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Here’s when history says the post-Fed rally should start — and the two unlikely sectors to benefit

Stock futures are pointing to a mixed start as investors ponder the 10th straight, and perhaps final, Federal Reserve interest-hike. A European Central Bank meeting, data, earnings from Apple and others, and more bank stress make up a frenetic Thursday.

A few tomatoes are being lobbed at the Fed Chairman Jerome Powell for his “sound and resilient,” description of the U.S. banking system, followed by a collapse in PacWest shares. (More below) Hedge fund boss Bill Ackman was practically apoplectic, while bond-trader Jeffrey Gundlach said bank stress won’t stop until rate cuts start.

Elsewhere, JonesTrading’s chief market strategist Mike O’Rourke said he’s “stunned” that Powell has now “hiked twice in the face of sizable bank failures. While we would agree these challenges are far less severe than 2008, we also believe discretion is still the better part of valor,” he told clients.

“Nonetheless, here we are on the cusp of a 4th bank failure and the S&P 500
SPX,
-0.70%
is 2.5% higher than where it closed the last day SVB traded, before it was placed in receivership. Maybe the Fed Chairman is taking his signal from the equity market as both have expressed a low level of regard for risk,” said O’Rourke.

Read: Why stock-market bulls can’t celebrate as Fed hints at pause in rate hikes

Onto our call of the day, which offers more cheer in the face of fear, as trader Kevin Muir of the Macro Tourist blog walks us through what markets did after final Fed hikes, with some surprising stock winners.

Muir looked at total returns from the day of the last Fed increase, representing average returns from tightening campaigns between 1984 and 2018. “On average, on the first day after the last hike, stock markets decline. The next day it gets worse. And on the third day, it declines a little more,” he said.

But on the fourth day, markets stop falling and two weeks later stocks are up, meaning investors just take a few days to digest the rate hike and start to move on.

Moving even further out, things also don’t look shabby at all, as his chart shows:

The big takeaway here, says Muir, is that investors should not rush out to buy right away, but hold their fire for a couple of weeks, if things go to script. He also looked at bonds and found things bullish across the boards with falling yields, but only on week 3 and 4 after the last hike.

As for stocks, he did this rundown of major sectors from the first week to 90 days later:

In the first week, he finds everything losing but financials, then he scans further out, where tech stocks are in the lead after 90 days.

“Looking at the next winners, we have financials and real estate. Holy smokes, talk about a scary duo to own right now – but maybe that’s why they might work? The sentiment in these two sectors is so downtrodden, we could see a massive short covering rally,” said Muir.

Read: SVB and First Republic are just the first of many U.S. banks that will fail — if you believe 800 years of history

The markets

U.S. stock futures 
ES00,
-0.26%

YM00,
-0.24%

NQ00,
+0.07%
are bouncing around after Wednesday’s post-Fed decision decline, and Treasury yields
TMUBMUSD02Y,
3.821%
continue to tumble, with the 10-year note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.355%
at 3.36%. Crude-oil futures 
CL.1,
+0.31%
are higher, just below $70 per barrel. The dollar 
DXY,
-0.06%
is flat and gold
GC00,
+0.55%
and silver
SI00,
+0.97%
are higher.

Next central bank on tap — the European Central Bank, where a 25 basis-point hike is expected on Thursday.

For more market updates plus actionable trade ideas for stocks, options and crypto, subscribe to MarketDiem by Investor’s Business Daily.

The buzz

PacWest
PACW,
-1.98%
shares are down 38%. The lender issued a statement saying deposits are rising and confirmed it’s in talks with potential investors or partners. A late plunge in shares came Wednesday on a Bloomberg News report of a possible sale. Western Alliance Bancorp 
WAL,
-4.40%
and Zions Bancorp
ZION,
-5.27%
are down 17% and 9%, respectively.

First Horizon stock
FHN,
-7.04%
is down 45% after the bank said it has mutually agreed with TD Bank Group
TD,
+0.40%
to terminate their merger deal.

There’s also this:

Loaded with consumer brands including Tylenol, Johnson & Johnson’s Kenvue spinoff
KVUE,

heads for the biggest IPO in over a year on Thursday, with shares priced at $22 each.

Arconic
ARNC,
-5.69%
stock is up 26% on a report private-equity firm Apollo Global Management is reportedly nearing a deal to acquire the industrial-parts maker.

Bud Light problem? Anheuser Busch
BUD,
+1.34%

ABI,

reported a jump in profits. Moderna
MRNA,
-0.96%,
Peloton
PTON,
+2.56%,
Cardinal Health, Stanley Black & Decker
SWK,
+1.23%
also report results. Then it’s a huge after-hours lineup, with Apple
AAPL,
-0.65%,
DoorDash
DASH,
+1.20%,
Lyft
LYFT,
+2.35%,
Shopify
SHOP,
-1.09%,
Coinbase
COIN,
-5.51%,
DraftKings
DKNG,
-0.50%,
AIG
AIG,
-1.12%,
Bumble
BMBL,
+2.78%,
GoDaddy
GDDY,
-4.80%
and Fortinet
FTNT,
-1.55%
to name a few.

Read: Apple is about to rain billions more on investors alongside earnings

Lemonade stock
LMND,
+1.65%
is up 12% after upbeat results from the online insurance group. Zillow
Z,
-1.00%
reported forecast-beating earnings, despite wobbles in residential real estate.

First-quarter productivity and unit-labor costs are due at 8:30, alongside the March trade deficit and weekly jobless claims, which come a day ahead of the April payrolls report.

Read: Why the economics profession didn’t forecast the surge in inflation — and why prices can cool without the economy tanking

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The chart

The tickers

These were the top-searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m. Eastern:

Ticker

Security name

TSLA,
+0.19%
Tesla

MULN,
-1.06%
Mullen Automotive

PACW,
-1.98%
PacWest Bancorp

AMC,
+4.36%
AMC Entertainment

GME,
+1.72%
GameStop

AAPL,
-0.65%
Apple

BUD,
+1.34%
Anheuser-Busch

NIO,
+2.55%
NIO

AMZN,
+0.02%
Amazon.com

WAL,
-4.40%
Western Alliance Bancorp.

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Listen to the Best New Ideas in Money podcast with MarketWatch reporter Charles Passy and economist Stephanie Kelton.

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