Thursday, April 23, 2020

Market Direction Mid Week: No Clear Direction

market direction alerts












The trading strategy this website uses as its signature tool is our bullish and bearish alerts. This indicator has effectively been used with accuracy since 2011. The website helps our followers stay in tune with the stock market and profits have been amazing. This post provides a mid-week update on how the stock market has preform. At the bottom of this post are the all-time numbers since the current alert was made. The current bullish alert is moving in the right direction.


Market Direction: BULLISH alert issued 4/10/2020


Can the stock market keep climbing higher?

Click the Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down in the upper right sidebar. 

Subscribe and share with friends.




U.S. stock-index futures pointed to a slight pullback for Thursday after strong gains in regular trade Wednesday, as investors braced for an updated reported on weekly unemployment, among other economic reports, that may offer further insight into the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
How are benchmarks performing?
Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average YMM20, -0.45% shed 95 points, or 0.4%, at 23,263, those for the S&P 500 index ESM20, -0.45% gave up 10.65 points, or 0.4%, at 2,778.50, while Nasdaq-100 futures NQM20, -0.59% retreated 32.50 points, or 0.3%, at 8,608.75.

On Wednesday, the Dow DJIA, +1.98% advanced 456.94 points, or 2%, to finish at 23,475.82. The S&P 500 SPX, +2.29% gained 62.75 points, or 2.3%, to end at 2,799.31. The Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, +2.80% climbed 232.15 points, or 2.7%, to close at 8,495.38.

For the week so far, the Dow is off 3.2%, the S&P 500 is down 2.6% and the Nasdaq is down 1.8%, as of Wednesday’s close, with the benchmarks threatening to end a weekly win streak at two straight weeks.

What’s on investors’ minds?
Is Wall Street inured to awful weekly data from the labor market after a month of reports indicating that millions are out of work due to shutdown procedures in place to help slow the spread of COVID-19?
Thursday’s action could be telling, with initial jobless claims in the week ended April 18 likely to show an increase of at least 4 million people, with estimates ranging as high as 5.25 million, according to the latest MarketWatch survey of economists.

That figure would push total claims to at least 25 million after a month that has already seen total claims surge from 200,000 on average to above 22 million.

Job losses underline the yearning to restart the economy soon, and efforts to achieve that goal have at least partly supported gains for equity markets, which have risen in two of the past three sessions.
Speaking during a Wall Street Journal podcast, Vice President Mike Pence said the White House hopes the coronavirus epidemic to be “largely in the past” by early June, though America’s No. 2 stopped short of predicting when the economy will running at full tilt.

“We truly do believe as we move forward, with responsibly beginning to reopen the economy in state after state around the country, that by early June, we could be at a place where this coronavirus epidemic is largely in the past,” he told the Journal.
Reopening the U.S. economy is likely to be an uneven affair, with President Donald Trump, during a daily briefing about the country’s response to the pandemic Wednesday, saying that he “strongly” disagreed with plans by Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp to restart much of the state’s economy as early as Friday.
Meanwhile, investors have been digesting unsurprisingly bad corporate quarterly earnings results. On a year-over-year basis, the earnings-per-share growth estimate is negative-13.6%, and that rate would be negative-11.8%, if the oil sector were excluded, according to data from Refinitiv as of midday Wednesday. Of the 84 S&P 500 companies that have reported so far, 66.7% have posted results above consensus estimates, while 28.6% have missed the mark. By comparison, over the past four quarters, 74% of companies beat estimates and 19% missed, according to the analytics company.
What’s other economic data are ahead? 
A reading of manufacturing, PMI Composite, is due at 9:45 a.m. Eastern, and a report on new home sales is due at 10 a.m., while the Kansas City Federal Reserve’s manufacturing index is set to be released at 11 a.m. At 4:30 p.m., an update of the Fed’s balance sheet is due.

$tockMarketDirection proprietary model is currently BULLISH. We strongly encourage you to monitor positions closely, exercise proper money management strategies and follow us at  $tockMarketDirection for ALERTS we may issue advising a change in the current market direction. Stay tuned and follow us. If you have a testimonial or comment of how this website has helped you we would like to know, email us. Share with friends.

The all-time highs since our initial recommendation to go LONG this market. Here is how the markets have performed:

Stock Market Direction Recommendation (4/10/2020)
Dow
up 544.84 points a 2.30% gain
4/17/20
Nasdaq
up 531.33 points a 6.52% gain
4/20/20
S&P 500
up 89.40 points a 3.20% gain
4/17/20

Related Link: http://www.stockmarket-direction.com/

No comments:

Post a Comment