by Lance Roberts, RIA
Last week, we discussed investors throwing caution to the wind and the need to take on defensive positioning. One week later, the bulls and bears are squaring off at the 200-dma line to see who will gain control.
Over the last several weeks, we have repeated one simple phrase:
āReversions happen fast.āĀ
In last Tuesdayās āTechnical Updateā, we specifically noted the rather extreme overbought condition of the market. To wit:
āThe number of sectors and markets which are trading at extreme overbought levels confirms this extension. The chart below, available to our RIAPro.NetĀ Subscribers (30-day Risk-Free Trial), shows a market rarity. Every sector and market, except for bonds, is extremely overbought.ā
āThe last time this happened was in the second week of April, which preceded a 4% correction, and then resolved itself in a month-long consolidation. The next good entry point came in mid-May. The price level was relatively unchanged, and the risk/reward for adding risk exposure was much improved.ā
Risk vs. Reward
Just like the last time, it didnāt take long for the ācorrectionā to surface. As noted in this weekendās newsletter, the correction quickly reduced the previous negative risk-reward parameters.
āThat correction came swiftly on Thursday. The surge in COVID-19 cases in the U.S. undermined theĀ āV-Shapedā economic recovery meme. As we noted, the market had rallied into overhead resistance, and the correction found support at the 200-dma.ā
When the market had reached its peak two weeks ago, we penned a 70% probability that the market would correct the 200-dma. Last Thursday, that level was achieved. Currently, risk/reward parameters have improved somewhat due to the correction, but remain negative overall.
- -6.6% to the 200-dma vs. +5% to all-time highs.Ā Negative (70% ā Target achieved)
- -11.2% to the 50-dma vs. +5% to all-time highs.Ā Negative (20%)
- -14.4% to previous consolidation lows vs. +5% to all-time highs.Ā Negative (5%)
- -18.3% to March bounce peak vs. +5% to all-time highs.Ā Negative (5%)
Importantly, the sell-off last Thursday was a good reminder of just how brutal markets can be when there is a complete lack of liquidity.Ā It was also a good reminder of why we hedge our portfolios against just such an event.
Bulls & Bears Clash At The Line
On Monday, the bulls and bears fought over the 200-dma. It seemed at the open as if the bears were close to taking control of the market. However, the tide quickly turned. With markets plunging again at the open, and with Jerome Powellās personal fortune on the line at Blackrock, the Fed took quick action:
Here is the aptly timed press release putting causing bulls to ārush back in:ā
The Federal Reserve Board on Monday announced updates to the Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facility (SMCCF), which will begin buying a broad and diversified portfolio of corporate bonds to support market liquidity and credit availability for large employers.
As detailed in a revised term sheet and updated FAQs, the SMCCF will purchase corporate bonds to create a corporate bond portfolio based on a broad, diversified market index of U.S. corporate bonds. This index is made up of all the bonds in the secondary market that U.S. companies have issued to satisfy the facilityās minimum rating, maximum maturity, and other criteria. This indexing approach will complement the facilityās current purchases of exchange-traded funds.
The Primary Market and Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facilities were established with the Treasury Secretaryās approval and $75 billion in equity provided by the Treasury Department from the CARES Act.ā
The Fedās announcement was unnecessary as it only repeated the original mission of the SMCCF. The made made no changes to the program, but with prices off steeply Monday morning, it seems as if the Fed needed a āquick fixā to prevent a larger downdraft.
The good news is the bulls were able to defend the 200-dma once again successfully. However, the bears arenāt quite ready to give up just yet.
The Bullās Case
The bullish case for the market is pretty thin.
- Hopes are high for a full reopening of the economy
- A vaccine
- A rapid return to economic normalcy.
- Ā 2022 earnings will be sufficiently high enough to justify ācurrentā prices. (Let that sink in ā thatās two years of ZERO price growth.)
- The Fed.
In actuality, the first four points are rationalizations. It is the Fedās liquidity driving the market.
The Bearās Case
The bearās built their case on more solid fundamental views.
- The potential for a second wave of the virus
- A slower than expected economic recovery
- A second wave of the virus erodes consumer confidence slowing employment
- High unemployment weighs on personal consumption
- Debt defaults and bankruptcies rise more sharply than expected.
- All of which translates into the sharply reduced earnings and corporate profitability.Ā
Ultimately, corporate profits and earnings always matter, as discussed previously. (Historically, earnings never catch up with price.)
āThroughout history, earnings are very predictable. Using the analysis above, we can āguesstimateā the decline in earnings, and the potential decline in stock prices to align valuations. The chart below is the long-term log trend of earnings versus its exponential growth trend.ā
As we noted then, while ādonāt fight the Fedā seems to be a simple formula for the bullish case, the deviation between āfundamentalsā and āfantasyā will eventually matter.
What COVID-19 started, and has yet to complete, is the historical āmean reversionā process which has always followed bull markets. Such should not be a surprise as asset prices eventually reflect the underlying reality of corporate profitability and earnings.
Short-Term Bulls, Longer-Term Bears
From a purely technical perspective, the bulls remain in control for now. As shown below, the market was able to work off some of the short-term overbought condition without a confirmed break below the 200-dma.Ā Importantly, the correction also held the uptrend line that has been running since the initial gap-up off the March 23rd low.
However, the lower MACD and Price Momentum Oscillator are on clear āsell signals,ā which suggests risk to the bulls in the short-term. With resistance at Thursdayās āgap downā open just slightly above Mondayās close, the risk/reward for markets very short-term is poor.
If the market breaks the uptrend line, the 50-dma and the May consolidation range lows will be the next lines in the sand.
It is worth noting that both of the primaryĀ āsell signalsāĀ remain intact on a WEEKLY basis. Such suggests we may not be through theĀ ābear marketāĀ phase just yet. While such doesnāt necessarily mean the market will crash, historically returns have been lower with much higher volatility.
Cautiously Bullish
Fundamentally speaking, we remain ābears.āĀ However, we also realize that with the Federal Reserve intravenously feeding liquidity into the markets, we need to participate. As we stated last week:
āAs a portfolio manager,Ā we buy āopportunityā because we have to. If we donāt, we suffer career risk, plain and simple.Ā However, you donāt have to. If you are indeed a long-term investor, you have to question the risk undertaken to achieve further returns in the market currently.ā
As noted, fundamentals will eventually matter. We just donāt know when that will ultimately be the case. However, there are more than enough signs to know we are likely close to a peak:
- Wall Street firms using 2-year forward āoperating (or B.S.)ā earnings to justify valuations.
- Investors are chasing bankrupt companies.
- Companies rampantly issuing debt to shore up liquidity
- A complete lack of market liquidity.
- Investor over-confidence
- Retail investor exuberance.
- Overly estimated future earnings growth.
You get the idea.
Playing Defense
What investorās donāt realize is that they could be walking into a ātrap.ā As Carl Swenlin noted this past weekend:
On Wednesday, we pointed out the similarities between this yearās price action and the price action during the 1929 crash and the rally that followed. Whether or not we have just seen the top of the rally, I believe there will be a top soon and that it will look like this.ā
Whether or not you think such could be the case is irrelevant. What is important is to factor the āpossibilityā into your process. Here was Carlās conclusion:
āInvestors are ālooking across the valleyā to the good times that await us there. They seem to believe that we will just levitate across the valley. But we canāt levitate. We have to go down into the valley and confront the many difficulties that await us there. People havenāt begun to imagine the storm we are walking into.ā
Regardless of the Fedās monetary policy, the markets will eventually have to deal with āWhat Is.ā For investors, this leaves a very high potential for disappointment in the coming months as the realities of the worst recession in decades begins to unfold.
As noted last week, sometimes playing a bit of ādefenseā is the best āoffense.āĀ
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