Wealth Management Resources
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Markets had a volatile week despite a relatively light economic calendar. Monday kicked off on a strong note as U.S. stocks moved higher following a better-than-expected ISM Manufacturing report, which returned to expansion territory for the first time in a year and showed broad strength across new orders, production, and employment. Tuesday saw equities drift lower despite limited macro news. Interestingly, more stocks within the index finished higher even as headline returns turned negative. Overseas, Indian equities rallied after a trade deal with the U.S. reduced tariffs on Indian goods. Selling resumed Wednesday, led by Tech, even as ISM Services remained unchanged and in expansionary territory. Once again, more underlying names were up despite the index being down, offering another signal of broadening participation beneath the surface. On Thursday, selling pressure expanded beyond Tech as job openings declined sharply and initial jobless claims rose, pointing to a cooling labor market. Stocks rebounded Friday as consumer sentiment rose to a six-month high. The Dow recovered earlier losses to finish at a new all-time high, while broader markets closed modestly lower.
We are now more than halfway through the Q4 earnings season, and results have been solid. 59% of S&P 500 companies have reported, with 76% delivering EPS above estimates. While this is slightly below the five-year average, it is in line with the ten-year trend. On an aggregate basis, earnings are running 7.6% above expectations, in line with recent history. Earnings growth remains the primary driver of long-term equity returns, as rising profits support higher share prices and company value over time. The blended earnings growth rate for the quarter stands at 13.0%, up from 11.9% last week and 8.3% at the end of Q4. If this pace holds, it will mark the tenth consecutive quarter of earnings growth and the fifth quarter of double-digit growth for the index. Earnings growth has been broad, with nine of eleven sectors reporting gains. Information Technology is leading the way, posting earnings growth of 30.4%, followed by Industrials and Communication Services. Consumer Discretionary and Health Care are sectors reporting declines, with Consumer Discretionary down at -0.9%.



Senior Director of Strategy Management
World Investment Advisors, LLC