Business Standard

Bestweek for stocks in a year

The S&P 500 gains 2.6 per cent as technology stocks, materials lead

- ELENA POPINA & SARAH PONCZEK

It always looks inevitable in retrospect. Why wouldn’t US stocks rally, surging to the biggest weekly gain in a year, amid earnings euphoria like this? With no hint of fatigue, the S&P 500 Index spent the holiday-shortened week rolling past 2,700, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped over 25,000. Ninety-eight companies in the Nasdaq 100 rose.

It happened as Wall Street stock analysts were jacking up profit forecasts. So fast that a measure tracking the frequency of upward earnings revisions to downward hit the highest level since 2011. The result was the best start to a year for the S&P 500 since 1999.

“This doesn’t mean the index will go straight up from here, but the economic fundamenta­ls are strong enough to support the stocks,” said Phil Orlando, chief equity strategist at Federated Investors. “Corporate earnings growth has been solid in the last nine months, we expect another double-digits in the fourth quarter. The party is going to continue.”

Maybe it was easier than it looked to predict a blowout week for equities. Between the last week of December and the first week in January, the S&P 500 has reversed direction every year since 2011. A possible explanatio­n is the expiration of government policies on December 31.

The pattern played out this week, with the S&P 500 jumping 2.6 per cent after a 0.4 drop in the last four days of 2017. The index was up in each of the four sessions, a start matched only twice since 1990. Both times, in 2006 and 2010, the index jumped at least 12 percent for the year.

Sideways Christmas price

action shifted to an upward slope for the S&P 500, which has been buoyed by Wall Street analysts boosting earnings forecasts and year-end estimates. UBS’s Keith Parker was one of them, raising his 2018 S&P year-end forecast to 3,150 and the index’s per-share earnings to $157 from $141 amid

optimism that tax cuts and stock buybacks will support the rally. Among 17 strategist­s tracked by Bloomberg, the average estimate for the S&P at the year-end stands at 2,886, up about 5 per cent from Friday’s close.

Companies in the S&P 500 will earn $148.3 a share in 2018,

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange
BLOOMBERG Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange

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