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S&P 500 hits all-time high - Now what?
S&P 500 hits all-time high - Now what?

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

S&P 500 hits all-time high - Now what?

S&P 500 hits all-time high - Now what? originally appeared on TheStreet. The naysayers were once again proven wrong. Despite an economy in turmoil, an uncertain Federal Reserve, and geopolitical unease, the S&P 500 has climbed the proverbial wall of worry and notched a new all-time high, surpassing levels last seen in February before President Trump's tariff announcements sent stocks reeling. The S&P 500's returns have been impressive, gaining more than 23% since Trump on April 9 switched gears and paused reciprocal tariffs for 90 days to hammer out trade deals. 💸. 📈 It's been an even more dramatic run for the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite. Since its early April low, that index has shot up more than 32%, largely on the back of AI powerhouses like Nvidia and Palantir, which have gained 64% and 95% over the period. The moves will likely have many scratching their heads, wondering what could happen next to the benchmark index. Fortunately, longtime analyst Ryan Detrick, chief strategist of Carson Group, has crunched the numbers to see what the S&P 500 historically has done in the wake of similar record-setting highs. The lifeblood of stock market returns is revenue and profit growth. The more sales and earnings, the more willing investors are to pay up for shares. Because of this, economic health is key to the S&P 500's performance. If households and businesses are expected to open their wallets more in the future, it's good for business, and that's good for stock market this year, worries that tariffs would spike inflation, crimping spending, led many to believe we were on the cusp of stagflation (inflation without GDP growth) or an outright recession. Those worries were compounded by the fact that the Fed hit the brakes on interest-rate cuts this year due to concerns that lower rates alongside tariffs would cause inflation to skyrocket. The concerns haven't fully disappeared, but they've retreated. While US GDP growth in the first quarter was slightly negative, most expect GDP to recover in the second quarter and for full-year GDP to be positive. The Federal Reserve pegs GDP growth at 1.4% this year, and the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow tracking tool suggests second-quarter GDP increased by 3.4%. Of course, the GDPNow measure will change as more data arrive, but the Q2 numbers are likely to be solid. More Experts Analyst makes bold call on stocks, bonds, and gold TheStreet Stocks & Markets Podcast #8: Common Sense Investing With David Miller Veteran fund manager sends dire message on stocks If so, the US might sidestep a profit-busting economic reckoning, allowing investors to ratchet higher their models for corporate profit. Additionally, the stock market has become more optimistic about the likelihood of Fed rate cuts later this year. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell is under intense pressure from Trump to cut rates, and a wobbly jobs market could mean the Fed won't stay sidelined much longer as long as inflation remains in check. In April, core Personal Consumption Expenditures inflation, the gauge favored by the Fed, showed prices rose 2.5% from one year ago. That's above the Fed's 2% target but arguably not overly concerning, given that the Fed cut rates by 1 percentage point last year when inflation was higher. The S&P 500 may have priced in a lot of the potential upside associated with a healthier-than-expected economy. The S&P 500's price-to-earnings multiple, a key valuation measure investors use, peaked at more than 22 in February 2025 when the S&P 500 last made a new high. After retreating to 19 in April, the runup in stock prices has outpaced upward earnings revisions, causing the S&P 500's p/e multiple to swell again. According to FactSet, the benchmark index trades with a forward one-year p/e multiple of nearly 22. Historically, when the S&P 500's p/e multiple has been this high, gains in the following year have been harder to come by, with a negative average return from 1971 through 2020. History certainly isn't a guarantee, but Ryan Detrick considered what'd happened in the past when stocks behaved similarly, and his study also suggests lackluster returns are possible from here. "The S&P 500 hasn't hit a new high in more than four months, but that could end any day now," wrote Detrick on X. "Turns out, when it goes between 4-12 months without a new [all-time high] and then hits one, the forward returns are quite muted. Not once up double digits a year later. Hmm." Detrick spotted four prior instances that met his criteria for similarity. The average return one year after notching the new high after not having a new high for between four and 12 months is just 4.4%, significantly below the stock market's average 11%-plus annual return over the past 50 years. The shorter-term returns are potentially more concerning, though. In his study the average 3-month and 6-month returns for the S&P 500 were negative 5% and negative 1.3%, respectively. Of course, anything can happen. Much will depend on what actually happens with inflation, jobs, the Fed, and trade deals. Still, the data may suggest that investors should temper their outlook, at least for now. It's not all bad news for most investors, though. Remember, stock market weakness can provide a great opportunity to buy the dip on the market or individual stocks. Just ask anyone who bought stocks in April.S&P 500 hits all-time high - Now what? first appeared on TheStreet on Jun 27, 2025 This story was originally reported by TheStreet on Jun 27, 2025, where it first appeared. Connectez-vous pour accéder à votre portefeuille

Americans spent and earned less in May as trade war bites
Americans spent and earned less in May as trade war bites

Axios

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Axios

Americans spent and earned less in May as trade war bites

Amid Stagflation Watch 2025, the latest data dump shows a little more stag-, but no real sign of -flation. Why it matters: Mainstream economic forecasts see the trade war leading to both higher prices and more sluggish growth. In May spending and income data out Friday morning, there is more reason to worry about the latter than the former. By the numbers: The Personal Consumption Expenditures price index targeted by the Fed rose a mere 0.1% in May, with the core gauge — excluding food and energy prices — up 0.2 %. While core inflation ticked up to 2.7% year-over-year in May, it has risen at only a 1.7% annualized pace over the last three months. That's the lowest since December 2023, and fully consistent with the Fed's 2% inflation target. Tariff-driven inflation remains the dog that won't bite. State of play: The worrying aspects of the report weren't on the inflation side of the ledger, but in what Americans are earning and spending. Adjusted for inflation, consumer spending fell 0.3% after rising by 0.1% in April. Real disposable income declined by 0.7% last month, the first time since last August that inflation outstripped pay growth. The new numbers brought Atlanta Fed's GDPNow tracker down to an estimate of 2.9% GDP growth rate in Q2, from 3.4%. What they're saying: "Consumers cut back on outlays last month, making fewer discretionary purchases as they grapple with softer labor market conditions, increased financial uncertainty and the onset of tariff-induced price increases," wrote EY-Parthenon senior economist Lydia Boussour in a note. Reality check: The drops in consumption spending and incomes can be at least partly chalked up to one-off events, instead of outright evidence of an economic slowdown. Consumers are easing spending after a springtime splurge on all sorts of goods, aimed at getting ahead of tariff-related price increases. For instance, the biggest drag on spending was goods, autos in particular — a category that was a key beneficiary of spending earlier in the year. The drop in personal income came after a spike in recent months, including a 0.7% jump in April alone from a payout of social benefits for teachers, firefighters and police officers, related to recent legislation. Now it is wearing off. Yes, but: It's clear that the economy had less momentum coming into the second quarter than initially believed. Revisions out Thursday showed the economy weakened at a faster pace in the first quarter, in part due to a slower rate of consumer spending. Economic policymakers were reassured that underlying measures of growth held up as tariff front-loading weighed on the headline figure. But those measures were also revised lower: Real final sales to private domestic purchasers, the sum of consumer spending and investment, rose 1.9% in the first quarter — down 0.6 percentage point from the previous estimate and well below the 3% figure first reported. Minneapolis Fed president Neel Kashkari pondered Friday how tariffs are likely to impact consumer prices — and why there's so little sign of it in the data so far.

S&P 500 hits all-time high - Now what?
S&P 500 hits all-time high - Now what?

Miami Herald

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Miami Herald

S&P 500 hits all-time high - Now what?

The naysayers were once again proven wrong. Despite an economy in turmoil, an uncertain Fed, and geopolitical unease, the S&P 500 has climbed the proverbial wall of worry and notched a new all-time high, surpassing levels last seen in February before President Trump's tariff announcements sent stocks reeling. The S&P 500's returns have been impressive, gaining over 23% since President Trump switched gears and paused reciprocal tariffs for 90 days on April 9 to hammer out trade deals. Related: Jim Cramer sends strong message on Nvidia stock at all-time highs It's been an even more dramatic run for the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite. Since its early April low, that index has shot up over 32%, largely on the back of AI powerhouses like Nvidia and Palantir, which have gained 64% and 95% over the same period. The moves will likely have many scratching their heads, wondering what could happen next to the benchmark index. Fortunately, long-time analyst Ryan Detrick, chief strategist of Carson Group, has crunched the numbers to see what the S&P 500 historically has done in the wake of similar record-setting highs. Weiss/Getty Images The lifeblood of stock market returns is revenue and profit growth. The more sales and earnings, the more willing investors are to pay up for shares. Because of this, economic health is key to the S&P 500's performance. If households and businesses are expected to open their wallets more in the future, it's good for business, and that's good for stock market returns. Related: Veteran Tesla bull drops surprising 3-word verdict on robotaxi ride Earlier this year, worries that tariffs would spike inflation, crimping spending, led many to believe we're on the cusp of stagflation (inflation without GDP growth) or an outright recession. Those worries were compounded by the fact that the Federal Reserve hit the brakes on rate cuts this year due to concerns that lower rates alongside tariffs would cause inflation to skyrocket. The concerns haven't fully disappeared, but they've retreated. While US GDP growth in the first quarter was slightly negative, most expect GDP to recover in the second quarter and for full-year GDP to be positive. The Federal Reserve pegs GDP growth at 1.4% this year, and the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow tracking tool suggests second-quarter GDP increased by 3.4%. Of course, the GDPNow measure will change as more data arrives, but it's likely the second quarter numbers will be solid. More Experts Analyst makes bold call on stocks, bonds, and goldTheStreet Stocks & Markets Podcast #8: Common Sense Investing With David MillerVeteran fund manager sends dire message on stocks If so, the US may sidestep a profit-busting economic reckoning, allowing investors to ratchet higher their models for corporate profit. Additionally, the stock market has become more optimistic about the likelihood of Fed rate cuts later this year. Fed Chair Jerome Powell is under intense pressure from President Trump for rate cuts, and a wobbly jobs market could mean that the Fed won't stay sidelined much longer as long as inflation remains in check. In April, core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) inflation, the gauge favored by the Fed, showed prices rose 2.5% from one year ago. That's above the Fed's 2% target but arguably not overly concerning, given that the Fed cut rates by 1% last year when inflation was higher. The S&P 500 may have priced in a lot of the potential upside associated with a healthier-than-expected economy. The S&P 500's price-to-earnings ratio, a key valuation measure used by investors, peaked over 22 in February 2025 when the S&P 500 last made a new high. After retreating to 19 in April, the runup in stock prices has outpaced upward earnings revisions, causing the S&P 500's P/E ratio to swell again. According to FactSet, the benchmark index trades with a forward one-year P/E ratio of nearly 22. Historically, gains in the following year when the S&P 500's P/E ratio has been this high have been harder to come by, with a negative average return from 1971 through 2020. History certainly isn't a guarantee, but Ryan Detrick considered what's happened in the past when stocks have behaved similarly, and his study also suggests lackluster returns are possible from here. "The S&P 500 hasn't hit a new high in more than four months, but that could end any day now," wrote Detrick on X. "Turns out, when it goes between 4-12 months without a new ATH [all-time high] and then hits one, the forward returns are quite muted. Not once up double digits a year later. Hmm." Detrick spotted four prior instances that met his criteria for similarity. The average return one year after notching the new high after not having a new high for between four and twelve months is just 4.4%, significantly below the stock market's average 11%-plus annual return over the past 50 years. The shorter-term returns are potentially more concerning, though. In his study, the average 3-month and 6-month returns for the S&P 500 were negative 5% and negative 1.3%, respectively. Of course, anything can happen. Much will depend on what actually happens with inflation, jobs, the Fed, and trade deals. Still, the data may suggest that investors should temper their outlook, at least for now. It's not all bad news for most investors, though. Remember, stock market weakness can provide a great opportunity to buy the dip on the market or individual stocks. Just ask anyone who bought stocks in April. Related: Legendary fund manager issues stock market prediction as S&P 500 tests all-time highs The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.

Bitcoin Will Rally as U.S. Growth Improves, Crypto Bills Progress: Coinbase Research
Bitcoin Will Rally as U.S. Growth Improves, Crypto Bills Progress: Coinbase Research

Yahoo

time12-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Bitcoin Will Rally as U.S. Growth Improves, Crypto Bills Progress: Coinbase Research

A more upbeat macroeconomic backdrop, growing corporate appetite for digital assets, and increased regulatory clarity will fuel a constructive outlook for crypto markets in the second half of 2025, according to a report by Coinbase Research. After a bumpy first quarter marked by a brief contraction in U.S. GDP and trade disruptions, data now point to stronger growth. The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow tracker has jumped to 3.8% QoQ as of early June, a sharp upgrade from earlier in the year. This shift, alongside expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts and a less aggressive trade policy, has eased recession fears and strengthened investor sentiment. Declining dollar dominance and inflation protection use-cases may also boost bitcoin's BTC appeal, even if long-dated U.S. Treasury yields remain elevated, the report said. Altcoins may lag unless they benefit from specific catalysts, such as ETF approvals or protocol developments. Meanwhile, public companies are increasingly adding crypto to their balance sheets, aided by a 2024 rule change allowing "mark-to-market" accounting for digital assets. While this trend is expanding demand, it's also introducing new systemic risks. Firms that fund crypto buys with convertible debt may be forced to sell if refinancing options dry up or prices fall sharply. Regulatory developments are also expected to reshape the market, the report said. The Senate recently passed the GENIUS Act, a bipartisan stablecoin bill now heading to the House. A broader market structure bill, the CLARITY Act, aims to define the roles of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) in overseeing digital assets. If passed, it could clarify rules for both issuers and investors. Separately, the SEC is considering more than 80 crypto ETF applications, including multi-asset funds and proposals involving staking and altcoins. Some rulings could be made as early as July, and the rest are likely to be finalized by October. Overall, bitcoin appears poised to benefit from both macro and structural tailwinds in the second half of the year, while the outlook for altcoins will depend on navigating a more complex and still-evolving regulatory and liquidity environment, according to the report. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Bad trade headline after another hit the market — but a key economic tracker is looking up
Bad trade headline after another hit the market — but a key economic tracker is looking up

CNBC

time30-05-2025

  • Business
  • CNBC

Bad trade headline after another hit the market — but a key economic tracker is looking up

Every weekday, the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer releases the Homestretch — an actionable afternoon update, just in time for the last hour of trading on Wall Street. Markets and trade: Stocks dropped Friday but are still on pace for a solid weekly gain. The market broke down around noon ET after Bloomberg reported that the Trump Administration was planning to broaden restrictions on Chinese tech companies. According to the report, the new rule would require U.S. licenses for transactions with subsidiaries of companies on the U.S. sanctions list. It's too early to know the impact, if any, this could have on U.S. tech companies. One would think most companies have stopped selling to businesses associated with U.S.-sanctioned companies, like Huawei. Until we know for sure, these restrictions represent a negative headline for the tech sector and China-exposed companies that were hoping for the recent detente to continue. Developments over the past 24 hours suggest a notable decline in goodwill between the United States and China. On Thursday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Fox News that trade talks with China "are a bit stalled." Then Friday morning, President Donald Trump said on Truth Social that China had violated its recent trade agreement with the U.S. He ended the post by saying, "so, much for being Mr. Nice Guy," in a possible foreshadowing of these new restrictions. We all know by now that everything is subject to negotiation with the current administration, and the technology sector is going to be a big focus of upcoming trade talks. The recent episode involving a threatened tariff increase on the European Union — delayed just days later — served as a key reminder not to overreact to individual headlines. But, the market probably needs the U.S. and China to get along for this rally to continue, so we have to stay focused on what the two countries are saying. Economic activity: Following Friday's data releases, the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow tracker was upwardly revised to a gain of 3.8% for the second quarter from its previous estimate of 2.2% on May 27. To be fair, the model isn't always the most accurate predictor of the growth rate of real gross domestic product. On Thursday, the Bureau of Economic Analysis released its second estimate of first-quarter gross domestic product, showing the economy declined 0.2%. That's much better than the GDPNow final forecast of down 2.7% for Q1 (or down 1.5% using the alternative model that adjusts for imports and exports of gold). So, that's our caution about reading too deeply into one model or forecast. Still, the tracker provides a useful gauge of economic momentum, and the fresh data suggest the economy rebounded solidly in the second quarter, with one month remaining. Up next: Two companies in the portfolio are scheduled to report next week: CrowdStrike and Broadcom . Other notable earnings report includes Campbell's, Dollar General, Five Below, and Lululemon. On the economic data side, it's jobs week. That means data on job openings on Tuesday, ADP private payrolls on Wednesday, and the government's nonfarm payrolls report on Friday. Some of the other key reports are ISM manufacturing, factory orders, and durable goods orders. (See here for a full list of the stocks in Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.

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