Mid-Week Market Update: Signs Point To Continued Growth

Published 12/09/2015, 03:02 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM
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US500
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Below are a few mid-week thoughts.

Trend: Today, the SPDR S&P 500 (N:SPY) will have a golden cross, where its 50-dma will cross above its 200-dma at about $205 (blue arrows). Holding above that level would obviously be positive. SPY continues to follow the NDX, which had its golden cross November 17 and is now sitting very near a 15-year high.

SPY Daily 1997-2015


Sentiment: The equity-only put/call ratio closed at 0.96 yesterday. It has only closed this high 12 other times in the past 5 years; In all cases, SPY closed higher at least once within 5 days. Excluding overlapping observations, 6 of 8 (75%) also closed higher at the end of 5 days. In two cases there was a significant drawdown before the higher close, something to watch out for today on weakness. A third day lower today would add further weight to near term upside (from index Indicators).

DJIA Performance

Recall that the dominant pattern in the period before (and after) the initiation of higher rates by the Fed is for up and down chop in a small range. That might be the case now as well, in which case fading the edges is the appropriate strategy (data from Stock Almanac).

Market Performance Before and After Major Rate Tightening

Breadth: There is a great deal of consternation about market breadth. Yet the picture is a more nuanced than the dialog in the market would have you believe.

Only last week, the cumulative advance-decline (A-D) line for the S&P hit an all-time high. What is notably absent from the discussion is that the market has sold off since that new high in A-D, a pattern we have seen often in the past as well (a post on this here).

The discussion has now turned to weakness in new 52-week highs versus new 52-week lows (known as the high-low ratio). It is weak, but as the chart below shows, index lows correspond to lows in the high-low ratio (red shading) and market peaks correspond to highs in the high-low ratio (green). This is exactly opposite of what many market commentators imply, but it fits the same breadth pattern that we see in A-D. This is a different way of thinking about breadth which we find has value (data from Sentimentrader).

NYSE High/Low Ratio 2013-2015

Macro: Here is a link to worthwhile article from Bill McBride (Calculated Risk) on the state of the economy (post). Bill was one a handful of analysts who was on top of the housing bubble prior the financial crisis. He remains very optimistic about housing and commercial development now, and also sees little signs of excess in debt. As he concludes, the economy is poised for more growth. This has been our view as well.

Given this backdrop, the worry over high yield as a barometer on the broader economy seems unwarranted. Indeed, most of the blow out in spreads is in the beleaguered energy and materials sectors.

High Yield Worries DeBunked

This is not new paradigm, but a relationship we have seen in the past as spreads (blue) blow out when oil prices drop (inverted; red), and vice versa.

Yield Spreads vs Oil 2003-2015


Valuation: Maybe the biggest headwind for the market next year is valuation. Forward P/Es are 16x, above the norm over the past 10 years. Moreover, this ratio assumes earnings growth of 8-10% which is probably a stretch given economic growth of 3-4% and margins that are already highs (data from FactSet).

Forward 12-M P/E Ratio 2005-2015


Will the indices go higher next year? According Mark Hulbert, the odds of a gain next year are always about 2/3, whether the prior year was up a lot, up a little or down. The natural tendency for the market is to rise over time.

Probability Market Will Rise Over Time in a Given Calendar Year

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