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Was That An S&P 500 Reversal? Most Probably Not

Published 04/29/2020, 02:29 PM
Updated 05/14/2017, 06:45 AM

Despite opening with another bullish gap, the buyers just could not push stocks higher yesterday. But the futures have rebounded in the overnight trading. So can the S&P 500 upswing continue now?
Let’s check yesterday’s developments on the daily chart (charts courtesy of http://stockcharts.com ).

S&P 500 in the Short-Run

Yesterday’s red candle shows the reversal of fortunes. The key question is whether it’s a short-term, one-day phenomenon, or whether it marks a local top. Volume would slightly lean in favor of the bears, but the daily indicators haven’t suffered much with yesterday’s downswing. Preceding price action supports upswing continuation – after all, we have made neither a lower high, nor a lower low.

As a result, the benefit of short-term doubt still goes to the bulls. With prices back above the 50% Fibonacci retracement, it’s up to them to show us they can make it to the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement next, and close the early March bearish gap in the process.

Let’s dive into the reasons why we think the upswing has a pretty good chance of continuing.

The Credit Markets’ Point of View

Credit markets are a key ingredient in stock analysis. Does the riskier corner (well, considering the breadth of the Fed intervention, what is actually the riskiest one now?) of the debt instruments support stocks going higher?

Just as high yield corporate bonds (HYG ETF (NYSE:HYG) ETF) themselves, their ratio to short-term Treasuries (SHY ETF (NASDAQ:SHY) ETF) kept more than steady yesterday. That’s an encouraging sign pointing to the stock market recovery being not too far behind. In other words, yesterday’s setback is likely a short-term phenomenon only.

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How did yesterday’s S&P 500 decline reflect upon its key sectors?

Key S&P 500 Sectors in Focus

There’s no denying that technology reversed yesterday, led by the heavyweights. As Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) was about to release its earnings after the market close, the uncertainties-driven downswing is understandable. But the disappointment wasn’t really there to the degree feared. Yes, ad sales slowed down, but revenue climbed 13% as the net income has scored merely a 1.5% gain. This illustrates that the ad market
downturn is starting to cut into profitability.

The upcoming quarter will be hard on advertising. Being as diversified as Alphabet is though, the company will weather the storm. Its shares liked the earnings conference call message, and reacted with an upswing in aftermarket trading. This bodes well for the other tech behemoths such as Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) or even Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) as they report. And as a result, for the tech sector as such.

Healthcare (NYSE:HTA) was the other sector leading yesterday’s S&P 500 downswing. It also happened on sizable volume, and the extended daily indicators have taken a hit. Considering the sharpness and momentum of the recovery from the March 23 lows, it wouldn’t be unimaginable to see the sector taking a breather and consolidate over the coming sessions.

Which sectors would then help drive the index upswing?

Despite the lackluster oil performance, energy (XLE ETF (NYSE:XLE) ) and materials (XLB ETF (NYSE:XLB)) with industrials (XLI ETF (NYSE:XLI)) not
lagging behind, are the places to look at. And among the S&P 500 sectoral heavy-weights, financials (XLF ETF (NYSE:XLF)) are doing quite well, too.

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Let’s quote our observations from yesterday:

... Our Friday’s takeaway was that financials don’t appear to be willing to decline much further these days and that the odds favor their next move to be up. And in line with anticipation and the signals from the credit markets, they’ve indeed turned steeply higher yesterday. This development bodes well for the risk-on assets and further index gains.

Even accounting for yesterday’s downswing, they still closed the day higher than on Monday. Coupled with the discussed resilience in credit markets, this bodes well for the upcoming strong showing of the sector. Please note the low volume of yesterday’s session. It doesn’t point in the direction of us having seen a reversal yesterday. The daily indicators haven’t suffered much either, and looking at the premarket S&P 500 upswing (futures are trading back around 2885 currently), it’s more than likely that financials will finish up today.

The Fundamental S&P 500 Outlook

Later today, the Fed will announce its new monetary policy decisions, and of course hold a press conference. These were our yesterday’s thoughts:

… Do the markets expect a new move out of this meeting? Yesterday, Bank of Japan took some more action, whetting the appetite around the world. But will the Fed deliver in a meaningful way? Probably not, as we look rather to the wait-and-see attitude to win overall at this meeting with perhaps a few bones thrown here and there.

Should the Fed meeting outcome be largely along these lines, stocks may waver thereafter. But the tape tells us that the expectations are for the Fed to have the bulls’ back. These points remain valid.

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Summing up, even accounting for yesterday’s downswing, S&P 500 trades solidly above the 50% Fibonacci retracement, and remains primed for further gains. Among the key sectors, technology and healthcare were hardest hit, while financials held up fine and the stealth bull market trio (energy, materials and industrials) continued to perform.

The key ratios (financials to utilities, and especially discretionaries to staples) haven’t really suffered a profound setback yesterday either. More than a cursory examination of yesterday’s Alphabet earnings report also supports the case for the tech sector moving higher later today. The balance of risks remains skewed to the upside and our profitable long position remains justified.

Latest comments

I just wanted to say thank you for your articles on here and for taking the time to respond to messages. I’ve signed up for your service on Sunshine Profits. I look forward to receiving your insights on a regular basis. I’m very much a bear with where this market is right now, however I finally went long based on your analysis, and I caught the last big leg up. So thank you! However today has been brutal
I have seen it very good
Hey Monica, I have an urgent question, my business partner signed up for your service earlier today but from his past experiences with your client support, it takes 3-4 days for them to reply and the reply completely missed his question the last time. Here's hoping you could answer this question here faster, "In your latest alert, you mentioned a profit target for the S&P, what's the exit strategy? To complicate matters a little more, we use your service to trade 3x ETFs, what would the stop-loss percentage be and of course, the exit profit target?" (We understand it can't be the same percentage as the S&P since we have to account for the 3x leverage.) Thanks!
Hi Sandra, you'll find your question answered in today's article, at the From the Readers' Mailbag part - you know where to look for it. Thank you and keep your questions coming. Have a good day, Monica
I expect a clearer picture of 2Q earnings for many business models will stop this market bull run.  We will see the bounce lose momentum.
This rally seems to have very low volume. That observation seems like the key reason for potential failure. Are the institutional investors pushing up the market or the individuals? The second that the major funds feel it time to sell, the market may well crash again in the blink of eye. Hoping not, but it might.
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