Worries over the strength of China's economy – and a surprising central bank move there – weighed on stocks in early trading Monday, though the major indexes managed to bounce back as the session wore on.
Overnight, a round of data was released that showed economic growth in the mainland slowed in July. The reports included worse-than-expected readings on retail sales and industrial output, as well as a sharp rise in the youth unemployment rate, which hit 19.9% last month – its highest level since the data was first published in 2018.
"The economic data from China overnight was very disappointing, to put it mildly," says Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at currency data provider OANDA. "Combined with the lending figures on Friday, it does not paint a good picture of domestic demand or the growth outlook. It seems the reopening boost was both uninspiring and short-lived." In reaction to the weak data, the People's Bank of China unexpectedly cut two key lending rates to help spark growth.
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The headlines from China dragged U.S. crude futures down 2.9% to $89.41 per barrel. As such, energy (-1.9%) was the worst-performing sector today, with oil stocks like Valero Energy (VLO, -2.8%) and Devon Energy (DVN, -3.0%) suffering notable declines.
While the major indexes spent most of the morning in negative territory, buyers swooped in around lunchtime to push them higher. By the close, the Nasdaq Composite was up 0.6% at 13,128, while the S&P 500 Index (+0.4% at 4,297) and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (+0.5% at 33,912) also notched modest gains.
Other news in the stock market today:
It's time for investors to start shopping. This is according to BofA Securities analyst Sara Senatore, who says investors might want to start building a wishlist for when the Federal Reserve starts cutting rates – which BofA economists believe will happen in the second half of 2023 – paying particular attention to high-quality consumer discretionary stocks.
The sector has taken a beating in 2022, which isn't too surprising, given consumer stocks tend to lag in a rate-tightening cycle, as "the Fed's rate hikes are intended to dampen demand," Senatore says. But, investors might want to start looking for opportunities in consumer stocks, as they "materially outperform during Fed easing cycles – historically peaking five to eight months after the Fed's first rate cut," the analyst adds. Plus, "performance is neutral to positive as early as six months before the first cut and strongly positive for consumer services in those periods."
Investors looking for a place to start on their wishlist might want to consider these 11 consumer stocks. The top-rated names featured here have plenty to offer investors, including attractive valuations and impressive long-term growth outlooks. Check them out.
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