Tesla, Amazon — even Boeing — will move markets this week

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Stocks ended Friday with what seemed like a a slow day even if the Standard & Poor's 500 Index and the Dow Jones Industrial Average both closed at new highs.

The S&P 500 was up just 0.4% to nearly 5,865, and the Dow added just 0.09%, all of 36 points, to finish at 43,276. The Nasdaq Composite Index rose to 0.6% to 18,490. It wasn't a new high, though Nvidia  (NVDA)  did hit a new high.

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Investors seem ecstatic. There are projections the S&P 500 will rise to at least 6,200, a 5.7% gain from 5,865 now. It would mean a 30% gain for the year, the biggest since 1997. There are bullish calls on the Nasdaq, on tech stocks overall.

The major averages closed higher for a sixth straight week on Friday. In theory, the markets could make a run at the record for number of weekly gains.

Related: Veteran trader has sharp words for Fed on interest rate cuts

That was nine between end of October 2023 and the end of trading in 2023 and another nine-week stretch that ended in January 2004.

A big week for earnings

The pieces in place suggest a seventh week of gains is possible:

The third-quarter earnings season is about to hit its heaviest few weeks.

The big macro trends are favorable:

  • Job growth looks steady.

  • Oil prices are sliding, in spite of all the Middle East tensions.

  • Gasoline prices are moving lower.

  • Rising mortgage rates are keeping home sales in check for now.

  • All of the 11 S&P 500 sectors are solidly ahead on the year. Real estate is up 11.5%, in part because the Federal Reserve is expected to continue cutting rates. The leaders: Information Technology, up 33%; Utilities, up 29%; Communications Services, up 28.3%; and Financials, up 26.5%.

Related: Stanley Druckenmiller makes a stunning confession about Nvidia stock

The risks to the extreme bullishness

The obvious risks are:

A disputed Presidential election. You can bet the Trump-Vance and Harris-Walz campaigns are organizing their lawyers.

The Middle East crisis spin into major war. So far, despite all the death and destruction, the long-lived conflicts have remained geographically focused. That's one reason why crude oil dropped below $70 a barrel on Friday.

The unknown unknown. The bullishness as seen this past week (which includes heavy betting Donald Trump will win the election) does not allow for a serious mistake. It's so pervasive "it makes me nervous," Los Angeles money manager Julie Biel, a participant on  CNBC's Fast Money program, noted on Friday. She's right: Strange things can and will happen. The 2008-09 financial crisis erupted because too many people in the financial industry failed to see how vulnerable their institutions were to loose lending practices.