Key Takeaways:
- The Fed announcement is in focus as Evergrande fears subside
- Key technical levels could make life hard on the bulls
- Despite the news on Evergrande, real estate is showing strength
Stocks appear set to open higher on Wednesday ahead of the Fed announcement. However, there’s no expectation that interest rates will change. Instead, investors will likely be looking for any signals of a delay in tapering plans. Currently the feeling is that the risk of Evergrande becoming a “Lehman-type event” for China is unlikely and won’t affect the Fed’s plans.
Evergrande assured investors on Wednesday that it would make an interest payment on time. Although the Wall Street Journal reported that the company is still expected to miss a separate payment due to international investors. Investors appear to have an expectation that the Chinese government will step in to stave off any negative ripple effects that the Evergrande situation could cause.
The U.S. has its own government funding issues. The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill to raise the debt ceiling that would fund the government until December 3. However, it’s unclear if the bill will make it through the Senate. Republicans have their own plan to fund the government without raising the debt ceiling, but it’s failing to make traction outside of the minority party. Democrats don’t need Republicans to pass the bill because of their majority. The problem is that the progressive wing of the Democrat party doesn’t want to pass the bill without passing the infrastructure bill that moderate Democrats have stalled.
After today’s Fed meeting, Evergrande and the debit ceiling will give investors something to “look forward” to. Unfortunately, it will likely be with contradictory information.
U.S. tech companies certainly don’t need government help to buy real estate because they’re flush with cash. Despite the expectation for a hybrid workspace where workers may split time between the office and home, Alphabet’s (GOOGL) Google
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Cereal maker General Mills
After the market open, investors will have an opportunity to digest the existing home sales and crude oil inventories. Crude oil (/CL) climbed nearly 1.5% overnight ahead of the report. The real estate sector will also hear from homebuilder KB Homes
Tuesday also saw a smattering of news from all around the markets. DraftKings (DKNG) made a $20 billion cash and stock offer to buy global competitor Entain (GMVHF). DraftKings is the top gambling site in the U.S. and Entain is the top in Europe. The merger could create an enormous online gaming site.
In earnings news a few common themes appear, Lennar
FedEx
Walt Disney
In the battle against COVID, Johnson & Johnson
Turnaround Tuesday?: Tuesday started in the positive but was pulled lower as buyers appeared to burn themselves out. Turnaround Tuesday refers to an observation made by the Bespoke Investment Group that found that the Tuesday after a large Monday selloff, tended to return 1.02% for the S&P 500. Between 2009 and 2019, they found that the week after a Monday selloff returned an average of 3.16% 17 out of 18 times.
However, there’s a lot weighing on stocks including what some analysts say is a long overdue correction, uncertainty around Chinese central planning directives, potential Fed tapering, higher inflation, and so forth. The S&P 500 may need one or more Tuesdays to make the turnaround.
Getting Real: While Chinese real estate is in trouble, real estate in the U.S. appears to be holding strong. As stocks sold off on Monday, the Real Estate Select Sector Index ($IXRE) performed relatively well compared to other sectors by trading a little more than 1% lower. In fact, it was only outperformed by the defensive bellwether utilities. At the same time, the sector has exhibited relative strength compared to the S&P 500 over the last six months. Only the tech sector has been higher.
Elsewhere in real estate, homebuilders appear to be doing well despite a recent selloff. The S&P Homebuilders Select Industry Index ($SPSIHO) is only 6% off of its all-time high and reported an uptick in August building permits. Much of this was in multi-family housing. According to MarketWatch, homebuilders have switched focus on higher margin homes like multi-family and luxury homes. With the high cost of building materials from the broken supply chain, the shift make sense, although it may leave middle class would-be homeowners in the lurch.
Chinese Puzzle Box: China is becoming a bigger puzzle for many investors. The country has produced some stocks that have performed well over the years but many of them seem to have fallen well out of the top performers. Recently, the Chinese government has come down on various sectors including education, technology, gaming, gambling, and now real estate. Because real estate is much bigger part of the Chinese economy, the recent developments are of particular interest for investors.
The Washington Post recently reported that the Chinese President Xi Jinping has recently emphasized “common prosperity” as it tries to figure out what to do with increasing wealth gap among Chinese billionaires and the Chinese people. The rising cost of food and housing is likely making it harder on China’s lower income people. Yet, increased regulation, taxes, and shared profits could slow economic growth.
As you can see, there’s a lot to figure out as China deals with its growing pains.
TD Ameritrade® commentary for educational purposes only. Member SIPC.