'Litmus Test': Stock Market Update For The Week Ahead

The Past Week, In A Nutshell

What Happened: After the abrupt rotation into value and small-cap stocks on the procurement COVID-19 coronavirus vaccines and news of further lockdowns, broad-market indices ended flat-to-down.

Remember This: “Historically the overall retail investor sentiment or the stock market in general are not largely impacted by what happens on a Black Friday or a Cyber Monday,” Dan Raju, CEO of Tradier, told Benzinga.

“I look at retail Thanksgiving spending as a first litmus test of investor confidence in the markets after the positive vaccine news. If retail investors react to Thanksgiving by spending money on Black Friday/Cyber Monday, it will be seen as a reinforcement of confidence and a good initial indicator of a strong upcoming holiday shopping season. On the other hand, if retailers are unable to meet expectations, it might be looked at as an indicator of continued curtailed spending.”

Pictured: Profile overlay on a 15-minute candlestick chart of the Micro E-mini S&P 500 Futures

Technical

After an initiative upside drive on news that another COVID-19 coronavirus vaccine developed by Moderna Inc (NASDAQ: MRNA) was 94.5% effective, U.S. index futures pared gains as participants struggled to maintain higher prices, evidenced by the non-presence of committed buying and low-excess at the edges of balance.

Given that Friday’s session failed to negate Wednesday’s spike liquidation by moving back into the micro-composite high-volume node at $3,557, the fairest price to do business during the prior balancing activity, initiative sellers remain in control. As a result, knowing that prior end-of-day spikes were the result of weak-handed, short-term buyers liquidating in panic, the selling moved prices away from value and didn’t attract increased participation, and Friday was a monthly options expiry, traders can carry forward the following framework.

If the auction remains in or below the prior selling activity, then initiative sellers remain in control and the liquidation could be the start of a new trend lower, confirmed by trade beyond the $3,506.25 excess low. Otherwise, there is the potential for a failed break-down in which participants rotate back over the $3,580 balance boundary.

Fundamental

In a commentary, BlackRock discussed the staying power of growth stocks after the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic.

We believe this year brought a sort of forced adoption necessary for future business survival, a dynamic likely to continue for companies that want to be competitive in a post-COVID world. That means demand could continue to edge higher for providers of these products and services. One example: Many consumers swapped gym memberships for connected home fitness equipment. The initial demand spike may recede, but many of these consumers will be multi-year subscription payers and likely to become more firmly entrenched in an ecosystem of products offered by a certain company.