Stock Market: Why Earnings Season Will Be More Important Than Ever


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Let’s call it a dress rehearsal for the funeral.

We’re referring to the drubbing that tech stocks took this past week. On the surface, it wasn’t all that bad. The


Nasdaq Composite

fell 0.3%, better than the


Dow Jones Industrial Average’s

0.9% drop and on par with the


S&P 500’s

0.3% decline.

Yet the pain for the most-expensive speculative names continued. The


iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector

exchange-traded fund (ticker: IGV), which counts


Salesforce.com
(CRM) and


Oracle
(ORCL) among its biggest holdings, slid 1.6% this past week, and


Peloton Interactive
(PTON), once the face of the forward-thinking pandemic beneficiaries, fell 12% and lost its spot in the Nasdaq 100.

By now, we all know what’s to blame for the slide in these tech stocks. With inflation soaring—December’s consumer price index rose 7% year over year—the Federal Reserve has orchestrated a massive shift in monetary policy. The federal-funds futures market is pricing in an 86% chance of a hike at March’s meeting, according to the CME FedWatch Tool, with at least two, if not three, more coming over the rest of the year. That’s bad news for speculative growth stocks, which are hit hardest by higher interest rates.

Yet if rate expectations have peaked for now, it could mean that tech stocks will look attractive once again, if only until investors are forced to readjust to tighter monetary policy again. “What we are likely to see is increased bottom fishing in tech in the next few days as it is unlikely the path of rates will increase much more in the coming weeks,” writes Nordea strategist Sebastien Galy. “[The recent selloff] is just a preview of what will happen to tech in a year’s time.”

That’s a long way off, and now investors have earnings season to distract them, at least until the Federal Open Market Committee meeting ends on Jan. 26. It didn’t get off to a great start.


JPMorgan Chase
(JPM) sank 6.1% on Friday, despite beating earnings forecasts after it called out rising expenses, suggesting that perhaps too much good news had been priced into stocks.

It’s a possibility. December’s retail sales data, released on Friday, declined 1.9% in December, missing forecasts for a 0.1% decline. It may be nothing—a temporary decline caused by the Omicron variant and early holiday shopping. But it also suggests that the…



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