Drop in jobless claims points to a continued rally: Strategist

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US Equities (^GSPC, ^DJI, ^IXIC) have experienced a historic run, with the S&P 500 seeing multiple weeks of gains. However, February's Producer Price Index (PPI) reading revealed a 0.6% increase in wholesale prices.

Carson Group Chief Market Strategist Ryan Detrick joins Yahoo Finance to discuss the latest PPI data and his perceptions of the market's strength.

Detrick signals that initial weekly jobless claims are useful indicators of the economy's robust performance: "What caught me this morning though, we're still bullish, maybe a little pause would be normal, yes inflation is a little hotter, maybe you could argue the retail numbers are a tad weak, but look at claims. 209,000, I mean just quietly -- you hear about the layoffs, yet there's no spike in initial claims. The consumer is still strong, wages are still strong...but overall this backdrop is still there, its a strong economy, and still a bull market. "

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Nicholas Jacobino

Video Transcript

SEANA SMITH: It's great to have you here. So help us make sense of the moves that we're seeing in the market here. We're up against those record highs. Enough to keep the momentum?

RYAN DETRICK: Yeah, first off, March 14, happy Pi Day. Have you guys talked about that yet?

SEANA SMITH: We haven't, no. Thirty minutes in.

RYAN DETRICK: So there we go.

SEANA SMITH: Thank God you're here.

RYAN DETRICK: Happy-- well, yeah. Happy Pi Day. So, listen, I mean, we've been optimistic. We've been pretty bullish. Let's just put it in context. I know Jared you talk about these things. Up 16 of 19 weeks on the S&P, maybe 17 out of 20. 24% gain those 19 weeks.

That's like never happened before. So this has been a great run. A historic run for a lot of reasons. We can get into some of the things.

What caught me this morning, though, that-- we're still bullish. Maybe a little pause would be normal. Yes, inflation is a little hotter. Maybe you could argue the retail number's a tad weak. But look at claims-- 209,000. I mean, just quietly, you hear about these big layoffs, yet there's no initial spike in initial claims.

I mean, the consumer is still strong. Wages are still strong. Inflation, we can get into that stuff. But overall, this backdrop is still there. It's a strong economy. And it's still a bull market.

JARED BLIKRE: And the continuing claims also down. So, I mean, we're focused on the inflation data trying to figure out what the Fed's next move in-- is. But the market is always trying to get ahead of the Fed. And for all the bearish calls that we've seen, for all the calls that the market is extended-- as you said, we pretty much haven't seen this before, at least not recently. What could put a pinprick in this rally and pop this little bit of a-- I don't want to call it a bubble. I'm trying to shy away from that word. But how do we-- how do we do some mean reversion and get into that?