Crude prices had dropped more than 10 percent in the trading week
ended Dec. 12. That was largely responsible for a 3.5 percent drop
in the S&P 500, as investors fled stocks over concerns about
energy-sector bonds, corporate earnings, and expectations for world
economic demand.
That seemed to change Thursday. The S&P 500 surged while oil fell, a
potential change in sentiment among investors looking to focus on
sectors that may benefit from an accelerating U.S. economy.
"The proof is that oil turned down and the market said, 'Oh, that
was yesterday's news, today we're moving ahead,'" said Quincy
Krosby, market strategist at Prudential Financial in Newark, New
Jersey.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch credit strategist Hans Mikkelsen
credited the decoupling partly to Fed Chair Janet Yellen's Wednesday
news conference.
"She explained how declining oil prices are expected to be a net
positive for the U.S. economy. Furthermore, she went out of her way
to dismiss any downward pressure on inflation as transitory."
Investors may have already priced in the effect of cheaper oil on
energy-sector earnings and are now starting to weigh the positives
for other sectors.
In its 2015 global outlook, fund manager Pimco said the fall in
energy costs, because it is largely supply-driven, should ultimately
help growth in major economies, including the United States, Japan,
and the euro zone.
Fourth-quarter energy-sector earnings are expected to decline 19.2
percent from a year ago; on October 1, growth of 6.6 percent was
expected.
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"You will see some pain in the short term because of fourth quarter
earnings," said James Liu, global market strategist at JPMorgan
Funds in Chicago. "So the broad S&P 500 will take a hit based on
that, but over the next several quarters it is clearly going to be a
good thing."
As recently as Tuesday, the 10-day correlation between the S&P 500
<.SPX> and Brent crude <LCOc1> stood at 0.97, meaning each moved in
almost perfect sync with the other. The correlation has been
breaking down and last stood at 0.42, with Brent stumbling 3.1
percent, while the S&P 500 surged 2.4 percent, on Thursday.
According to data from S&P, energy <.SPNY> has fallen to a market
share representation of 8.31 percent, from 9.7 percent at the end of
the third quarter, as names such as Denbury Resources <DNR.N>,
Nabors Industries <NBR.N> and Halliburton <HAL.N> have each tumbled
more than 35 percent.
With investors hoping oil prices have at least stabilized as Brent
hovers around the $60 mark, selling pressure could resume on
equities if the downward march for oil begins again, weighing on the
broader S&P index and tightening the correlation.
(This story changes date to Dec 19 from Dec 18)
(Additional reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Nick
Zieminski)
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