Banking Worries That Began To Surface Late Last Week Continued To Plague Investors Throughout This Week.
Market participants learned Sunday through a joint statement from the Federal Reserve, Treasury, and FDIC that all depositors at Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank of New York would be fully protected even though both banks had been taken over by regulators. In turn, the Fed also introduced a Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) that will help banks avert selling Treasury and other government securities at a loss by allowing them to offer those securities to the Fed, which will value them at par, as collateral.
Those actions were designed to shore up confidence in the banking industry, but price action in the bank stocks this week suggested confidence has still not been restored.
First Republic Bank (FRC) was at the epicenter of the bank stock trade, having been the beneficiary of news that 11 large banks, including JPMorgan Chase (JPM), will collectively make $30 billion of uninsured deposits into the bank. That news on Thursday triggered a massive reversal in shares of FRC to the upside, but by Friday, FRC was seeing large losses again after announcing the suspension of its common share dividend and that its borrowing from the Federal Reserve from March 10-15 varied from $20 billion to $109 billion.
The latter news coupled with the report that banks borrowed $11.9 billion from the newly announced Bank Term Funding Program and approximately $153 billion from the Fed's discount window for the week ending March 15 once again rattled investors and led to widespread selling of the bank stocks to end the week.
With investors lacking confidence in the banking industry, a risk-off mentality drove price action for most of the week. Buyers piled into mega cap stocks that are viewed as being distant from the banking sector fallout, having strong balance sheets and being more resilient in an economic slowdown. Alphabet, NVIDIA, and Microsoft all gained more than 12.0% this week.
The Mega Cap Growth Index jumped 5.7% this week, helping to prop up returns at the index level for an otherwise weak market. To wit, the S&P 500 Equal Weight Index declined 1.7% this week while the market-cap weighted S&P 500 ended the week up 1.4%.
The influence of the mega cap stocks was evident in the outperformance of the communication services (+6.9%), information technology (+5.7%), and consumer discretionary (+2.4%) sectors, all of which house mega cap constituents. That outperformance was more of a safety trade that also manifested itself in the outperformance of the defensive-oriented utilities (+3.9%), consumer staples (+1.3%), and health care (+1.3%) sectors.
Similarly, price action in the Treasury market also reflected a flight to safety in conjunction with concerns the economy may weaken considerably because of the banking sector's problems. On a related note, oil prices dropped 13.5% this week to $66.33/bbl on demand concerns.
The 2-yr note yield plunged 77 basis points this week to 3.82% and the 10-yr note yield fell 30 basis points to 3.40%, also driven in part by a belief that the Fed isn't going to be able to raise rates as much as previously thought and may be forced to cut rates relatively soon.
The latter point notwithstanding, the CME FedWatch Tool shows a 64.2% probability that the Fed will raise rates by 25 basis points at the March 21-22 FOMC meeting. That is up from 59.8% a week ago. Notably, the European Central Bank agreed this week to raise its key policy rates by 50 basis points despite worries surrounding Credit Suisse, saying it did so because "inflation is projected to remain too high for too long."
· Nasdaq Composite: +4.4% for the week / +11.1% YTD
· Russell 2000: -2.6% for the week / -2.0% YTD
· S&P Midcap 400: -3.2% for the week / -2.3% YTD
· S&P 500: +1.4% for the week / +2.0% YTD
· Dow Jones Industrial Average: -0.2% for the week / -3.9% YTD