged market value-weighted index of 15- and 30-year fixed-rate securities backed by mortgage pools of the Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA), Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC), and balloon mortgages with fixed-rate coupons. The Barclays Capital Municipal Bond Index includes investment-grade, tax-exempt, and fixed-rate bonds with long-term maturities (greater than 2 years) selected from issues larger than $50 million.

 

Mark Gallagher is a financial advisor located at Gallagher Financial Services at 2586 East 7th Ave. Suite #304, North Saint Paul, MN 55109. He offers securities and advisory services as an Investment Adviser Representative of Commonwealth Financial Network®, Member FINRA/SIPC, a Registered Investment Adviser. He can be reached at 651-774-8759 or at mark@markgallagher.com.
Authored by the Investment Research team at Commonwealth Financial Network.

© 2016 Commonwealth Financial Network®

 

Weekly Market Update, August 29, 2016

Presented by Mark Gallagher

General market news
• The yield on the 10-year Treasury jumped as high as 1.63 percent after Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen’s speech on Friday, yet it was as low as 1.53 percent as the market tried to assess the meaning of the language in her speech. On Monday morning, the 10-year opened at 1.61 percent—its highest open since late June. The 30-year remained well within its recent range, opening at 2.27 percent on Monday.
• The S&P 500 declined 0.67 percent last week after negative performance in the health care, consumer, and energy sectors. The health care sector, in particular, fell 1.80 percent after news broke of steep price increases for Mylan’s EpiPen. The Nasdaq Composite Index also fell slightly, by 0.35 percent.
• The economic news from last week was mixed. Although new home sales data for July was strong, increasing to 654,000 homes, existing home sales declined to 5.4 million on thin supply. Durable goods orders showed solid gains, backed by an uptick in orders from the commercial aircraft sector, but the second estimate of gross domestic product growth showed that the U.S. economy grew at a pace of just 1.1 percent, largely due to weak local and government spending.

Equity Index Week-to-Date Month-to-Date Year-to-Date 12-Month
S&P 500 –0.67% 0.00% 7.67% 14.27%
Nasdaq Composite –0.35% 1.26% 5.13% 12.50%
DJIA –0.85% 0.15% 7.53% 16.02%
MSCI EAFE 0.18% 0.32% 1.90% 3.19%
MSCI Emerging Markets –0.95% 2.90% 15.81% 17.72%
Russell 2000 0.11% 1.59% 10.04% 11.04%

Source: Bloomberg

 

Fixed Income Index Month-to-Date Year-to-Date 12-Month
U.S. Broad Market –0.43% 5.52% 5.60%
U.S. Treasury –0.94% 4.80% 4.54%
U.S. Mortgages –0.05% 3.27% 3.74%
Municipal Bond 0.15% 4.55% 6.90%

Source: Morningstar Direct

 

What to look forward to
We will touch on several important sectors in this week’s data, including the consumer, manufacturing, and the labor market.

We expect Personal Income to have increased in July, while the ISM Manufacturing Index is expected to have declined slightly in August.

The highlight of the week will be the August Employment report, which will be released Friday.

Disclosures: Certain sections of this commentary contain forward-looking statements that are based on our reasonable expectations, estimates, projections, and assumptions. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve certain risks and uncertainties, which are difficult to predict. All indices are unmanaged and are not available for direct investment by the public. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The S&P 500 is based on the average performance of the 500 industrial stocks monitored by Standard & Poor’s. The Nasdaq Composite Index measures the performance of all issues listed in the Nasdaq Stock Market, except for rights, warrants, units, and convertible debentures. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is computed by summing the prices of the stocks of 30 large companies and then dividing that total by an adjusted value, one which has been adjusted over the years to account for the effects of stock splits on the prices of the 30 companies. Dividends are reinvested to reflect the actual performance of the underlying securities. The MSCI EAFE Index is a float-adjusted market capitalization index designed to measure developed market equity performance, excluding the U.S. and Canada. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index is a market capitalization-weighted index composed of companies representative of the market structure of 26 emerging market countries in Europe, Latin America, and the Pacific Basin. The Russell 2000® Index measures the performance of the 2,000 smallest companies in the Russell 3000® Index. The Barclays Capital Aggregate Bond Index is an unmanaged market value-weighted performance benchmark for investment-grade fixed-rate debt issues, including government, corporate, asset-backed, and mortgage-backed securities with maturities of at least one year. The U.S. Treasury Index is based on the auctions of U.S. Treasury bills, or on the U.S. Treasury’s daily yield curve. The Barclays Capital Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) Index is an unmanaged market value-weighted index of 15- and 30-year fixed-rate securities backed by mortgage pools of the Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA), Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC), and balloon mortgages with fixed-rate coupons. The Barclays Capital Municipal Bond Index includes investment-grade, tax-exempt, and fixed-rate bonds with long-term maturities (greater than 2 years) selected from issues larger than $50 million.

 

Mark Gallagher is a financial advisor located at Gallagher Financial Services at 2586 East 7th Ave. Suite #304, North Saint Paul, MN 55109. He offers securities and advisory services as an Investment Adviser Representative of Commonwealth Financial Network®, Member FINRA/SIPC, a Registered Investment Adviser. He can be reached at 651-774-8759 or at mark@markgallagher.com.

Authored by the Investment Research team at Commonwealth Financial Network.

© 2016 Commonwealth Financial Network®

 

Weekly Market Update, August 22, 2016

Presented by Mark Gallagher

General market news
• The 10-year Treasury yield opened at 1.59 percent early Monday and quickly dropped to 1.54 percent. (It had opened last Monday at 1.50 percent.) The range of 1.58‒1.60 percent seems to be the ceiling for the 10-year, and we think this could continue for some time, as investors around the globe continue to seek the relative safe haven of U.S. Treasuries.
• The S&P 500 was relatively flat for the second week in a row, gaining just 0.06 percent. The energy sector continued its rally from the prior week with an increase of 2.2 percent. This performance was backed by a 9-percent rebound in WTI crude oil prices, which moved to $48.52 per barrel. The increase came after comments from Russia’s energy minister about successful talks with Saudi Arabia to attain market stability. The Nasdaq Composite Index also moved slightly higher by 0.16 percent.
• The economic news last week was mixed. The week began with soft inflation data, as the Consumer Price Index remained relatively unchanged in July, showing a nominal 0.1-percent increase in core prices. Increases in medical care and housing costs tried to push the index higher, but energy prices and food costs pulled down the final value. On the other hand, Industrial Production increased 0.7 percent, led by improvements in mining segments.

 

Equity Index Week-to-Date Month-to-Date Year-to-Date 12-Month
S&P 500 0.06% 0.67% 8.39% 7.36%
Nasdaq Composite 0.16% 1.62% 5.56% 5.79%
DJIA 0.02% 1.00% 8.45% 9.87%
MSCI EAFE ‒0.09% 1.37% 2.21% ‒2.37%
MSCI Emerging Markets 0.75% 5.07% 17.63% 12.11%
Russell 2000 0.59% 1.47% 9.90% 4.39%

Source: Bloomberg

 

Fixed Income Index Month-to-Date Year-to-Date 12-Month
U.S. Broad Market ‒0.29% 5.68% 5.37%
U.S. Treasury ‒0.67% 5.08% 4.56%
U.S. Mortgages ‒0.04% 3.27% 3.68%
Municipal Bond 0.03% 4.42% 6.89%

Source: Morningstar Direct

What to look forward to
We will focus on housing at the beginning of this week, with releases of New and Existing Home Sales, which are both expected to have slowed down in July.

We will also see the release of July Durable Goods Orders data and the second estimate of second-quarter Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth.

Disclosures: Certain sections of this commentary contain forward-looking statements that are based on our reasonable expectations, estimates, projections, and assumptions. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve certain risks and uncertainties, which are difficult to predict. All indices are unmanaged and are not available for direct investment by the public. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The S&P 500 is based on the average performance of the 500 industrial stocks monitored by Standard & Poor’s. The Nasdaq Composite Index measures the performance of all issues listed in the Nasdaq Stock Market, except for rights, warrants, units, and convertible debentures. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is computed by summing the prices of the stocks of 30 large companies and then dividing that total by an adjusted value, one which has been adjusted over the years to account for the effects of stock splits on the prices of the 30 companies. Dividends are reinvested to reflect the actual performance of the underlying securities. The MSCI EAFE Index is a float-adjusted market capitalization index designed to measure developed market equity performance, excluding the U.S. and Canada. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index is a market capitalization-weighted index composed of companies representative of the market structure of 26 emerging market countries in Europe, Latin America, and the Pacific Basin. The Russell 2000® Index measures the performance of the 2,000 smallest companies in the Russell 3000® Index. The Barclays Capital Aggregate Bond Index is an unmanaged market value-weighted performance benchmark for investment-grade fixed-rate debt issues, including government, corporate, asset-backed, and mortgage-backed securities with maturities of at least one year. The U.S. Treasury Index is based on the auctions of U.S. Treasury bills, or on the U.S. Treasury’s daily yield curve. The Barclays Capital Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) Index is an unmanaged market value-weighted index of 15- and 30-year fixed-rate securities backed by mortgage pools of the Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA), Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC), and balloon mortgages with fixed-rate coupons. The Barclays Capital Municipal Bond Index includes investment-grade, tax-exempt, and fixed-rate bonds with long-term maturities (greater than 2 years) selected from issues larger than $50 million.

Mark Gallagher is a financial advisor located at Gallagher Financial Services at 2586 East 7th Ave. Suite #304, North Saint Paul, MN 55109. He offers securities and advisory services as an Investment Adviser Representative of Commonwealth Financial Network®, Member FINRA/SIPC, a Registered Investment Adv

Authored by the Investment Research team at Commonwealth Financial Network.

© 2016 Commonwealth Financial Network®