The bones of this economy are still ‘very strong’, strategist says

Lori Calvasina, RBC Capital Markets Head of U.S. Equity Strategy, joins Yahoo Finance Live to breakdown how markets are faring on Friday, S&P 500 forecasts and China's Evergrande crisis.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: Investors have had to digest a lot this week besides the debt ceiling debate. FedEx dropped an earnings warning, Nike cut its sales outlook last night, the Fed signaled its long-awaited bond tapering program, China's Evergrande is hanging by a thread. Lots going on for sure this week. Let's get a pulse of the market with all this volatility in mind.

Lori Calvasina is the head of US equity strategy over at RBC Capital Markets. Lori, Good Friday morning to you. Lots for investors to digest this week. What's your current thinking on the market?

LORI CALVASINA: Sure. Look, we've been looking for a short-term pullback in the market late this year for quite some time. I know a lot of other strategists are starting to make that same call as well. But you know, this is something frankly we had expected to happen simply because we were seeing earnings growth decelerate off these unbelievably kind of crazy highs that we had in the second quarter. And typically when you come out of a recession and that happens you do see stocks sell off a bit. You tend to be down modestly on a six-month forward basis after that peak rate of change in S&P 500 EPS growth.

Now, the other things that are happening right now is that we've got a lot of uncertainties abounding on other issues, whether it's in the governmental side, whether it's in terms of the COVID backdrop, a lot of uncertainty still about the Delta variant. And then supply chain issues obviously, are becoming a big topic, not just with the early reporters this week but we heard a lot about that in the post-Labor Day industrial conferences that happened around the Street. So there are just a lot of small things that maybe on their own could be manageable for investors that are starting to really sort of chip away to the downside here. But again, I don't think this is anything to be overly alarmed about. We typically have a pullback right around this time in recovery trades anyway.

JULIE HYMAN: Hey, Lori, it's Julie. So just to be clear, a lot of the folks that we were talking about sort of are echoing what you're saying in that they were looking for some kind of a pullback but most of them expect then a recovery. Your target for the end of the year I believe is still 4,325. So that implies that we're not necessarily going to see a recovery here. What sort of keeps-- what are the weights, the persistent weights you think on stocks continuing to go up here or rebounding here?