After a
late-year rally fueled by the U.S. election pushed stocks to surprising new
peaks, investors are wary that the market could be primed for a spill to start
2017.
The benchmark
S&P 500 .SPX is
set to post a roughly 10 percent price gain for 2016 and around 12 percent on a
total return basis, including reinvested dividends. That tops the single-digit
increase expected by market participants polled by Reuters a year ago, with
more than half of the advance coming after Donald Trump's Nov. 8 presidential
victory.
The Dow Jones
Industrial Average .DJI was
on pace to rise more than 13 percent for 2016, with a total return above 16
percent.
From here,
though, investors expect the S&P 500 to rise by mid-single-digits in 2017,
according to a Reuters poll earlier this month.
Reflecting the
renewed bullishness for equities, U.S.-based stock funds pulled in $11.8
billion in the week ended Dec. 28, data from Lipper showed on Thursday, marking
a sharp reversal from most of the year.
But investors
see several warning signs for 2017, including stocks at traditionally expensive
valuations; investors registering particularly bullish sentiment; and the Federal
Reserve primed to raise interest rates several times this year.
Meanwhile, a
market lifted in part by hopes for Trump's policy agenda could be deflated
should any of those hopes be dented once he begins in office. The S&P has
rallied by more than 5 percent since Election Day, while the Dow has climbed by
more than 8 percent.
"If
anything, we head into the new year with the likelihood we will probably see
some near-term weakness in equities primarily because of the move we’ve seen
higher," said Peter Kenny, senior market strategist at Global Markets
Advisory Group in New York. "You will see some winning trades being taken
off the table and, in general, a reset."
A TAXING START
TO THE NEW YEAR?
January has
proven to be a difficult month for equities in recent years, with the S&P
500 falling at least 3 percent in each January of 2014, 2015 and 2016. The
beginning of 2016 was marked by the worst 10-day start ever for the S&P,
plagued by worries about a rout in commodities, a China slowdown and a
potentially over-aggressive Fed after it hiked interest rates for the first
time since 2008.
A year later,
a test for the market could come as soon as next week. Investors may have been
holding off on selling their winners until 2017 with hopes that any profits
will be taxed at a lower rate under a Trump administration.
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