16 April 2024

Investors Set to Bask in Labor Day Highs

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The bull market reached its 2,000th calendar day of existence earlier this week, on the same day as the S&P hit 2,000. That little spurt of coincidence almost felt like a turning point. The pundit cries of market top have quietened just a bit. Bears are probably tired of screaming it. Investors are definitely tired of hearing it and writers are tired of writing about it.

We’re now on the way through the fourth-longest bull run since 1928, and there seems to be a growing confidence that the market has already priced in most of the bad stuff. Hence, Labor Day weekend should be enjoyed, with a relatively low level of market-top bubble stress to detract from the beers and barbecue.

That’s probably the way it felt for investors during Labor Day back in 1929, too. After all, stocks were taking out highs regularly then, as well. And the Dow would knock out another record the day after Labor Day.

That September 3, 1929 peak, however, would be the last for awhile. October gets the press, but it began to unravel much earlier. The final Labor Day of the “Roaring 20s” turned out to be a pivotal juncture on the way to the Great Depression.

But stocks are up at the moment, so let’s worry about potential catastrophes next week. For now, pass the brats and an extra helping of sunshine. We can start the hand-wringing all over again on Sept. 2.

Key market gauges: With Thursday’s slightest of hiccups behind us, it’s back into green territory, as futures on the Dow  and the S&P  try to hold on to some rather slim gains.

The economy: The week winds down but we still get personal income and outlays for July, followed by the Chicago purchasing managers index for August at 9:45 a.m. Eastern. Then, 10 minutes later, the Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment index is slated to hit.

The buzz: Rough day for Abercrombie & Fitch which saw its stock take a hit on disappointing earnings. But the hidden headline is that the company is cutting back on the use of its logo.

Apple’s busy week of buzzmaking comes to a close with its official Sept. 9 event announcement. It’ll happen at the same place Steve Jobs unveiled the Mac some 30 years ago.  

Earnings: Thursday’s late reporting crew is drawing mostly rave reviews, with Avago, Splunk ,  and Veeva all in rally mode this morning.

The chart of the day: Fresh off all the banter about the Ford Mustang going global with right-hand drive for the first time

Click here to access the full article on Market Watch.

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