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Midyear review: Can 2024's big gains continue?

By any standard measure, the second quarter was good for stocks, especially big stocks, with a ton of record-setting performances. 

There was Nvidia  (NVDA) , the “it” stock, up 10.3% for the month and 149% on the year. But the monthly gain, nice as it was, wasn’t the best among S&P 500 stocks.

Or Arm Holdings  (ARM) , the chip designer, critical to cell phones. It went public last fall. It was up 36% in June and is up nearly 118% on the year. 

How about Super Micro Computer  (SMCI) ? It was up 4.4% in June but DOWN 18.9% for the second quarter but UP 188.24% for the year. And, oh yes, the shares jumped 255.3% in the first quarter.

Related: Nvidia stock pullback has markets on edge for S&P 500 correction

At the same time, Walgreen Boots Alliance  (WBA)  was booted out of the Dow Jones Industrial Average this winter. The pharmacy chain announced this week it was going to shutter thousands of stores. The shares at $12.10 on June 28, were down 25% in June alone. They’re off 54% this year.

Troubled aerospace giant Boeing  (BA)  ended June up 2.5%. Not much to cheer about when the stock is down 30% for 2024. It could be worse. Intel  (INTC) , once the chip colossus, has slumped 38% this year.   

Markets in brief

The stock market’s 2024 reality: It is about tech and big stocks. They’ve been winning in a big way. But many have become overbought and are treading water.

The S&P 500 was up a respectable 3.5% in June, with a 3.9% gain for the second quarter. For the year, the index is up 14.5% — after 10.2% gain in the first quarter. 

Two sectors are the S&P’s biggest drivers: technology and communications services, led by Google-parent Alphabet  (GOOGL)  and Facebook parent Meta Platforms  (META) . Each  is up more than 25% this year.

The Nasdaq Composite climbed nearly 6% in June and is up 18.1% for the year. On pace, in theory, to match 2023’s 39% gain.

The Dow is an also-ran, saddled with Intel, Boeing and Nike  (NKE) , all down more than 30% this year. The venerable index looks tired. It was up just 1.3% in June, fell 1.6% in the second quarter and is up just 4% in 2024.

The Nasdaq-100’s very strange day

The Nasdaq-100 Index, aka the Nasdaq on steroids, offers a glimpse into the risks. The index is up 17% on the year, 6.2% for June and 7.8% in the quarter.

Components include Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, Facebook-parent Meta Platforms, and Alphabet. Plus Nvidia, Tesla  (TSLA) , and Costco Wholesale  (COST)

June 28 was, well, weird for the Nasdaq-100, and the story makes one wonder if markets are too stretched.  

The index jumped more than 200 points right after the June 28 open. It crossed the 20,000 level for the first time, topping out at 20,018.

And then many investors (or their computers) sold heavily, and the index dropped back more 351 points. 

Options expirations probably had something to do with the declines. The selling, though, seemed extreme. 

The close was 19,683, off 0.5% and 226 points below its record closing high of 19,909 on June 18.

Market tops often look like this.  

More on markets and business 

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The risks facing the rest of 2024

Wall Street is full of bulls, boosting their year-end targets on, say, the S&P 500. They see the index ending the year maybe at 6,000, maybe higher. But the stock market has dragged many analysts into those numbers because so many assumed a recession this year. 

Now, they’re saying they expect multiple years of economic growth, job creation, and massive increases in stock prices.

They aren’t worried about war or even politics.

Increasingly, there are skeptics. 

Yes, the big stocks are up big and maybe are too big. Ten stocks now represent nearly 36% of market capitalization of the S&P 500. Especially tech stocks and shares like pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly  (LLY) , up 55.3% this year and sporting a market capitalization of $860.5 billion. 

But markets, frankly, stumbled out of June and may have trouble getting reenergized. Mid-cap and small-cap stocks aren’t rising. Interest rates may be stuck if the Fed doesn’t cut rates.

Related: The best and worst quality car brands, according to J.D. Power

A stalling market may reflect economic stresses, said David Rosenberg, former chief North American economist at Merrill Lynch. He now heads a Toronto-based consulting firm.

There are two economies at work now: a good one for the affluent, and a recession, hitting middle class- and lower-income workers hardest, according to Rosenberg.

It’s made worse because the Federal Reserve is so data dependent, wanting, seemingly, absolute confirmation that inflation is really headed to its goal of 2% a year. 

Waiting may create its own problems. Many families are barely hanging on, and many will be in dire straits if without jobs for more than three months. One see the stresses in regular news stories of small businesses going under: restaurants, butcher shops, toy makers.

Rosenberg’s advice to Jerome Powell: Don’t wait to cut interest rates. The economy needs help now. He’s skeptical the Fed will move. “They’re too scared to move rates prematurely.” 

A shopper leaves a store having a closing sale.

David McNew/Getty Images

What’s ahead this week

Hate to say it, but this week will be slow. The July 4 holiday is Thursday. Markets will close early on Wednesday. Canadian markets will be closed on Monday. Lots of investors will be headed to the beach. 

July’s biggest economic report will come Friday with the monthly jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The consensus estimate is that payrolls will be up in June by 180,000 jobs, with the unemployment rate holding at 4%. 

The jobs piece of the report will be closely watched because the May report estimated 272,000 jobs had been created, much more than expected. 

There are few earnings reports that will move markets. One to watch is Constellation Brands  (STZ) , the marketer of Corona beers plus a big portfolio of wineries and Svedka vodka.

Related: Veteran fund manager picks favorite stocks for 2024


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