The 2023 investment narrative is already diverging from 2022: Morning Brief

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Thursday, January 19, 2023

Today's newsletter is by Jared Blikre, a reporter focused on the markets on Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Twitter @SPYJared. Read this and more market news on the go with the Yahoo Finance App.

Despite Wednesday's losses in the major U.S. indexes, stocks are flying out of the gate in 2023.

The Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) and S&P 500 (^GSPC) are having their best start to a year since 2019.

And in enjoying these gains in the new year, stocks are diverging from the trends that emerged in the second half of 2022. A move that has important implications for investors.

Start with the biggest loser of the day, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI), which was down 1.81%, or 614 points, on Wednesday, its worst showing in over a month. As of late December, the Dow had outperformed the Nasdaq by 20 percentage points — the most since the dot-com bubble crash two decades prior.

Despite this outperformance, however, the Dow ended 2022 down nearly 9%. There were few places for investors to hide in 2022.

But Wednesday, the Nasdaq outperformed the Dow by 57 basis points. Particularly notable coming on such a negative day for the market. In the first 11 trading days of the year, the Nasdaq is already up 4.69% compared to the Dow's meager 0.45% gain.

If we dive inside the benchmark S&P 500 and look at relative sector performance, 2023's year-to-date sector chart is nearly the inverse of 2022.

S&P 500 Sector Performance -- 2023 year-to-date
S&P 500 Sector performance year-to-date through Jan. 18., 2023.(Source: Yahoo Finance)

Last year's second-worst-performing sector is this year's best: Consumer Discretionary (XLY).

Helping matters are the sector's two largest megacap components — Amazon (AMZN) and Tesla (TSLA) — which are both nicely positive so far in 2023, gaining a little over 4% each.

The two other sectors besides consumer discretionary that house some of the market's biggest names — Tech (XLK) and Communication Services (XLC) — are also serving as leaders this year.

And let's not gloss over the strength in Real Estate (XLRE), which is up more than 5% after having just endured one of the most challenging housing markets in a generation last year. Another big narrative shift after 2022.

On the flip side, those red sectors in the above heat map — Utilities (XLU), Health Care (XLV), and Consumer Staples (XLP) — were the least-bad sectors after Energy last year. These sectors are also commonly referred to as defensive areas of the market for investors to find shelter in a storm. In the 2023 market, however, it seems safe trades aren't quite safe.