Stock bulls eye Spain, Bernanke and jobs

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The S&P 500.INX.SPX finished its third positive quarter in the last four on Friday, despite suffering its largest weekly percentage decline since June. For the past three months, the S&P 500 gained 5.9 percent – its best third quarter since 2010. In contrast, the index was down 1.3 percent for the week.
The benchmark S&P 500 earlier this month reached its highest level since late 2007. Yet uncertainty remains over whether stocks can hold their gains against the headwinds of a struggling economy.
That explains, in part, the retreat over the last several days.
The S&P 500 hit a high of 1,474.51 in mid-September before pulling back by a bit more than 2 percent. A run at 1,500 seems possible, but the flurry of economic and world events ahead probably will prevent a major advance in the coming week.
Bulls are betting this week’s Spanish budget proposals will be a preamble to a bailout request by Mariano Rajoy’s government. The move would be seen as a first step to get the finances of the euro zone’s fourth-largest economy in order and would clear some of the market uncertainty regarding the euro zone crisis.
Monetary policy is also on the list of market catalysts next week. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is scheduled to speak on Monday and the minutes of the latest FOMC meeting are set for release later in the week. The week’s agenda includes meetings of the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan.
“I think we could see a rebound next week if we get some of the stars aligning and have Spain ask for a bailout, the ECB announcing favorable terms for that bailout, and if we see the Bank of Japan announce further monetary intervention,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief portfolio strategist at Wells Fargo Funds Management in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin. “If Spain and the ECB don’t deliver, we could set ourselves up for a further lateral move in the markets. A negative would be if Rajoy flat-out denies that they need a bailout.” The ECB and BOJ are set to meet on Thursday, with the Bank of Japan’s meeting extending until Friday.
FACTORIES, JOBS AND THE DEBATES: Chinese factory and business conditions data will kick off a numbers-heavy calendar for markets. Manufacturing PMI, due on Monday, is expected to show a second straight month of contraction.
A snapshot of U.S. manufacturing activity will be provided on Monday when the Institute for Supply Management releases its September index. The September ISM reading is expected to show another month of contraction, but at a slightly slower pace than in August. On Wednesday, the ISM will release its US services-sector Purchasing Managers’ Index, which could show a slight deceleration in the pace of growth in the non-manufacturing sector.
“We have Chinese economic data over the weekend, and we’ll see how markets react on Monday,” said Wasif Latif, vice president of equity investments at San Antonio, Texas-based USAA Investment Management. “It seems like the market is bracing for bad numbers, meaning if they’re not as bad, it could be market-positive,” Latif said.
Non-farm payrolls for September, due on Friday, are seen up 115,000, while the U.S. unemployment rate is seen ticking up 0.1 percent from August to 8.2 percent in September.
The jobs data will come on the heels of the first of three U.S. presidential debates, scheduled for Wednesday night. Recent poll numbers point to a strengthening lead by President Barack Obama, but a weak payrolls reading could give some hope to Republican challenger Mitt Romney. “If Romney doesn’t turn the ship with a very strong (debate)performance, the president is going to win,” said Jack de Gan, chief investment officer at Harbor Advisory Corp in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. He said the trend in the polls has taken away some of the market uncertainty regarding the presidential election. He added that an ECB- or Spain-related headline out of Europe on Thursday could overcome almost anything that would happen Wednesday night during the debate. “I think the market is coming to terms with the fact the president is ahead, and unless something significant changes, (he) will prevail.”