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Week-in-Review: Week ending in 10.22.21

The Bottom Line

● U.S. equities continue their grind higher with the S&P 500 hitting fresh highs during the week. International equities were mixed for the week.
● Like equities, yields grinded higher, the 10-Year yield was up +7bps, and the 2-Year yield +6bps for the week.
● Economic news showed that supply chain constraints and labor shortages are still broadly affecting the economy with housing starts, building permits, and manufacturing activity retreating, but service activity has shown some signs of expanding.

New Highs Yet Again

The S&P 500 set a new intraday record on Thursday before retreating from its new high, which continued into the Friday session and took the Nasdaq with it. Despite the selling pressure at the end of the week, the Nasdaq rose +1.29% for the week and the S&P 500 was up +1.64%. Around 23% of the S&P 500 has reported earnings so far, most of whom have reported stellar results and added a tailwind to the index. Small caps weren’t terribly far behind the large caps, with the Russell 2000 up +1.13% for the week. International markets were more tepid as the Nikkei-225 fell -0.91% for the week, and European equities were somewhat muted as well, up +0.53% for the week. Fed Chairman Powell spoke on Friday, admitting that ongoing supply chain constraints could continue to add upward pressure on inflation, which may accelerate the Fed’s timeline for withdrawing economic support. Chairman Powell also made a comment that the timeline for tapering asset purchases before the end of the year is still intact, with next month likely being the starting point. Labor shortages and supply chain constraints seem to be the only thing holding back economic progress as covid-19 cases continue to decline as vaccination efforts continue to show progress.

Digits & Did You Knows

BOOM – The Nobel Prize for Economics has been awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences since 1968. This year’s winners (3 Americans) will split the prize, worth approximately $1.2 million. Alfred Nobel created the annual prizes across multiple disciples at his death in 1896. Nobel made his fortune by inventing dynamite. (source: Nobelprize.org, BTN Research).
REDUCED NOT ELIMINATED – Social Security trustees announced on 8/31/21 that unless financial changes are implemented, the payment of Social Security benefits would drop to 76% of their originally promised levels beginning in 2033 through the year 2095. (source: Social Security Trustees 2021 Report, BTN Research).

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Source: Bloomberg. Asset‐class performance is presented by using market returns from an exchange‐traded fund (ETF) proxy that best represents its respective broad asset class. Returns shown are net of fund fees for and do not necessarily represent performance of specific mutual funds and/or exchange‐traded funds recommended by the Prime Capital Investment Advisors. The performance of those funds may be substantially different than the performance of the broad asset classes and to proxy ETFs represented here. U.S. Bonds (iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF); High‐YieldBond(iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF); Intl Bonds (SPDR® Bloomberg Barclays International Corporate Bond ETF); Large Growth (iShares Russell 1000 Growth ETF); Large Value (iShares Russell 1000 ValueETF);MidGrowth(iSharesRussell Mid‐CapGrowthETF);MidValue (iSharesRussell Mid‐Cap Value ETF); Small Growth (iShares Russell 2000 Growth ETF); Small Value (iShares Russell 2000 Value ETF); Intl Equity (iShares MSCI EAFE ETF); Emg Markets (iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF); and Real Estate (iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF). The return displayed as “Allocation” is a weighted average of the ETF proxies shown as represented by: 30% U.S. Bonds, 5% International Bonds, 5% High Yield Bonds, 10% Large Growth, 10% Large Value, 4% Mid Growth, 4%Mid Value, 2% Small Growth, 2% Small Value, 18% International Stock, 7% Emerging Markets, 3% Real Estate.

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