Monday, 23 December 2024

5 keys to markets in 2025; expect some drama, too

by BD Banks

In case you have not been counting, 2024 has five-and-half trading days left. And  2024 has been a very good year so far. Not record-breaking, but a 24.3% gain for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, as of Dec. 20, is not something to thumb your nose at. 

If it’s a record you seek, go back to 1995, when the index jumped 34.1% and started a 5-year streak when the index grew 20% a year. (Okay, 1999 was only a 19.5% gain.)

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Besides, this past week reminded investors and everyone markets can be fickle. 

There was unease before the Federal Reserve meeting on Wednesday. Inflation was becoming increasingly stuck at a half-percentage point or so of the Fed’s 2% goal.fed Chairman Jerome Powell warned Wednesday rates might not come down as quickly next year as many had expected. 

Related: Veteran analyst explains if stocks will see a Santa Claus Rally this year

The S&P 500 a and the Dow Jones industrial Average both fell nearly 3% on Powell’s statement. The Nasdaq Composite Index dropped 3.6%. 

It was such a big surprise that Fed officials spent Friday reassuring everyone rates would still be coming down.

The holidays are here

Christmas is Wednesday, and, a calendar rarity, Hanukkah starts the same day. Markets will be closed for the day. 

Monday will be a full day of trading. On Tuesday, trading halts at 1 p.m. Full days of trading are set for Thursday and Friday. 

New Year’s Day is also a holiday, but there will full days of trading the other days in the week starting Dec. 30. 

What’s ahead for stocks in 2025

If you believe Wall Street research departments and market gurus, 2025 should be a decent year. There seems to be a consensus the S&P 500 index will rise to 6,600, an 11.3% gain (before dividends.) There are a few hearty projections the index will end at 7,000 or higher, a 14% gain.

That is, of course, talking about large-capitalization stocks and the like. And the indexes, especially the S&P 500, Nasdaq and Nasdaq-100 Indexes and ETFs like the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust SPY and the Invesco QQQ Trust   (QQQ) , are heavily dominated by technology and related stocks.

But the good feeling would also spread to midcap and small-cap stocks, the conventional wisdom says.

There are three big catalysts: 

  • Most professional investors believe Artificial Intelligence spending will continue at current massive levels and the monetization (profits) will come. Good for Nvidia  (NVDA) , Taiwan Semiconductor  (TSM) , Microsoft MSFT, Amazon  (AMZN) , Broadcom  (AVGO) , Google-parent Alphabet  (GOOGL)  and Facebook-parent Meta Platforms  (META) .
  • Deregulation will spur more mergers and acquisitions and, if the bond market cooperates with decent interest rates, will produce a new wave of initial public offerings. 
  • Lastly, as Seattle investor Jon Markman put it on Friday, the expectation has been that the incoming Trump Administration will “provide investors with the fuel to maintain a solid stock market advance. Investment strategists see incredible power in deregulation and tax cuts.”

All of that assumes the raucous, tension-filled budget battle that just ended doesn’t resume.

Markets didn’t find the budget fight reassuring. You could see it the unease in rising bond yields, which meant mortgage rates jumped.

Market sectors show returns are not uniform

As of Friday, just three sectors of the S&P 500 are up in December: consumer discretionary, technology and communication services, and they are among the four dominant sectors in 2024 and expected to dominate in 2025. The fourth is financial stocks. 

Technology is straightforward. 

Consumer discretionary stocks include Tesla, Yum! Brands  (YUM) , Home Depot  (HD) , home builders Lennar  (LEN)  and D.R. Horton  (DHI)  and Caesars Entertainment  (CZR) .  Because the sector is so fast, stock performances can vary widely. Royal Caribbean is up 84% this year. Tesla is up 69%. Nike  (NKE)  and Lululemon Athletica  (LULU)  are down 29% and 26%, respectively. 

Communications Services includes Alphabet, Netflix  (NFLX) , Walt Disney  (DIS)  and Meta. Tops in the sector is Netflix, up 87%, followed Fox Corp. Class B  (FOX)  and Fox Corp. Class A  (FOXA) , up 69% and 67%, respectively.

Some consumer staples, like Walmart WMT and Costco Wholesale COST, already are winners this year, up 75.5% and 44.5%, respectively. But the sector overall is up only 13.6%. They should do well, and those with solid managements and growing dividends, will attract investors.

Related: Analysts unveil surprising small cap stocks forecast for 2025

Energy will be a wildcard

Energy is one of the worst performing sectors in the S&P 500. Consumers are happy they are. 

The fortunes of these companies, including Chevron  (CVX)  and Exxon Mobil  (XOM) , is tied directly to the price of oil and, thus, vulnerable to geopolitical forces 

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, however, is struggling to get its members to abide by their quotas. And they face an enormous competitor: the United States, which has led world oil production for the last six years. 

Crude oil is currently down 3.4% this year at $69.22 a barrel. It was just 30 months ago that crude hit $122 a barrel in the United States. Gasoline prices soared, with AAA’s U.S. national average price hitting $5.016 a gallon in June 2022.  

Sunday’s price was $3.042 a gallon, down 2.3% on the year and down a whopping 40% from the 2022 peak. More than half the country is paying less than $3 a gallon now.

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The bond market would like a word, however

Starting in late November, the big post-Trump election rally started to stall. The Russell 2000, S&P Midcap 400 and S&P Midcap 600 indexes peaked at all-time highs on Nov. 25. The Dow peaked on Dec. 4. The S&P 500 followed two days later. The Nasdaq finally topped out on Dec. 16. 

One cause was rising longer-term interest rates, surging because of investor worries about the U.S. financial well-being. The 10-year Treasury was at 3.66% before the Federal Reserve’s first rate cut on Sept. 18. The yield was as high as 4.6% on Thursday before falling to 4.52%, up from 25% from that September low. 

Mortgage rates, which track the 10-year yield, surged above 7%, after the Fed said it might do only two rate cuts in 2025 when investors had been looking for four. The worry about the Fed meeting was rates were done falling. Rates above 7% are weighing on home sales and new-home construction.

A For Sale sign hangs in front of a house in New York State in June 2024. 

Newsday LLC/Getty Images

On Friday, two important Fed officials, Austan Goolsbee and John Williams, suggested the Fed still had room to cut. Goolsbee is president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. Williams is president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank.

Their comments set off Friday’s stock market rally and eased bond-market pressures. Whether the relief carries over into next week isn’t clear. Normally, you expect a Santa Clause rally over the last five trading days of the year.

The risks in 2025

These will affect bond and stock markets: 

  • Burgeoning borrowing needs are pushing higher the cost of what the U.S. government pays for credit higher, and that affects the entire economy. That’s a big reason why interest rates have remained higher than expected since bottoming in September.
  • Tariff threats. President-elect Trump wants to impose new tariffs on goods from Europe, Canada, Mexico and China, still insisting they won’t boost inflation in the United States. 
  • Mass deportations. No one knows the scope of Trump’s vow. 
  • The effects of possible mass federal layoffs. 
  • Geopolitics. The Ukraine-Russia War is still being waged. So are all the conflicts in the Middle East. A hot spot to watch: China and Asia. Over the weekend, Trump demanded Panama return the Panama Canal.

Something you will hear about 

Lastly, a little gift to think about: An investable idea that is starting to make a name for itself. It may change computing as we know it in maybe the not-to-distant future. 

It’s called quantum computing, building around the idea of using quantum mechanics, an esoteric branch of physics, to create incredibly fast and powerful computers.

The field of quantum computing includes a number of disciplines including quantum hardware and quantum algorithms to solve problems that a classical computer can’t solve or can’t solve fast enough. 

Quantum computers don’t use bits of electricity to work. Rather, they work with subatomic particles.

Google has announced a chip that can solve an experiment quickly that the company said would otherwise take 300 million years to solve. 

Several companies have gone public to raise cash to work on these computers. None are remotely profitable, but they working on making the technology doable. The trio are Rigetti Computing  (RGTI) , IonQ IONQ  and D-Wave Quantum systems  (QBTS) .

Rigetti makes integrated circuits for quantum computers. IonQ is developing a quantum computer. D-Wave is selling computers that exploit quantum effects in their operation.

All of the big technology companies are playing with the idea. Companies that have used some of the technology include Master Card MA, NEC Corp.  (NIPNF)  and Unisys  (UIS) .

For more check, my colleague Rob Lenihan’s story Analysts revamp IonQ, Rigetti, and D-Wave Quantum stock price targets on quantum computing outlook

Related: Veteran fund manager delivers alarming S&P 500 forecast

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