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S&P 500 Is Hungry for Stimulus - And Will Get It

Published 07/24/2020, 10:13 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

Yesterday I gave you all the reasons why a pullback in the S&P 500 was likely, and today I'll talk about the reasons why remaining bullish is still the most sensible thing to do if you love your trading account.

In short, little has changed in terms of the outlook. The S&P 500 closed back at the line connecting the early June highs—but quite a few bullish signs emerged yesterday, solidly tipping the odds of upcoming upswing in the bulls' favor.

S&P 500 in the Short-Run

I’ll start with the daily chart perspective (charts courtesy of http://stockcharts.com ):

The daily setback is clearly visible, but was it a game changer? I don't think so—even with new unemployment claims coming in above expectations, and existing ones unsurprisingly stubbornly high, the focus isn't on the harsh economic realities of many real economy sectors, but on the upcoming measures to counter them.

It’s all eyes on the stimulus – and that's why the elevated volume is rather a sign of momentary setback and not a full-blown reversal. The late-Feb bearish gap is being put to test, and I expect the bulls to overcome it eventually. Earlier in July, we have also experienced an odd bearish day that brought out the bears from their caves, without really changing the situation on the ground materially.

I expect the same dynamics to play out this time as well, regardless of the headlines touting more stimulus details only next week, or Trump discussing the value of the China phase one trade deal.

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Let's check the credit market clues next, because that's where one of the bullish signs just emerged.

The Credit Markets’ Point of View

High Yield Corporate Bonds

High yield corporate bonds (HYG ETF) ran into headwinds yesterday, and just couldn't extend last days' gains. The bears pushed hard for a reversal, but were repelled well before the closing bell. The result is a hanging man candlestick—while bearish on its own, it's unlikely that it marks more than a fleeting reversal of fortunes.

Remember that the Fed is stepping up to the plate again. Treasuries of whatever duration are salivating at the prospect of more money being thrown at the issues. As we're at the "everyone benefits, no one pays" stage of inflation, there ain't no breaking the stock bull's neck yet.

Both the leading credit market ratios—high yield corporate bonds to short-term Treasuries (HYG:SHY) and investment grade corporate bonds to longer-dated Treasuries (LQD:IEI)—highlight a daily pause (you can find this and other charts at my home site), relatively speaking.

The overlaid S&P 500 closing prices (black line) against the HYG:SHY chart shows just how far have stocks retreated yesterday. That's a telling perspective putting into context my yesterday's conclusion of better to be waiting for short-term mispricing opportunities. One is still staring us in the face currently.

Smallcaps, Emerging Markets and the S&P 500 Internals

The Russell 2000 (IWM ETF) brings out the second bullish sign—the smallcaps held up much better than the 500-strong index. In place of their rather usual underperformance, that's a bullish sign. Also IWM ETF volume yesterday points to a run-of-the-mill session, and not an emotionally charged battle.

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That leaves only the emerging markets (EEM ETF) declining in unison with the S&P 500 yesterday. Should US-China tensions get ratcheted up a notch or two, that would work to lift the US dollar and send the stock bulls temporarily packing. Remember though, that a fallout in relations isn't in the interests of either party, and the weak reaction in both the greenback and stocks reveals the market treating it as a flash in the pan.

Even the daily market breadth didn't dip profoundly into the bearish territory as the advance-decline line shows chiefly. The bullish percent index is still solidly bullish, and that means dips better be bought.

The fact that market breadth didn't take a hit yesterday, shows that the plunge was driven by tech (XLK ETF) with the other sectors more or less refusing to participate broadly. Even semiconductors (XSD ETF) didn't decline as profoundly as technology did. All of these are in-your-face signs that the stock bull has much farther to run, and all we're seeing, is a healthy consolidation coupled with sectoral rotation.

Summary

Summing up, yesterday's S&P 500 setback hasn't materially changed the optimistic stock outlook, and the bullish signals arising out of Thursday's session support this conclusion. With credit markets not yielding and technology consolidating its meteoric gains, it's time for the beaten-down areas to start catching up, and lift the index. Unless the unexpected happens and stimulus doesn't appear on time to support the real economy and the markets (it will appear), the stock bull run is immune to the temporary shocks of U.S. – China retaliations caliber. With lockdowns thankfully failing to gain much traction not just on the federal level, the risks in stocks remain skewed to the upside.

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Latest comments

Another solid piece of analysis. A few important things from this week.1. Liquidity remains high and in fact is becoming looser. The NCFI dropped yet again and is at it's lowest reading since the recovery started. 2. Many people think that the All Time High is some unclimbable mountain we can't and shouldn't reach. it's important to remember that is was reached during a time when the economy was really that healthy already. Sure unemployment was significantly better but share price growth was fueled by corporate debt and share buybacks and many fundamental measurements of growth were lagging.Now we have enormous government stimulus, Fed injected liquidity. Which is worse??? it's both an artificial way to inflate stocks.
edit: ATH was reached when the economy was not that healthy
 Thank you. Yes, I discussed the Fed and rotation also means that money out of tech isn't going to the sidelines, but to other sectors (bullish). Yes, there were cracks appearing before corona as the credit markets have shown. Current stimulus-driven rally has further to go indeed
Good article
Right, this selloff hasn't proliferated.  I'm looking forward to next week.
damn, bet your wrong, wel atleast in the 3 stocks i have. 🤣🤔😪🤮
There are selloffs that scare you out, and selloffs that wear you out. I'm sticking to the combination of technicals and fundamentals, and present as factual and accurate assessment as possible. Monday's analysis of the bull market's health will show why patience is a virtue - and why we need XLK to weigh in some more to help propel S&P 500 to new highs, among other factors. Everyone, have a nice weekend!
and btw Brrr... will not pay S&P to a ATH ... so the head room gets short.
As long as Brrr... remains you were right, but Brrr... cannot remain forever. Thus, why are you not taking off as I do since weeks 😇
You are funny Monica! You call in your article for stimulus that is - urgently - needed to propel the markets higher and tell me the market is more complex. At current you are wrong, only with Brr... the market goes up. If Brrr... ends it will fundamentally crash. The only question is when FED ends Brrr... and honestly no chart will show you this.
 They won't end it early, you can bet your pepperonis they won't let their foot off the gas until well AFTER the recovery appears complete, for good measure. It's in their mandate. A better question might be, when will Brrr... become a negative for "investors".
 Brrr... That's the one who must not be named, or what? You're overestimating that it's just him who's been responsible for the run off the March lows. Stimulus I see as the catalyst, an upcoming piece-in-the-puzzle narrative that is what the markets need and would cheer. Yes, the market is more complex than placing all eggs into one basket / clutching at straws / waiting for a wonderful headline coming sure as ****tomorrow. You're underestimating the collective wisdom of the markets (akin to the wisdom of horse herd, flock of birds or school of fish) - the cracks will become apparent once they're in. Fed keeps playing largely along. More info in Monday's article :)
Monica, how long do you expect a stock bull run 100% based on mulitple expansion and not actually fundamentals and real growth can continue? When do you expect valuations will matter to investors again? I too agree the market will get stimulus.. Enjoy your articles! Cheers
 Let the market tell us when it wants to stop reacting positively to incoming stimulus. We have quite a few months, more than a good few months left before the economic realities start to matter to the market more.
 which credit, corporate or government you watch to peak? If corporate, junk or quality?
 I watch them individually, then ratios and interplays
great analysis... pragmatic, insightful and coordinated
Thank you too - glad it's helping you along!
hi punk girl..... nice picture xD
Thank you for all your appreciation ;)
Hi Monica, Huge fan of your reviews and article. Makes sense technically. So you don't believe that the bigger investors will sell to lock in the profits and wait for how the situation with china, stimulus, unemployment and talks of tech bubble plays out? I mean what's the rush to jump the gun? Thanks again, your opinion and reviews are awesome!!
Thank you very much as well! As said recently, the stimulus has the power to overcome whatever harsh economic realities or other surprises come our way. It seems to me way too early for this bull run to lose steam. Keep reading, commenting, asking and talking (Richard Clinton and everyone)
Another great article! Your analysis has been spot on and I appreciate you sharing it.
Thank you very much! Just doing my daily best
Zimbabwe is also hungry.
 I've already said that your XLI / XLI-approximating choice is a good one :) and probably better than any glove maker (pardon me, all the individually successful glove makers out there)
 until Feb its peaking. Then it drops simultaneous with stocks. No forewarning that I see.
 It's like with Dow Theory. Anyway, context is always king
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