Week Ahead: Earnings Results Expected To Drive Markets; Oil Highest Since 2014

 | Oct 17, 2021 13:45

  • Some analysts believe this October could be less volatile than expected
  • Upcoming week filled with high-profile earnings releases
  • Tesla shares currently behaving like traditional, value stock automobile companies
  • Earnings releases from some of the US's largest companies are likely to be financial market catalysts next week when an array of businesses from a variety of sectors provide their quarterly results. Note, too, the term 'catalyst' could be misleading. It would suggest that stocks were languishing and in need of an additional push.

    That's hardly the case. Currently an assortment of stocks have been providing significant returns.

    h2 What happened to the scariest month of the year for markets? /h2

    At the beginning of the month, we cautioned that October was notorious for being the most volatile month of the year, by far. That statistic is true for every October in general, but during a year in which inflation and tightening were already weighing on markets, we figured market action might just get inordinately wild.

    We published our warning following the first monthly decline for US stocks in eight months, and the worst monthly drop since the infamous March 2020 bottom. However, so far in October stocks are chugging along just fine.

    Three of the four major US equity indices—the S&P 500, the Dow Jones, and the NASDAQ (both the Composite and NASDAQ 100)—posted gains two weeks in a row during October. Plus, the mega-cap Dow is on course for its best month since March and its most profitable October in six years.

    Perhaps we were overly alarmist and investors will safely be able to avert losses during what amounts to the scariest month of the year for markets. And maybe they'll even be able to enter November with gains.

    That seems to be Jim Cramer’s view. During a recent Mad Money segment he characterized the upcoming corporate earnings as the “the cavalry’s finally here to save the day.” In his view, corporate results are not necessarily all going to be positive, but they'll provide a needed upside distraction so investors will no longer be worried about inflation and tightening.

    It's certainly a comforting thought, but we're not convinced. Here' what we're seeing on the S&P 500 chart: