Stock futures are looking up for Tuesday, perhaps a sign the market’s teflonlike tendencies that have helped it shake off crisis after crisis remain. Assets took a dive on Monday amid fears highly contagious coronavirus variants could thwart a “back-to-normal” economy.

“So investors are facing the very real prospect that limitations on daily life could be a factor affecting markets and corporates even into 2022, which is a far cry from the hopes many had at the start of this year when the vaccine rollout began,” summed up a team of Deutsche Bank strategists led by Jim Reid.

Enter our shaken, not-stirred call of the day from strategists at JPMorgan, who have boosted their “long-held” 2021 year-end S&P 500 price target of 4,400 to 4,600.

“We remain constructive on equities and see the latest round of growth and slowdown fears premature and overblown,” said the JPMorgan team, led by Dubravko Lakos-Bujas. “Even though equity leadership and bonds are trading as if the global economy is entering late cycle, our research suggests the recovery is still in early-cycle and gradually transitioning toward mid-cycle.”

For example, they see “a more sustained cycle, for the U.K. and Asia, even though macro indicators appear to be cresting. The U.S. recovery is rooted in labor market improvements, a “still very strong consumer setup,” healthy company fundamentals, central bank support and potential for more fiscal stimulus, said the strategists.

As for the delta coronavirus variant, JPMorgan doesn’t see the latest COVID-19 wave derailing broader economic reopenings, thanks in part to low to stable hospitalizations from vaccinations. “As argued previously, reopening of the economy is not an event, but rather a process, which in our opinion is still not priced-in, and especially not now given recent market moves,” said the strategists.

Consumer discretionary (retail, travel and leisure), semiconductors, banks and energy are “strong buys at current levels,” due to recent pullbacks that have created lots of “attractive opportunities.” The team noted that an increasing number of reopening stocks are 30% to 50% off first-quarter 2021 highs, with some even reversing back to June 2020 levels when COVID-19 uncertainty was worse.

For large-cap energy stocks, JPMorgan sees “increasing potential for a sharp short squeeze and move higher, given its extreme disconnect from oil fundamentals.” For semiconductors, the team pointed to analysis showing the sector is only 30% to 40% into the current upcycle, with strong annual growth seen into next year with upward earnings revisions.

Growth stocks are no longer such a straightforward trade, given that related sectors and themes have “significantly outperformed and are now increasingly vulnerable to yields normalizing off of current low levels and to profit-taking as we enter earnings season,” said Lakos-Bujas and the team.

While the prospect of bond yields moving lower is a risk for the overall market, the bank sees those normalizing and retracing higher into the second half of 2021. But it also warns that while all of the above sectors look attractive due to position unwinding by investors and a push into bonds, any reversal of those signals “could easily amplify moves in the opposite direction.”

The strategists base the S&P 500 upgrade on “strong earnings growth and capital return until 2023.” Their S&P 500 earnings per share estimate for 2021 was lifted $5 to $205 and by the same amount for 2022 to $230, and gross corporate buybacks are seen surpassing a first-quarter 2019 record of $850 billion.

Here are a few highlighed names in JPMorgan’s recovery basket: Delta Air Lines
DAL,
-3.74%
,
Lyft
LYFT,
-3.15%
,
Ford
F,
-2.42%
,
Whirlpool
WHR,
-3.40%
,
Lululemon Athletica
LULU,
+0.36%
,
Norwegian Cruise
NCLH,
-5.49%
,
Starbucks
SBUX,
-2.87%
,
Target
TGT,
-0.01%
,
L Brands
LB,
-3.75%

and Coca-Cola
KO,
-1.19%
.

A rebound, but not for bitcoin

Stock futures
ES00,
+0.52%

YM00,
+0.65%

NQ00,
+0.41%

are indicating a portion of Monday’s losses could be clawed back, with European equities
SXXP,
+0.45%

also higher, and even oil is seeing a bit of a bounce. Bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-3.57%
,
however, has dropped below $30,000, as Monday’s selloff continues.

A relatively light earnings day has Netflix
NFLX,
+0.37%

in the spotlight, with the streaming-service provider set to report results after the close of markets. Meanwhile, the chief executive officers of media groups Comcast
CMCSA,
-1.60%

and ViacomCBS
VIAC,
-1.04%

reportedly met in recent weeks to discuss possible overseas streaming partnerships.

Are rising COVID-19 cases starting to affect corporate plans to bring workers back to the office? Technology giant Apple
AAPL,
-2.69%

has reportedly delayed its employees’ return by a month.

Meanwhile, movie-theater chain AMC Entertainment
AMC,
-0.97%

plans to reopen two of the top-grossing theaters in the Los Angeles area. They have been shut for more than a year.

Shares of International Business Machines
IBM,
-0.71%

are up, after the tech stalwart posted revenue growth for a second consecutive quarter that beat expectations.

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