Jobs report, Musk settles — What you need to know for the week ahead

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The fourth quarter is here.

After a third quarter that saw the S&P 500 return more than 7%, investors will head into the final three months of the year wit each of the major averages up more than 7% year-to-date and just below record highs.

And the recent strength in markets we’ve seen tends to beget more strength into the end of the year. Ryan Detrick at LPL Research noted Friday that since 1950, the fourth quarter has been higher in 13 of the 14 years since 1950 the S&P 500 added 7% or more in the third quarter, with the average return coming in at 5.9%.

This past week, the Federal Reserve’s decision to raise interest rates was the biggest economic news, while GDP revisions and consumer confidence data affirmed the strength of the U.S. economy.

Investors and the general public, however, had most of their attention on different news out of Washington, D.C., as the Supreme Court nomination for Brett Kavanaugh dominated the news cycle on Thursday and Friday, with the White House on Friday approving a week-long FBI probe into allegations of sexual misconduct by Kavanaugh.

“We understand the widespread frustration with Washington’s dysfunction, which was so ugly [on Thursday],” Greg Valliere, chief global strategist at Horizon Investments, said Friday. “But an unmistakable trend is that the markets don’t seem to care.”

Supreme court nominee Brett Kavanaugh testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2018. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, Pool)
Supreme court nominee Brett Kavanaugh testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2018. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, Pool)

Valliere added that, “Most of you get this: Savvy investors have looked past the dysfunction and instead have focused on the fabulous economic fundamentals that have propelled the stock market to record highs. Along the way, there have been partisan issues that investors do have to follow – trade, deficits, tax policies, etc. But the Kavanaugh hearings, the Trump tweets, and the political ugliness have not moved the markets.”

Expect this trend to continue in the week ahead, though the midterm elections — now just 37 days away — could buck the trend of markets remaining indifferent to political outcomes. Investors, however, seem content to cross that bridge when we get to it, much as they did ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

On the schedule in the week ahead, investors will get one of the month’s crucial economic reports, with the September jobs report due out on Friday.

Wall Street economists expect nonfarm payrolls grew by 185,000 during the month with the unemployment rate expected to fall 0.1% to match the post-crisis low of 3.8% first hit back in May.

Average hourly earnings will also be closely tracked with wages set to rise 2.8% over last year in September, a slight deceleration from the 2.9% pace of growth seen in August which matched a nine-year high.