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Technology Holds Key To The Next S&P 500 Move

Published 07/27/2020, 08:57 AM

Going into Friday, I was still sticking to the bullish S&P 500 outlook. As the index declined, are the prospects of higher prices gone?

Not at all, and today's analysis will examine the signs that still lean bullish despite the precarious technology position.

Despite the S&P 500 closing below the line connecting the early June highs, continued unemployment claims rising on the state level (don't forget about those rising ones under the federal pandemic programs either), the fate of the $600 weekly addition to unemployment benefits expiring at the end of July, or the U.S. – China confrontations.

On Thursday, I laid out the market's sensitivities this way:

(…) as strange as it might sound, the stock market isn't about the real economy struggles these weeks. All eyes are on the stimulus and vaccine hopes (whatever one imagines under the latter term), not on the corona case panic and hyped death charts.

Stimulus is coming, and regardless of its final shape and size, markets are going to cheer it. The Fed is no longer in a wait-and-see weekly mode. Stocks expect a policy move, and are still positioned to benefit before inflation or economic realities (thornier road ahead than many an alphabet soup recovery projection implies) strike.

Talking economic realities, what about the societal and interpersonal ones? Sobering snippets of overnight U.S. corona fear transformations courtesy of Big League Politics:

  • 75 percent believe that things will never return to normal
  • 59 percent are too afraid to go back to their workplace with others
  • 75 percent feel that handshakes will no longer be customary
  • 38 percent want physical offices permanently removed and replaced with remote work
  • 53 percent are nostalgic for the good old days when people weren’t forcibly masked while the rest have seemingly become accustomed to the "new normal".
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Such shifts underscore why some sectors have it way tougher than others.

S&P 500 in the Medium- and Short-Run

I’ll start today's flagship Stock Trading Alert with the higher timeframe perspective (charts courtesy of http://stockcharts.com ).

The weekly candlestick (please see this and many more charts at my home site) bears shape of a reversal, but is it a credible one? Weekly volume didn't pick up, weakening the case for a trend change. The preceding week brought us a hanging man, and that didn't bring the bears out of their caves either.

The weekly chart is thus rather neutral in its implications, but given the non-refusal (by and large) of the move above the early June highs, I still interpret the chart as bullish rather than bearish.

One close below the line connecting the early June highs, doesn't make a breakout invalidation yet. It lack rising volume, and the noticeable lower knot also makes it suspicious.

As the bulls nibble at the late-Feb bearish gap, I expect them to overcome it eventually. Especially since all eyes are on the stimulus to counter the harsh economic realities of many real economy sectors.

Such were my Friday's words regarding the days finishing in the red:

(…) 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 China phase one trade deal value.

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Meanwhile, the credit market signals are still pointing largely one way.

The Credit Markets’ Point of View

High yield corporate bonds (HYG ETF) reversed their opening weakness, and closed near the upper border of its recent range. Encouraging in itself, the move though lacked convincing volume, which makes the implications less bullish than when viewed with only price action in mind.

The ratios finetune the picture. 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) paused – with the latter declining. This one-day hesitation has the potential to spill over into upcoming sessions' trading.

The overlaid S&P 500 closing prices (black line) against the HYG:SHY chart shows just that the pace of stocks' fall, has moderated. With more air out of their relative outperformance seen since late June, the judgmental scope for further declines becomes more limited. Unless the ratio plunges, that is – which is what I don't expect it to do right now.

The recovering ratio of high yield corporate bonds to all corporate bonds (PHB:$DJCB) supports the notion of the stock bull having further to run. The sectoral rotation theme stands to benefit from such a dynamic.

Smallcaps, Emerging Markets and the S&P 500 Internals

The Russell 2000 (IWM ETF) also fell on Friday, but the daily volume left quite something to be desired. For the bears, that is. As a result, Friday's candle appears to be merely a daily setback.

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Emerging markets (EEM ETF) proved stronger on Friday, and erased their opening losses almost in full. That's positive for stocks back in the States too – it's a starting point, and obviously more has to follow.

Volatility (VIX) made an intraday reversal on Friday, though a retest of its opening highs wouldn't be out of the unexpected. This upside bump appears to have a little more to run on the upside, but judging by this chart alone, the stock bull run isn't in danger yet.

Zooming out, the weekly market breadth provides us with a broader perspective. Please note both the advance-decline line and advance-decline volume having descended into solidly negative values – but the bullish percent index solidly in bull market territory makes a case for an upcoming stock price rebound (perhaps preceded by a bit more base-building).

S&P 500 Sectors in Focus

Technology (XLK ETF) holds the key, and not merely in the short-term. On a positive note, it has reversed intraday, closing slightly above its opening values. The rising volume indicates accumulation to me, lending more credibility to the bullish interpretation.

The defining moment though can't be understated. This sector's consolidation with an upside flavor would be very constructive for the S&P 500, as the ongoing rotation into former laggards can't win the day due to weighting.

But the rotational stock bull signs of health are undoubtedly in. I would highlight materials (XLB ETF), healthcare (XLV ETF) and industrials (XLI ETF) as the best of the crowd, followed by the defensive utilities and consumer staples (XLU ETF, XLP ETF respectively). Consumer discretionaries (XLY ETF) are also fighting tooth and nail to keep among the leadership sectors, which is where the heavyweight financials (XLF) are slowly but surely moving too.

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Once technology joins in again (or stops standing in the way as a minimum), the stock bull run can go on and leave this soft patch with bullish undertones behind.

Summary

Summing up, Friday's S&P 500 setback hasn't materially changed the optimistic stock outlook, and the balance of signals from related markets still keeps more than slightly favoring the bulls. Technology is the joker, the wild card that would decide the S&P 500 direction in the short run, and either prolong this two-day decline, or let stocks slowly but surely regain their footing, which they seem bound to do still.

Disclaimer: All essays, research and information found above represent analyses and opinions of Monica Kingsley and Sunshine Profits' associates only. As such, it may prove wrong and be subject to change without notice. Opinions and analyses were based on data available to authors of respective essays at the time of writing. Although the information provided above is based on careful research and sources that are believed to be accurate, Monica Kingsley and her associates do not guarantee the accuracy or thoroughness of the data or information reported. The opinions published above are neither an offer nor a recommendation to purchase or sell any securities. Ms. Kingsley is not a Registered Securities Advisor. By reading Monica Kingsley’s reports you fully agree that she will not be held responsible or liable for any decisions you make regarding any information provided in these reports. Investing, trading and speculation in any financial markets may involve high risk of loss. Monica Kingsley, Sunshine Profits' employees and affiliates as well as members of their families may have a short or long position in any securities, including those mentioned in any of the reports or essays, and may make additional purchases and/or sales of those securities without notice.

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Latest comments

Poor USA: Governed by a sociopath with an additional lack of intelligence who is elected by about 50% of the population and after 3,5 years as President still has a relevant chance to get re-elected. And on top the stock prices are set by FED. And this shall no be explained by stimulus and inflation and fundamentals shall not play any role anymore ... Sorry, but such circumstances are a big bad jock only!
Morning Monica, agreed, tech will hold the key, and Thursday's results from 4 of the titans should be pivotal for the market. Interesting divergence in VCIT and LQD versus HYG and JNK last night. Big moves in the metals complex, both precious and base, early GMT our time, and all coinciding with a rebound in the DXY as you would expect. Mining stocks offered in Australia from early highs, and London listed followed. XLB offer in US no doubt later...
Indeed, and I remember what happened after AMZN reported last... HYG or JNK, LQD or VCIT, I have mentioned the one-day non-confirmation, and it got extended with Monday's action. Yes, just as you say - and as for sectoral analysis, XLB has been one of the best performing sectors off the March lows - not that likely to give up the baton
Excellent and thank you!
Enjoy!
I agree w/ Val Wr. Accurate and objective information is valuable regardless of what actually comes tomorrow.
Randall Wagner: Thank you, and when the outlook is indeed getting validated in the coming hours and days, people have one more way of benefiting.
Well done Monica, your analysis will survive the test of time much better than the rest
Val Wr: Thank you, I am just doing my daily best in a fair and unbiased way.
Speaking of the celebrated bull(shet) run, is there anything apart from falling dollar to support this circus?
 I'm discussing the details in the daily articles to a great extend. Please grab a recent few, and you'll easily uncover where I perceive the market sensitivities to lie.
 your articles analyse the markets on a daily basis, with some rotation indicators possibly legit in the span of weeks. Tell us what is the rationale behind "more than few good months" of rally, or maybe years or decades? Do that stem from the day-to-day analysis, because I can't make the connection.
 If you look at a very long-term chart, do you see that stocks have a tendency to rise, move sideways, or fall? As for the next few months ahead, I've mentioned the corona policy responses and looming elections as the key drivers of uncertainty.
Question. What is the implication if on daily graph stocks rise, but HYG and VCIT bonds fall? Especially when VCIT diverges, is it fear and distrust in company financials, or greed that traders dump high quality bond to buy risky asset?
 rising cost of capital is never good news for companies, no?
 If bonds rise, then their yields go down. And where are nominal interest rates at that time? Down. So what rising cost of capital?
 if company bonds drop, their yield and cost of capital rises, no? Companies are not government, they can't print.
speaking 'bout techs, they are (ok , were a week ago) 3 std.dev above 200WMA. And 2.5 above 200DMA.
nice waterfall.....hahahahahaha
No luck for USD in 2H of 2020? i'm very happy today, hahahahaha!!
 be happy, and not just today
An interesting trend which I've noticed on a lot of charts, is the relationship the current price in relation to it's high in April.  On many defensive or "value" stocks or sector ETF's like XLU, XLE , XLRE the price from the April high is acting as resistance, but the price appears to be building a base just below to push above. Yes this price was breached in June already but this appears to be the big stepping stone to another leg up for these stocks.  Both the HYG/SHY and LQD/LEI credit market ratios have just crossed above this level last week. A confirmed break above with that line is a hugely Bullish signal for the entire market.
I also look for the breakout above the early June highs to succeed, and different sectors will more or less support that (rotational aspect), but technology consolidating with a bullish bias is a condition sine qua largely non
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