Spotify and the jobs report — What you need to know for the week ahead

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The first quarter has come to a close.

And after an eventful three months for investors, the S&P 500 broke a nine-quarter winning streak after sustaining a 1.2% decline to kick off what Wall Street analysts expected to be another strong year for the stock market.

The Dow also lost ground in the first quarter, dropping 2.5% while the tech-heavy Nasdaq, the source of so much market stress in the last couple weeks of March, actually posted a 2.3% gain to start the year.

And so while the losses or gains posted by the market may appear unremarkable in the longer run, the action along the way showed investors that this year will be different.

The S&P 500 dropped more than 4% in two separate weeks during the quarter and a 10% peak-to-trough drop in just a handful of trading days in early February showed that the easy ride enjoyed in 2017 will not be repeated, even if returns end up being strong this year.

In the week ahead, investors look to start April and the second quarter off with a more positive outlook.

The March jobs report on Friday will punctuate the typically crowded early-month economic data schedule while the earnings flow will be light. A speech from Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell on Friday afternoon regarding the U.S. economic outlook will also feature on the economic calendar.

The big event from public markets this week will be the Tuesday debut of Spotify (SPOT), which will float shares in a direct listing on the New York Stock Exchange.*

Spotify’s public market debut will be the most highly-anticipated initial offering of the year. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann/File Photo
Spotify’s public market debut will be the most highly-anticipated initial offering of the year. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann/File Photo

Economic calendar

  • Monday: Markit manufacturing PMI, March (55.7 expected; 55.7 previously); ISM manufacturing, March (60 expected; 60.8 previously); Construction spending, February (+0.4% expected; 0% previously)

  • Tuesday: Auto sales, March (16.9 million vehicle pace annualized; 16.96 million vehicle pace previously)

  • Wednesday: ADP private payrolls, March (205,000 expected; 235,000 previously); Markit services PMI, March (54.3 expected; 54.1 previously); ISM non-manufacturing PMI, March (59 expected; 59.5 previously); Factory orders, February (+1.7% expected; -1.4% previously)

  • Thursday: Initial jobless claims (215,000 previously)

  • Friday: Non-farm payrolls, March (+189,000 expected; +313,000 previously); unemployment rate, March (4% expected; 4.1% previously); average hourly earnings, month-on-month, March (+0.3% expected; +0.1% previously); average hourly earnings, year-on-year, March (+2.7% expected; +2.6% previously); consumer credit balances, February (+$15.75 billion expected; +13.9 billion previously)

The earnings outlook

The first quarter is in the books. And for investors coming off a 2017 that saw strong returns and low volatility, it was certainly a shock to the system.