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Money and Markets: Investing Insights

What Next for This Unexpected Rally?

Jon Markman | Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 7:30 am


Jon Markman

Here are some semi-random items that should help you think about what’s happening in the markets at this time.

— The major indexes are off to a stunning start in March, with the S&P 500 up 3.5% (now -1.7% ytd) and the Nasdaq up 3.06% this month (-5.6% ytd).

— But the stars have been the small fry. S&P 400 Midcap Value (IJJ) is +5.7% and Smallcap 600 Value (IJS) is up 5.2%.

— The best sectors this month so far are SPDR Energy (XLE), +7.7% (-22% last 12 months) and SPDR Financials (XLF), +5.6% (-8.2% last 12 months).

— Best overseas action is iShares Brazil (EWZ), +21.9% this month (-24.8% trailing 12 months); and iShares Australia (EWA), +10.2% month to date (-19% TTM). All emerging markets together, iShares Emerging Markets (EEM), is +8.3% this month (-17.8% TTM).

— People are so excited about gold, but it’s only up 1.6% this month. Russia (RSX) is up 8.9%; Wisdom Tree India (EPI) is up 10.7%. Gold bugs make a lot of noise, but the metal usually pales next to its equities.

— While the energy producers’ rally has earned the most ink, we need to point out that the materials rally has been just as extreme, if not more so. U.S. Steel (X) is up more than 100% in the past three weeks alone, from $6.11 at the end of January to $12.98 on Friday. Agricultural and industrial chemicals maker LSB Industries (LXU) hit a low of $3.68 in mid-January and closed Friday at $10.44, a 183% move in six weeks. In the energy patch, our very own Atwood Oceanics (ATW) was $4.82 in early February, and closed Friday at $9.84, up 105%.

— These materials and energy stocks could just be tracing out huge bear-market rallies off of very depressed conditions. But I should point out that this is typically how major legit rallies start, with massive moves off bottoms that indicate a completely sold-out condition. The fact that most of these stocks have set pretty nice bases of three to four months adds weight to the bullish case.



Click image for larger view

— Bears will point out that crude oil, which appears to have sparked the broad-based rally, has experienced four separate 15% to 21% rallies since late 2014, and each has ended in tears. Crude oil has not rebounded over its two-year downtrend yet, as shown above, so if you were to look at one chart as a benchmark for whether the rally has legs, it is SPDR Energy. If it gets slammed back at its downtrend line at around $64, the whole rally will probably come to a screeching halt. But if it breaks through, bulls will be seen as the comeback kids.

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Unexpected Strength

The rally since the mid-February low was largely unexpected and has been fought all the way by most active market participants. This lack of belief has actually given the rally fuel, as bulls have been able to squeeze short-sellers until they scream. Witness the strength of iShares Russell 2000 (IWM), which was heavily sold short through mid-February, but then exploded higher later in that month and early this month as sellers gave in, cried “uncle,” and bought to cover.

Now the curious thing about the equity rally is that individual investor sentiment has barely budged higher, according to a note from Bespoke Investment Group. These analysts observe that in the latest poll of investor sentiment from the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII), bullish sentiment rose from 31.2% to 32.0%.



Click image for larger view

That was the 18th straight week where bullish sentiment has been below 40%, and even more amazingly, notes Bespoke, it is the 52nd week in the last 53 where bullish sentiment has been below 40%. In the history of the AAII survey, there has never been a stretch where we saw more sub-40% readings over a 53-week period. Note that the current level is around the same level as early 2009, just as the six-year bull market was getting started.

More indications that investor sentiment remains at epic levels of moroseness come from a Twitter posting by @BrattleSt.Capital. In the following Merrill Lynch chart you can see that the average cash balance of global fund managers is higher than at the lows of the 2008-2009 financial crisis and on par with the end of the 2002 bear market.



Click image for larger view

And finally, allocation to U.S. stocks is at an unusually low ebb as well. Brokerage data shows that investors in aggregate are now underweight U.S. equities for 12 straight months, and the current allocation is 0.7 standard deviations below the long-term average.



Click image for larger view

In the chart above, when the blue vertical bars are above the zero line, U.S. stocks are overweight in asset allocators’ portfolios, and when they are below the zero line, the world’s asset allocators are underweight U.S. stocks. The current levels are worse than the levels seen at the start of the bull market in 2009.

All of these charts in aggregate, show that investor sentiment through last week was far from overly bullish, and if people have indeed started to believe there will not be a recession this year and that the market might muddle through, then they need to buy a lot of equities just to get back to a normal allocation.

This suggests that the major indexes might not have trouble capsizing the hopes and dreams of the bearish majority at risk. That would mean prices could head toward December or October highs. Keep in mind that such an advance would still be a bear-market rally, and in turn set up an even greater decline over the rest of the year.

If all this sounds confusing, here’s the bottom line: Sentiment was so poor through the end of last week that there was plenty of fuel for a sharp advance that nonetheless falls short of the mid-2015 highs, and then tips over and falls back into bear market territory mid-year. This makes sense because bear markets are all about ripping investors’ hearts out, and what better way to do that than to provide an epic mid-course head fake. It happened in 2000-2002 and it happened in 2007-2009, so it can surely happen again.

Best wishes,

Jon Markman

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Jon began his career as editor, investment columnist and investigative reporter at the Los Angeles Times. As news editor, his staffs won Pulitzer Prizes for spot-news reporting in 1992 and 1994.

In 1997, Microsoft recruited Jon to help launch MSN’s finance channel, where he served as Managing Editor. In that capacity, Markman became the co-inventor on two Microsoft patents.

From 2002 to 2005, Jon served as portfolio manager and senior investment strategist at a multi-strategy hedge fund.

Since 2005, Mr. Markman has specialized in helping everyday investors buy tomorrow’s technology superstars BEFORE they skyrocket.

Mr. Markman is the author of five best-selling books, including Reminiscences of a Stock Operator: Annotated Edition; New Day Trader’s Advantage, Swing Trading and Online Investing.

{ 17 comments }

Anthony G Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 8:26 am

The bears have been run out of town for now. The debt levels have not improved anywhere. The bears will be back.

RAGNAR1 Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 9:31 am

dash for trash!
election year

Al Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 9:39 am

Buying the bottom of the market can not be timed with any degree of certainty. That being said, sentiment has seemed to improve ever so slightly to the point whereas investing in sector ETF’s, index funds, and individual stocks with pristine balance sheets seems appropriate at this time. Considering the current market levels and the fact that eventually the market will overcome the doldrum it is currently experiencing, now may be a good time to allocate some cash to diversified investments.

Chuck Burton Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 9:53 am

After last week’s run-up, it wouldn’t be surprising to see a small correction, at least . Then perhaps a run to the arch I spoke of in Mike’s column over the weekend – maybe hitting it in the vicinity of 2020 – 2030. A definite breakthrough could see the start of a huge bull run, but a fallback could touch off a near collapse. Or not. The markets can always surprise us – usually at some cost.

ConfirmingIndicator Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 10:36 am

History supports your conclusion.

Money Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 10:44 am

Agreed, Chuck…The charts, esp. of the djia and s&p, resemble greatly the latter part of 2007, except in that case, there was more of a “head and shoulders” pattern…
Nevertheless, we surrently appear to be just shy of the top of the right shoulder in that comparison.

Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 10:52 am

right shoulder? another one? this would make for a double bottom, which is a very bullish sign.

Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 10:54 am

if we see a double bottom, a good buying point would be at the bear trap.

Will Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 10:18 am

My take on this is that things will change in a hurry after the Fed raises rates on Thursday; the market is presently not expecting the Fed to make any rate increase at this time. Cheers

Will Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 10:20 am

Make that Thursday, the 16th.

Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 10:57 am

so the fed needs to raise rates, but also needs to consider negative rates? my head is spinning.

John. Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 10:46 am

Your indicators confirm my work.

F151 Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 7:10 pm

This rally is getting long in the tooth. There might be another few points….but it seems kind of tired.

Richard Wednesday, March 9, 2016 at 12:26 am

So since everything is so awesome, then I have to believe in this strong economy, the FED will guarantee an interest rate increase, hopefully very, very soon. Cheap money is killing the economy and not benefiting anyone really.

Krishna Daswani Wednesday, March 9, 2016 at 5:42 am

It is really a very disturbing time for us all! It seems that some valuable shares are being
Pushed down, and then the low holders sell off, prices godown and then the same
Speculators who pushed the prices down, now buy the same they sold at lower price,
Making them better off whereas the non-holders had to sell. This is one possibility!
Who knows!

James Connolly Saturday, March 12, 2016 at 9:54 am

Usually the Economic Cycle follows five stages Boom, Recession, Depression, Recovery and Growth. It usually takes 10 to 15 Years to go through the whole cycle.

Bobby Tuesday, March 15, 2016 at 5:56 am

I hear a lot of complaints and talk about charts and graphs and beta and etc. I will admit that the rules have changed. I’m still not sure but I think stop loss orders have been done away with? Please correct me if I’m wrong. And I have heard the craziest terminology used, honestly it threw me for a couple days till I spoke with an old older\wiser friend who brought me back to reality. The game has changed but remains the same. Go rent Wall Street with father and son Sheen not the Wolf. Just forward to the meeting between Gordon Gecko(Michael Douglas) and Charlie. Better yet watch it on YouTube. I bet you stayed up all night analyzing these dogs….I got 50 guys doing that already….. so if you don’t have anything else our business is done…. Blue star airlines!! It rings a bell so what? What’s my point everyone is looking backwards I even heard they drive the price down so they can buy it. Whoever said that…… YOU GOT IT. almost #1-whos they #2-you panicked fear is an emotion, nothing more. #3-look forward, not to be exactly sure of anything except it’s just a game, it’s rigged, and now it’s a much bigger game with different players but they don’t charge the rules they don’t have the power. So throw away the charts and don’t subscribe to newsletters that want to tell people about the game but don’t play themselves or they wouldn’t be in tnewsletter business. Think about things you know and look up things you don’t (encyclopedia….. maybe on eBay or Amazon and then look into options puts and calls nothing fancy maybe a straddle, then try it out and lastly nobody knows about gold or oil or Elon and his car( his biggest buyer is China, think about drones and the industrial war….and lastly check out the billionaire boys club from Facebook and ask yourself what are they going to do with the $$$$ because I have one truth for you enough is never enough. Good investing

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