Stock market’s riskiest fringes rally

The US stock market’s speculative fringes took off last week in an odd risk-on session.

Microsoft Corp, America’s second-largest company, cut its profit view. A top Goldman Sachs executive warned that unprecedented economic shocks are on the way. And a Federal Reserve official offered a fresh dose of hawkish commentary. But the riskiest US shares still climbed.

Technology companies that have yet to make any money outperformed the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average by 6,6 percentage points. The Renaissance IPO ETF advanced 6,6 percent, while the ARK Innovation exchange-traded fund added 7,3 percent. And options volumes in Tesla Inc. and GameStop Corp jumped.

Risk appetite returned after Chinese officials vowed to support economic growth, and OPEC+ agreed to open its oil taps faster in the summer months, which could lower oil prices and ease inflationary pressures. While the news helped trigger a broad equities rally, it was the market’s beaten down riskier districts that staged the biggest rebound.

“Today’s news on the macro front provides more catalysts for risk sentiment to improve after a brutal eight weeks of selling,” said Gareth Ryan, managing director at IUR Capital. “Risk assets can only remain oversold for so long before they begin to look attractive for the opportunist.”

Thursday’s advance came as private hiring data posted the smallest gain since the pandemic recovery began and Fed Vice Chair Lael Brainard threw cold water on a September pause in rate hikes.

In addition, Goldman President John Waldron decided to echo Jamie Dimon’s pessimistic tone from Wednesday and warn of tougher times ahead amid a string of shocks rattling the global economy.

Whether speculative fringes of the market are at an inflection point or simply hitting an air pocket remains to be seen. But traders are aware that prior similar rebounds this year have turned out to be head-fakes.

Since a Goldman Sachs gauge of non-profitable tech stocks peaked in early November, it has posted four other days of roughly 8  gains. That hasn’t stopped the gauge from falling for seven months in a row, the longest stretch of declines since its 2014 inception. – Bloomberg

 

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