Is Darling Ingredients Inc. (NYSE:DAR) The Top Stock With Improving Technical Ratings According To Piper Sandler?

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We recently made a list of Piper Sandler’s Top Technical Stock Picks: 20 Best Stocks. In this piece, we will look at where Darling Ingredients Inc. (NYSE:DAR) ranks among the list of stocks with improving technical rating according to Piper Sandler.

The start of October has seen another wild swing for markets. September’s second half saw Wall Street rejoice as the Federal Reserve delivered its highly anticipated interest rate cut. After an initial muted response from markets predicated on worries that the jumbo 50 basis point rate cut might have been due to economic worries, markets soared. Between the day the rate cut was announced and at the September end, the flagship S&P index and the broader NASDAQ index gained 2.6% and 3.5%, respectively.

However, trading during the first four days of October paints a different picture. From October 1st to the 4th, the flagship S&P shed 0.20% and the broader NASDAQ ended up losing 0.28%. This bearishness was fueled by the Labor Department’s JOLTS data which showed that job openings in America grew in September. For markets, this meant that the Fed now had more room to keep rates higher for longer, and investors started to price out a 50 basis point cut in November. Additionally, job openings grew by 8.040 million and beat economist estimates by nearly half a million openings. Investors also dealt with a tough global geopolitical environment after tensions continued to escalate in the Middle East following Iran’s attacks on Israel.

After the JOLTS data, October 4th came with more good news for investors who were worried about the economy. JOLTS was followed by the highly anticipated nonfarm payrolls data, which further dented hopes for interest rate cuts. This data showed that unemployment in America had fallen to 4.1% and the nonfarm payrolls had jumped by 254,000 which was the highest figure for the preceding six months. Economists had predicted the payrolls to grow by 140,000, so safe to say, the latest data blew these out of the park.

On the surface, the immediate implications of this would seem to imply that as rates can now stay higher for longer than investors had expected, stocks should fall. However, on the day of the nonfarm payroll data release, the flagship S&P and the broader NASDAQ gained 0.90% and 1.22% higher, respectively. Sounds strange, right? Well, some fresh commentary from Baird Wealth Management’s investment strategy analyst Ross Mayfield can provide some insights. He believes that the latest data set was “not the perfect report, but that’s kind of what you need for a soft landing anyways. Some broad based jobs added, but nothing too concerning for the Fed, right, in the form of reaccelerating wage inflation. So kind of a perfect Goldilocks soft landing report.” However, Mayfield adds that the nonfarm jobs report gives the Fed “reason to only go 25 basis points in November, probably 25 in December as well.” Yet, the somewhat ‘still warm’ labor market doesn’t take rate cuts completely off the table. According to the Baird analyst, “the Fed is trying to get back to neutral policy” and subsequently 25 basis points should be the way to go for the rest of the year.