Preface: Explaining our market timing models
- Ultimate market timing model: Buy equities (Last changed from “sell” on 28-Jul-2023)
- Trend Model signal: Neutral (Last changed from “bullish” on 26-Jul-2024)
- Trading model: Neutral (Last changed from “bullish” on 20-Aug-2024)
Update schedule: I generally update model readings on my site on weekends. I am also on X/Twitter at @humblestudent. Subscribers receive real-time alerts of trading model changes, and a hypothetical trading record of those email alerts is shown here.
Subscribers can access the latest signal in real time here.
Negative seasonality ahead
Now that the rally off the early August low appears to be stalling, what are the odds of a re-test of the August lows?
Here are the bull and bear cases.
Momentum, momentum!
The short-term bull case rests on price momentum. The market came within a hair of a Zweig Breadth Thrust buy signal. As a reminder, the ZBT buy signal triggers when the ZBT Indicator surges from oversold to overbought within 10 trading days. Historically, such displays of strong price momentum tend to persist for at least a year.
Along with the impressive display of strong price momentum, sentiment readings are not stretched and could rise further. The CNN Business Fear & Greed Index has only recovered to neutral. Frothy markets don’t look like this.
The short-term bear case
The short-term bear case rests on a combination of overbought conditions and a series of negative divergences.
The sectors that are possibly showing signs of emerging leadership are the defensive sectors. They appear to be trying to make rounded bottoms (blue lines). While the evidence isn’t definitive, some of them began to turn up in relative strength slightly before the S&P 500 began to stall (red lines).
In addition, the NYSE McClellan Oscillator reached an overbought condition and recycled downwards, which is usually interpreted as a short-term sell signal.
What to watch
Short-term bullish or bearish? I believe the jury is still out on that score. Here is what I am watching.
How will breadth evolve? Even as the S&P 500 stalled just below the resistance level defined by its all-time high, the equal-weighted S&P 500 broke out to an all-time high, indicating that the average stock in the index is dragging the index upwards. That’s bullish, right?
Other risk appetite indicators are giving off mixed signals. Even though credit market risk appetite (green line) is holding up well, equity risk appetite (red dotted line) is flashing a negative divergence.
More ominously, Bitcoin prices continue to track the relative performance of the ARK Investment ETF (ARKK), which is an indicator of speculative growth stocks. Bitcoin can also be thought of as a liquidity proxy and its downtrend is bad news for the bull camp.
Over at the bond market, yields fell when Fed Chair Powell stated in his speech Friday that it was time to cut interest rates: “The time has come for policy to adjust. The direction of travel is clear, and the timing and pace of rate cuts will depend on incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks.”
It was a dovish speech. Powell opened the door to half-point rate cuts by raising concerns about the cooling jobs market: “We do not seek or welcome further cooling in labor market conditions.” In particular, there were no coded signals of gradualism in the pace of cuts as “gradual”, “gradualism”, “measured (pace)” were notably absent from his speech.
Hi Cam,
I find it a little confusing that you have Healthcare in both sets of relative strength plots. i.e. XLV:SPY
I assume the 1st 5 are the weak ones and the 2nd 5 are the stronger ones.
It is also probably worth noting that since the August low, Technology , XLK, (31% of the Index) has been stronger than SPX.
I’ll put my money on momentum with the caveat “where does the momentum come from?”
As long as people keep plowing money into 401k etc things will be bought up. A recession would cut into that, along with fear when the markets weaken.
I personally have always found it harder to hold on to winners because I fear giving back the gains. One needs faith in the fundamentals.
Fundamentals matter but in such a richly priced market a return to traditional pricing means that stock prices recover less. So NVDA may continue to do well as a business but if it’s P/E is 18 it will take years for the stock price to get back to where it is now.
The 2 year yield has topped out for a year and is a good signal about market health. I think that it is because money is seeking safety. The Fed does not want to admit what is going on, because if they do then on account of the reflexive nature of markets it becomes a self fulfilling prophecy. When things are undeniable and markets are crashing then they drop rates but it doesn’t matter.
This is the half truth we are told. Rates affect things, but not overnight, there is a huge lag, but the markets spasm about this. It’s what Wall Street wants.
There is a lot to learn from the fables of “the boy who cried wolf” and “chicken little and the sky is falling”, how this fits in with BTFD and euphoria and complacency.
The only thing I am reasonably sure of is that one day there will be a crash and hopefully as it develops I won’t be in denial.
Watch NVDA earnings and its reaction on Wed evening for market direction and if tech can continue to lead. All circumstantial evidence points to a strong report. This year every three months we have a P T Barnum’s “Greatest Show on Earth” in NVDA reporting, and we would welcome a modern-day General Tom Thumb, although in days of wokeness like today a lot of fun are stripped out from our daily lives.