Monthly Market Wrap: November Stumbled To A Close But 2021YTD Still Looks Good

 | Dec 01, 2021 12:35

Investors were optimistic when November trading opened. October had just produced the best monthly returns in a year.

Interest rates were still low, even if the Federal Reserve was starting to warn that it was time to get ready for "normalized" rates—a polite way of saying interest rates would rise next year. Employment was growing with jobless claims falling and wages moving higher.

Excitement accelerated as the major averages kept closing at new highs. The NASDAQ 100 Index was up as much as 4.6% for the month on Nov. 19.

But mid-month, inflation worries—centered around rising gasoline prices, higher food prices, skyrocketing housing costs—began to weigh on stocks. Then, suddenly, this past Friday, after news of a new, possibly vaccine-resistant COVID-19 variant, Omicron, emerged, the bottom appeared to fall out of the market.

h2 Ongoing Omicron Worries; Faster Tightening On Tap/h2

Equities slumped again on Tuesday to finish out the month.

That occurred in part after the Financial Times, on Monday, was told by Moderna (NASDAQ:MRNA) CEO Stéphane Bancel that existing immunizations may not be as effective against the Omicron variant as they have been against other strains. Investors rapidly retreated back to risk-off positions after fears had briefly subsided during Monday trading.

Perhaps a bigger market catalyst however, was Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, who pointedly told the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday that the Fed wanted to rein in inflation and would start the clock ticking toward a first-rate hike earlier than expected.

As a result, yesterday saw another nasty bout of selling. When markets closed to finish out November, the selling had wiped out monthly gains for the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 and substantially trimmed returns for the NASDAQ Composite and NASDAQ 100.

Nonetheless, barring a December disaster, stocks are poised for a strong 2021 performance. The S&P 500 is up 21.6% year-to-date. The Dow has gained 12.7%, and the NASDAQ is higher by 20.6%. The NASDAQ 100 is up 25.2%.

The selling pressure since Friday reflected the following unknowns:

1. How dangerous the variant might actually be and whether existing vaccines would continue to be strong enough protection. Investor jitters were visible via cruise-line stocks, airlines and other travel related names.