1. Lines in the sand...
The S&P 500 appears to be stalling at resistance after a short sharp rebound. Looking at the “correction risk drivers“ I’ve mentioned previously:
- EPOL (geopolitics) also stalling
- LQD (rates/credit) turning down again
- ARKK (tech bust) bouncing along the bottom
Overall fairly unconvincing.
Source: @Callum_Thomas
2. Seasonality Check
June is historically the worst month of the year for stocks during a midterm year. Always exceptions to the average, but interesting to note.
Source: @RyanDetrick
3. Insider Timing
This “Insider Big Block Trading indicator” looks to be at or close to a buy signal... as always, note the exceptions (beware of early buy signals).
Source: @SethCL
4. Giving up on Calls
Small trader buying of call options has near evaporated -- stark contrast to the frenzy of 2020/21.
Source: @zerohedge
5. Bullish Speculation Evaporation
Similarly, the degree of trading in leveraged long vs short US equity ETFs puts on clear display the bullish speculation evaporation. Looks like a buying/bouncing signal recently though...
Source: @topdowncharts
6. Forward PE Ratio
Small Cap forward PE ratio back down to earth.
(albeit n.b. small cap consensus forward EPS crashed -57% in 2020, and have surged +15% this year, and up ~250% off the low point. All good if EPS deliver on analyst expectations — and assuming earnings are sustainable in the face of a potential global recession... )
Source: @topdowncharts
7. Price to Sales Ratio
Good news everyone!
After a big reset, the S&P 500 price to sales ratio is now only as expensive as during the peak of the dot com bubble!
(albeit, margins are also higher, rates lower, etc)
Source: @TaviCosta
8. Value?
"Buffett Indicator" also now all the way down to dot-com bubble levels.
Source: @KailashConcepts
9. Number of Money-Losing Companies
No profits, no problem?
(or: no profits, no, problem!)
Source: @LizAnnSonders
10. aka, The Cost of Recency Bias
"If 2008 hit again" (you always hear some attention seekers claiming this is going to be the next 2008 every time markets get a bit volatile… be careful who you listen to!!)
Source: @FusionptCapital
BONUS CHART
IPO Boom & Bust: Along with the SPAC craze, IPO markets kicked into a rare state of frenzy over the past couple years (helped by the liquidity tsunami of monetary + fiscal policy stimulus flooding across markets).
But that boom has given way to bust as the same forces retreat.
This year 97 IPOs have been withdrawn as funding conditions sour, and filings are averaging a pace of ~30 IPOs per month vs 115/month last year.
Another stark stat is the relative performance of the Renaissance IPO ETF — in relative terms (vs S&P500) up more than 200% from the March 2020 low to the Feb 2021 peak ...and now down -64% from the peak.
Basically this all represents a barometer of the comings and goings of liquidity and speculative fervor. After the party, here’s the hangover.
Until the next party…