S&P 500 blows past bond market warnings

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Stocks extended one of their strongest year-to-date rallies in three decades last week, with the S&P 500 notching two new record highs. Investors continue to bet that a soft landing for the world's biggest economy will support corporate earnings.

Analysts are also boosting their end-of-year targets for the benchmark, which is now within just 2.5% of a 6,000-point mark that seemed impossible to scale just a few months ago.

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The long bull rally, which began more than two years ago, however, faces a key test from the bond market over the coming weeks. Investors have marked up Treasury yields in the face of resurgent inflation risks and reckless fiscal spending promises from both Presidential candidates that threaten even larger debt and deficit levels.

Benchmark 10-year paper hit the highest levels since late July in early Monday trading, changing hands at 4.138% extending a slump that has added more than 50 basis points to the most important interest rate in world financial markets.

The S&P 500 is one one of its best year-to-date runs since the 90s, and is only a few bullish trading days away from the mythical 6,000 point mark.
The S&P 500 is one one of its best year-to-date runs since the 90s, and is only a few bullish trading days away from the mythical 6,000 point mark.

It must be noted that that move followed an outsized 50 basis points rate cut from the Federal Reserve in mid-September, a decision that some investors are now wondering may stoke inflation pressures. The economy continues its above-trend growth, oil prices remain elevated amid geopolitical tensions in the Persian Gulf region, and the job market consistently surprises to the upside.

Stocks are expensive. Or maybe not

For the moment, however, stocks are poised to extend their longer-term run despite trading at 22 times future earnings estimates, a valuation level that is considered expensive in historical terms.

"October's stock market is bucking the historical trend with remarkably little volatility,"

"While there are plenty of reasons why stocks should be choppy, from election uncertainty to rising geopolitical tensions, the market is overlooking all of these worries as it's become clear that a soft landing is upon us," said David Laut, chief investment officer at Abound Financial in Granite Bay, California.

Related: Tesla and Boeing may rock markets this week

"We believe there is continued upside ahead for stocks, especially now that we are entering a seasonally strong period of the year for markets, with November and December historically being good months for stocks," he added.

Louis Navellier of Navellier Calculated Investing thinks the higher PE multiples are more indicative of the higher profits and margins from mega-cap tech companies. The biggest companies comprise more than a fifth of the S&P 500, resulting in "materially less systemic risk than the markets have had historically."