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Weekly S&P500 ChartStorm: Seasonality; Cyclicals Vs. Defensives; IPO Withdrawals

Published 04/03/2022, 01:40 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

Welcome to the Weekly S&P500 #ChartStorm. The Chart Storm is a weekly selection of 10 charts which I hand pick from around the web (+some of my own charts), and then post.

The charts focus on the S&P 500 (US equities); and the various forces and factors that influence the outlook—with the aim of bringing insight and perspective.

This week: monthly charts, seasonality stats, cyclicals vs defensives, corporate bonds, homebuilders, price targets, valuations, IPO market trends...

1. Happy New Month! Back above the 10-month (i.e. ~200 trading days) average as at the end of March... They say nothing good happens below the 200dma. Crisis averted? Albeit, as a side note, interesting to note that the real/CPI-adjusted S&P 500 is still below its 10-month average.

S&P 500 - Happy New Month (Log)

Source: @topdowncharts

2. Seasonality Statistics: April is historically the best month for the S&P 500 in terms of average return and proportion of times positive.

(albeit it was negative 26% of the time, and worst April was -9% ...i.e. note the StdDev)

Monthly Return Stats For S&P 500

Source: @topdowncharts

3. March Returns in Focus: US Large Caps March performance in context... Up 3.6% on the month in March, but still down -4.9% YTD. This year the winners have basically been cash and commodities, whereas fixed income was the biggest loser.

March Returns

Source: Asset Class Returns

4. Cyclicals vs Defensives: Emerging Markets Cyclicals vs Defensives relative performance line peaked 9 months before the same for the USA did. And troughed in October... bullish or bearish?

Cyclicals vs Defensives

Source: @topdowncharts

5. Corporate Bond Market: Corporate bond breadth is not confirming the strength in the S&P 500 at this stage. To be fair, much of the weakness there is about duration vs credit, but we can't ignore the impact of higher bond yields in general...

SPX vs Corporate Bond Market

Source: @McClellanOsc

6. Homebuilders vs Mortgage Rates: Higher yields are hazardous...

Don’t underestimate the impact of higher bond yields. On my numbers, the indicative mortgage servicing cost indicator has gone up 94% since the low point (and that may cause issues for the wider growth outlook).

Homebuilders vs Mortgage Rates

Source: @MrBlonde_macro

7. Price Targets: Analysts think the techy sectors have the biggest upside.

S&P 500 Price Targets

Source: FactSet

8. European Equities: Thanks to heightened risk of WW3, European equities are now trading at a record valuation discount vs USA. Some will note that this didn’t matter throughout the past few years that you could have made similar remarks about the valuation discount, but we are at an extreme here and extreme valuation readings take on much greater weight.

Europe vs USA Equities

Source: @Ozard_OfWiz

9. Price to Book Valuations: S&P 500 price to book ratios still at eye watering levels.

Correction barely put a dent in valuations: Upper Quartile of industries are trading at price to book ratios *higher* than that seen during the dot com bubble, and this is despite a (minor) reset. Even the Lower Quartile is at the upper end of the range, and last but not least: the Median is well above that ever seen in recent history.

S&P 500 Price to Book Valuations

Source: Chart of the Week - Vertiginous Valuations

10. SaaS Valuations: Software valuations on the other hand corrected quite a bit (at least compared to recent history—and of course we do need to assume those "Next Twelve Months’ revenue forecasts" are correct...)

SaaS Valuations

Source: RedPoint Ventures via @SnippetFinance

oh… that’s right, almost forgot!

BONUS CHART >> got to include a goody for the goodies who subscribed.

IPO Market Update: As you might guess, and as usually happens in times of heightened volatility and drops in valuations, the number of IPOs pulled during March spiked to a record high.

US IPO Activity: Withdrawals

Of course it should be taken in the context of previously booming/bubbling IPO filing activity—which reached a record high earlier last year.

US IPO Activity

I’ve previously highlighted these and similar charts, and perhaps the biggest takeaway is that the surge IPO withdrawals represents a barometer of sorts of the overall investor sentiment and liquidity backdrop.

Late 2020/early 2021 was perhaps the zenith of the liquidity surge and investor euphoria. But now the liquidity tides are going out (e.g. Fed rate hike kick-off + QT soon), and sentiment is starting to shift…

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