Investing.com -- The S&P 500 rallied last week, driven by a mix of de-escalating trade tensions and political optimism.
According to Sevens Report, "there were several legitimate reasons for last week’s rally, including (in order of importance): De-escalation of the trade war with China, de-escalation of the Trump/Powell feud, rising anticipation for the announcement of numerous trade deals, and solid Q1 earnings."
However, Sevens Report cautioned that "none of these events are materially bullish," and warned that while "still-negative sentiment helped the S&P 500 temporarily break through 5,500 on some good earnings or further trade de-escalation briefly, I do not think the news has turned good enough to sustain a rally."
The strategist pointed out that tensions between Trump and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell are far from resolved.
"Trump understands that firing Powell would hammer markets, so he (probably) won’t try it, but that doesn’t mean the negative headlines are done," Sevens Report said.
They added, "The Fed meets next on Wednesday, May 7, and the Fed is very unlikely to cut rates at that meeting and that could draw Trump’s ire."
On the trade front, Sevens Report noted that while tariff reductions are better than escalation, "the baseline level of tariffs will be much higher than it was in January and that will be a headwind on growth and a tailwind on inflation."
Looking ahead, Sevens Report stated, "it is very unlikely that 2025 S&P 500 EPS expectations stay at $270," suggesting that "a $10/share reduction to $260 (or even lower) seems more appropriate."
"Bottom line: Last week was positive, but it wasn’t positive enough to alter my outlook that this market is still mostly rangebound between 5,100 and 5,500 in the S&P 500," Sevens Report concluded.