ALL ABOUT EARNINGS: Your complete preview of the week's big economic events
wells fargo bank vault
wells fargo bank vault

(AP)

Stocks rallied last week to move near their best levels of the year.

The Dow and the Nasdaq rose 1.8% while the benchmark S&P 500 was up 1.6%. The Dow is now just a bit more than 400 points away from a new record high while the S&P 500 is about 50 points off a record.

Meanwhile, the "most important oil meeting in decades" ended with OPEC and non-OPEC oil producing nations failing to reach a deal on cutting global production.

On the economic data front, this past week saw a mixed bag of readings on the US economy that overall indicated things are where we thought they were: not too hot, not too cold.

This week we'll get a new policy announcement out of the European Central Bank, though expectations are the ECB will announce no changes to its benchmark rates or its asset purchase programs. Next week, the Federal Reserve's latest statement is expected to keep rates unchanged.

But this week will be all about corporate earnings, with Netflix, Google, Microsoft, American Express, and McDonald's all among the companies set to report earnings.

Top Stories

  • Living Wills. This week, five Wall Street banks were revealed to have deficiencies with their so-called "living wills," or Dodd-Frank-required plans to wind down operations in the case of bankruptcy. (This information, however, wasn't supposed to get out yet and now the Federal Reserve and FDIC are both probing how The Wall Street Journal got this scoop, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.) Joo-Yung Lee, Managing Director and head of North American Financial Institutions at Fitch Ratings, told Business Insider, "The regulators are saying 'basically tell us how you're going to die and what is going to happen after' and that's not easy to do." The counter is that people do this. Then again, individuals are not systemically important. (Sorry, it's true!) On the other hand, the living will disagreement is more foundational in nature. The banks simply don't think these plans are going to do anything but give regulators leverage in the case of a future downturn, according to NYU professor Roy Smith.

    Recall that in the 2008 crisis there was no plan for what to do with large banks facing both solvency and liquidity crises. The result were some bailouts (and the bankruptcy of one large investment bank, Lehman Brothers). Of course, in reaction to that lack of a plan it seems sensible that regulators would want, well, a plan. But no business, really, is going to want to commit to a known plan of action that would arise from some as-yet-unknown crisis. Additionally, the post-financial-crisis response to how you build a more robust bank is you put more capital in the bank. It's unclear if this will work. Then again, we're in a post-crisis haze (still!) where the only scenarios being discussed are the kind of "global capitalism will fall apart if we don't fix this right now"-type disaster we had back in 2008. Which is the sort of thing you can say you're ready for but will probably not, you know, be totally prepared to handle. Or as Bloomberg's Matt Levine wrote this week, there are a number of simple steps you can take to structure a theoretical large bank for an orderly failure, but you still might need a bailout anyway.

  • San Francisco. It was a tough week for San Francisco bulls. The property market finally showed signs of cooling, with home prices in the city falling for the first time in four years in March, according to data from real estate brokerage Redfin. Additionally, the data showed that the percent of properties agents saw bidding wars for — or multiple bidders for one property — fell to 77% in March from 94% the prior year. Redfin chief economist Nela Richardson said, "This suggests that the price drop is not about inventory, it’s about buyers fed up with high Bay Area prices and crazy competition." This week, The Wall Street Journal reported that in the first quarter venture funding for startups was down 25%, the biggest drop the dot-com bust. Investing mega-firm T. Rowe price also wrote down the value of a number of startups it has invested in, including Dropbox, Uber, Airbnb, Evernote, and Warby Parker. So, the tech bust 2.0 is here?