Taper’s Here, But The Party’s Not Over

Finally, good news for market?

Market view from LMK Wealth Management

 

Stocks broke their losing streak last week and rallied on the long-awaited Fed taper and positive economic news. The S&P 500 and Dow both finished out the week at record closes. For the week, the S&P 500 gained 2.42%, the Dow surged 2.96%, and the Nasdaq grew 2.59%.

Stock market activity last week shows that good news may finally be good news for markets. The other shoe finally dropped on quantitative easing; the Fed announced a modest taper of $10 billion, reducing the size of its monthly bond purchases to $75 billion. In order to make the tapering pill easier to swallow, the Fed pledged to keep rates near their current levels until the headline unemployment rate declines below 6.5%. If the Fed continues to wind down purchases by $10 billion per the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, that would put an end to quantitative easing by late 2014. Stocks rallied on the news, taking it as an emphatic vote of confidence on the economy by the Fed.

In other Fed-related news, Janet Yellen, the nominee for chair of the Federal Reserve, cleared a major hurdle last week as the Senate voted to move forward with the nomination. A final vote is set for January 6 when the Senate returns from a holiday break.[4] Yellen is an experienced Fed hand, and it’s likely that her main focus as chair would be to keep the Fed on a slow and steady path.

No stepping to the brink…

The other shoe finally dropped on quantitative easing; the Fed announced a modest taper of $10 billion, reducing the size of its monthly bond purchases to $75 billion. In order to make the tapering pill easier to swallow, the Fed pledged to keep rates near their current levels until the headline unemployment rate declines below 6.5%

In Washington, the Senate approved the bipartisan budget deal, avoiding any last-minute brinksmanship. The bill guides government spending into 2015 and will avoid another government shutdown and will eliminate some sequestration cuts. Though the deal avoids tackling the debt ceiling issue, it does address government spending and will decrease the deficit by approximately $20 billion over the coming years.

On the economic front, markets surged when revised Q3 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) numbers were announced. New estimates of third quarter GDP growth indicated that the economy grew 4.1%, its fastest pace in almost two years. Economists increased their estimates of business and consumer spending as well as exports, which show that the economic recovery is still steaming along.

Looking ahead at the holiday-shortened week, there’s not a lot of economic data on the wire, and it’s likely to be a slow week. Regardless of what happens in the final weeks of the year, 2013 will stand out as a banner year for equity performance. It’s hard to know whether to expect a correction at the beginning of the year, but a pullback could provide good buying opportunities as long as fundamentals remain strong.

ECONOMIC CALENDAR:

  • Monday: Personal Income and Outlays, Consumer Sentiment
  • Tuesday: Durable Goods Orders, New Home Sales
  • Wednesday: All Markets Closed for Christmas Holiday
  • Thursday: Jobless Claims, EIA Petroleum Status Report