The S&P 500 In Week 2 Of February 2017
The big story for the S&P 500 in Week 2 of February 2017 is the same story that has now been percolating for weeks: the U.S. stock market's prolonged streak of unusually low levels of volatility, where the market hasn't fallen by at least 1% of its previous day's closing value for 82 trading days. How unusual is that? Statistician Salil Mehta has provided some historical context :
Since its founding in 1950, the S&P 500 has clocked nearly 17 thousand trading days, of which there have been only 22 other “no 1% drop” streaks, which also endured at least 81 trading days. The previous one was pre-financial crisis in 2006, and that lasted 94 days.
One percent is a significant number where the day-to-day movement of stock prices, because that's approximately the magnitude of the standard deviation for the day-to-day volatility of stock prices over all that time.
That's for the day-to-day changes in the market's closing values. Over the last 40 days, the entire intraday range of trading for the S&P 500 has fallen within one percent of its previous day's closing value.
And yet, even with so little day-to-day movement, the daily closing value of the S&P 500 has somehow continued to manage to fall within the range we forecast back in the first week of 2017.
Meanwhile, here are the main headlines that caught our attention during the second week of February 2017 for their market moving potential, or lack thereof.
Monday, 6 February 2017
- Oil falls as U.S. supplies, speculative length counter OPEC cuts
- Fed's Harker says March 'should be considered' for next rate hike
- Wall Street slips as energy shares, oil prices drop
Tuesday, 7 February 2017
- Fed's Kashkari says accommodative policy is appropriate
- Wall Street rises on earnings despite oil price pressure, dollar climbs
Wednesday, 8 February 2017
- Wall Street closes little changed; banks weigh on Dow
- Wall Street edges up as Nasdaq sets record high
Thursday, 9 February 2017
- Fed's Evans repeats support for gradual U.S. rate hikes
- Fed's Bullard says rates can remain low through 2017
- Fed buys $8.5 billion of mortgage bonds, sells none
- Wall Street rises to records as Trump ignites tax-cut hopes
Friday, 10 February 2017
- Oil up on widespread OPEC deal compliance, U.S. rig count rises
- Wall Street rises to records, spurred by Trump economy hopes
At The Big Picture, Barry Ritholtz summarizes the positives and negatives for the U.S. economy and markets for the trading week ending on Friday, 10 February 2017.
Disclosure: None.